A Walk in the Airpark
Rest and renewal in a long-standing pilot community.
- By Del Wilber
- Air & Space magazine, March 2009
Roger Guest strolls the lawns, where airplanes (Cub, foreground; Citabria, background) rather than cars rule.
Caroline Sheen
(Page 4 of 6)
In the 1950s, as the head of a general aviation business at Hyde Field in Clinton, Maryland, and working as a mechanic, Joe Fichera got a call from a customer. The fabric covering a wing had torn in flight, and the man had to make an emergency landing on Kent Island. Fichera flew his 1934 Kinner Sportster to Kentmorr, fixed the client’s airplane, and fell in love with the place. A nice field. Good food. A beach. But he couldn’t afford the house and lot prices back then. Over the years, he visited the place with his wife and friends. In the early 1970s, the Ficheras bought a $6,000 plot next to the runway, and in 1983 Joe installed a Nantacoke factory-built one-story ranch and later added a hangar and a workshop. He retired in 1984 as an aircraft restoration specialist with the National Air and Space Museum, though, like Massimini, he now volunteers there. Fichera restores aircraft that eventually go on display.
“If you own an airplane, it’s just the ideal place to live,” says Anne Fichera. “You don’t have to drive to the airport to get your plane—you are right here with it. If you want to go flying, you get in your airplane and go flying.”
The Ficheras’ hangar is filled with airplane photographs, posters, and decals, and that morning, Joe had whiled away some time there, working on his 1930 Brunner Winkle Bird biplane. He bought the Bird in 1946 for $600. In the early 1930s, Charles Lindbergh owned the airplane and used
it to teach his wife, Anne Morrow, to fly. Fichera flew the Bird, restoring it after it was damaged in a wind storm. In 1953, the engine quit on takeoff; Fichera set the airplane down in a plowed field, where it flipped onto its back. The airplane hasn’t flown since. But Fichera has been tinkering with it nearly every day for 20 years, repairing the fabric, the wings, the landing gear, and the instruments. Neighbors call the airplane a work of art. Fichera says it has taken so long to fix “because I was too busy fixing other peoples’ planes.”
Still, he won’t be able to fly it himself. Due to glaucoma, Fichera cannot keep his pilot’s license current. He hopes one of his neighbors or friends will take it up and he can fly as a passenger. “It’s frustrating,” he says. “But even if I can’t fly it, I still want to see it fly.”
Anne hears something that could be an airplane. She hustles outside, jumps into a golf cart, and races down the runway as one Cessna 150 after another comes in to land. (All the residents seem to have golf carts. They had a golf cart obstacle contest and race during one of the community’s recent picnics.) The Cessnas are with Keystone Flight, a Pennsylvania-based club for general aviation pilots. They park their eight aircraft in a row, and the leader, Mike Marra, leads the platoon to Kentmorr Restaurant, where they dine on crabs, crab soup, and crab cakes. They take pictures of everything. One pilot tries to talk a waitress into giving him a live crab as a souvenir.
“This is just such a wonderful spot to visit,” Marra says. “You have the bay and the grass strip and mostly the food. You can’t beat the food. It’s really a throwback to grassroots aviation. It’s like landing in someone’s back yard for a visit.”
But drop-ins like the one from Keystone Flight are rare. In the old days, residents recall pilots in pursuit of all things crab flying into Kentmorr by the dozen. At times, the line of parked airplanes stretched a quarter-mile down the runway.
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Comments (5)
Really enjoyed the article A Walk in the Airpark, particulary when I saw the picture of the 1958 Aeronca Tri-Champ. I am a big fan of that plane, and would be happy to hear from anybody who owns one and/or has the specs. on this bird.
Posted by Don Niemeyer on March 15,2009 | 03:45 PM
Great article about a great Airpark. I have flown there a few times and can't wait until the next time. One day, maybe I'll have my own house there.
Posted by Paul Canizaro on May 17,2009 | 10:22 PM
Dear Ir & Space,
Can't wait for every time I receive my magazine to pore over every page in the book.I grew up in the early days of aviation. My Dad flew in WWI and came back to be a Barnstormer, took my Mom up on a hop and they eloped, needless to say she was disowned.
Dad was a close friend of Col. Lindbergh and was at Roosevelt field the day he took off for Paris. They fly the mail together. Dad was also one of the first pilots when Hig Embry and JP Riddle set up Embry Riddle at "Sunkin Lunkin"
So long ago,yet so much has transpired since I tried shooting at the moon with my 22.
Keep up the great work. EDITORS' REPLY: Thanks for sharing your family history, Mr. K, and for your kind words! You made our day.
Posted by Charles Kallmann on September 21,2009 | 01:49 PM
I enjoyed,[ much ],reading the article about the airpark !I have a 7AC and am 85 % finished with my 2cond. restoration. I flew it for 24 years and ran it out some.I am being caught up in age and other responsibilities and increasing low funds in fixed low-income.I have more or less,stopped the rebuild for some time even though I still have the spirit to fly again.I am 80 yr's but quite spry and if I can manage to juggle my financial resources around some,perhaps I will fly again.My plane=65 hp.originalpaint scheme,bare bones panel,same small rudder,large spinner,5 gal. tank,each wing poor mans style all,I would like to hear more from over there, Thanks, Victor.
Posted by Victor Ornelaz on June 19,2010 | 05:12 PM
Such a great story and a fabulous bit of aviation history. When I get my pilot's license and finally own a small airplane, I'd love to barnstorm across the country just to have a hamburger at the Kentmorr Restaurant and meet some of the long-time locals. My name is Carla DeLauder. Expect to see me there within the next five years or so. (That's what I call a grand slam of a plan!) :o)
Posted by Carla DeLauder on January 8,2011 | 06:17 PM