That '70s Airshow
Business, babes, and barnstormers. For awhile, Reading, Pennsylvania, had it all.
- By Roger Mola
- Air & Space magazine, September 2001
Robert Harding Breithaupt—“Breity” to everyone who was anyone in the aviation business in the 1960s and ’70s—holds court at table number 6 in the Antique Airplane Restaurant, which his family has owned since 1964. From his corner perch by the door, he greets each diner, usually a member of Reading’s graying community and almost always someone he knows. He pushes back his chair and cranes toward the belly of the gloss-black 1927 Monocoupe, N6731, that hangs from the beams. It’s the airplane in which he learned to fly. He had it trucked 15 miles across town from the airport via the West Shore Bypass and installed in the restaurant in 1967.
“It’s still licensed. Gas it up and fly it right out,” he winks to the ladies at the next table. Breithaupt, 84, reaches up to rock the airplane. The lunchtime patrons lower their forks, and John Cianci, a retired controller from the Reading Airport tower, reassures the ladies of the Monocoupe’s solid anchor. Breithaupt retakes his seat and resumes the conversation about the National Maintenance & Operations Meeting, or, as it was known for decades, the Reading Air Show.
“Reading was considered the best show in the world in the ’50s to the early ’70s,” says Breithaupt. “We came before the Oshkosh thing got big, and we ran the show out of our own pocketbook.
“This was a trade show,” he says. “It wasn’t selling balloons to the kids.”
At its peak, Reading boasted a daily professional registration of 12,000. Its roster of exhibitors was a roll call of the big guns of aviation: Rockwell International, Grumman American Aviation, Boeing Vertol, AVCO Lycoming, Bell Helicopter Textron, Aerospatiale Helicopter, Pratt & Whitney, and Beechcraft, Piper, and Cessna. It was also a favorite venue for suppliers to the industry: AC Spark Plug, Teledyne Battery, Marathon Battery, Alcor, AVEMCO, Collins Avionics, BFGoodrich, Texaco, Mobil, Esso (later Exxon), and Shell. From humble beginnings in the 1940s, the show grew until in the late 1960s and ’70s, it rivaled the biannual Paris show in attendance, if not in prestige. In 1980, it ended. Maybe it got too big for its britches.
Breithaupt and Alfred M. “Sime” Bertolet bought Reading Aviation Service in 1941, when it was a sales and maintenance operation for light aircraft, dealing in little Ercoupes and Luscombes. They taught civilian pilots to fly and later got a U.S. Army contract for military pilot training. After World War II, during which Breithaupt flew B-24 Liberators in the China-Burma-India theater (he’s never without his CBI belt buckle), RAS founder Brooks McElroy, also a military pilot, rejoined the company. In 1949 the trio launched the National Maintenance & Operations Meeting.
“The initial shows were a thank-you party for our best RAS customers,” says Breithaupt. “We invited them for the Pennsylvania Dutch food. We had no airshow. We had FAA dignitaries to speak, and seminars.” The first performances, he says, were simply ad hoc presentations by some of the pilot-customers who happened to have flown their airplanes to the site. They had no schedule of acts.
“It was largely military surplus,” says Cianci. “Everyone who had an airplane after the war suddenly became a barnstormer.
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Comments (4)
What memories. As a native son of Reading I fondly remember being on home leave from Taipei, Taiwan. I was staying at the Abe Lincoln hotel and Bill Arner had put my name on the marquee with the message "Welcome home Art Scholl" This was during the week of the Reading Air Show and some of my old friends and classmates thought that "Art Scholl" referred to the pilot rather than me.
Posted by Art Scholl on May 28,2012 | 06:41 AM
My wife, sister-in-law and I attended Airfest 98. We had a grand time! The incident I recall most was that one of the "Blue Angels" F-18s lost an engine during their performance. The pilot stealthily landed his crippled jet, jumped into the spare #7 jet and re-took his place within the formation...all in about 4-5 minutes! An extraordinary feat to cap an amazing day.
Posted by Perry Rotzell on July 4,2012 | 02:04 AM
I have the pleasure of caring for Breity for the last 5 years . He is the most interesting man I have ever met. He is now 95 and full of stories. The history that this Great Man has been part of makes me proud as a young American to have the honor of knowing him. He still live and dreams of flying. If it wasn't for men like him the world wouldn't be the same. Thank You Briety for being you.
Love,
your pretty girl Sherry.
Posted by sherry toner-keith on October 13,2012 | 11:23 AM
My parents were friends of Breity from their high school days and our families grew up together. He took me on my first airplane ride in a Cessna 150 and fueled my lifetime passion for aviation.
He was one of the best story tellers of all time and always had interesting ones to tell. I have some of my own about him.
Fascinating man and of historic significance regarding the contribution he and RAS meant to Reading and Berks County.
Thanks for many memories.
Posted by Tom Forester on December 31,2012 | 08:05 PM