Ed Maloney's Mission
The man behind, beside, and all over, the Planes of Fame Air Museum.
- By Marshall Lumsden
- Air & Space magazine, March 2008
Among the first to see the historical value of aircraft, Ed Maloney opened a museum in 1957 and has been adding airplanes ever since, like the Hawker Hurricane. What makes the Planes of Fame Air Museum especially thrilling to airplane fans is aircraft that fly.
David Johnston
(Page 5 of 6)
All in the Family
The organizational chart for the museum looks a little like an abbreviated Maloney family tree. "It didn't start out to be a family operation," Maloney says. "I founded it and had two sons. I said, ‘Well, if you don't want to fly, you don't have to fly.' They came out and started washing airplanes and sweeping the floors just like anybody else, and they ended up staying in the business."
Jim Maloney, the older son, started hanging around the museum when he was seven. He brought along his best friend in the second grade, Steve Hinton. "What did I do when I was seven? I picked up Coke bottles and made a mess," Hinton recalls. But, with the younger son, John, the boys grew up around the airplanes. They washed and painted them and picked up mechanical experience. Eventually, they learned to fly, first the Stinson L-5, then the North American T-6 and the P-51. They flew warbirds for the television series "Baa Baa Blacksheep" in the early 1970s and, as their reputations as performers grew, became known among the aviation cognoscenti as "the Chino kids." After a brief stint as an airline pilot, Hinton came back to Chino to found Fighter Rebuilders with Jim Maloney. In 1983, Maloney died when a Ryan PT-22 in which he was a passenger went into a spin during an aerobatic maneuver in Arizona.
Hinton's career as a movie pilot, holder of a world speed record, and championship racer (he now flies the Planes of Fame T-33 as the pace plane at the Reno air races every year) has made him famous in aviation circles. He is one of the world's most experienced pilots of vintage warbirds, having racked up hours in everything from a Sopwith Camel to a Northrop F-5B.
His company, Fighter Rebuilders, located at the museum, has restored aircraft for collectors such as Bob Pond, whose airworthy warbirds are displayed at the Palm Springs Air Museum in California, and Stephen Grey and his Fighter Collection at Duxford, England. With such clients, the company is able to maintain a full-time crew the museum could not otherwise afford.
Hinton, who joined the family formally by marrying Ed Maloney's daughter Karen, is now president of Planes of Fame; Karen works as director of development. Their 19-year-old son Steve Jr. appears to be following in his father's footsteps. He flies the T-6 and late last spring he checked out in the P-51.
The museum supports itself with private donations from corporations and individuals, movie and airshow work, admissions and gift shop sales, and annual dues from memberships. One of the lures of membership is the possibility of a winning ticket in drawings for rides in one of the rare warbirds.
But much of the vitality of the museum comes from its corps of volunteers, all of whom share Maloney's passion for historic aircraft. Volunteers do most of the restoration work. An eight-person team, for example, has spent every Saturday for 11 years working on the Bell P-59 Airacomet, the first U.S. jet fighter (see "Restoration," Aug./Sept. 2005). According to volunteer Bob Velker, who describes himself as a "recovering engineer," there are half a million rivets in the wings alone. "We've got about 40,000 man-hours in it right now," he says.
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Comments (6)
It is only due to the remarkable foresight and determination
of men like Mr Maloney that we have examples of aircraft
which remain vital and tangible artifacts of aeronautical heritage.
Living here in the UK it's unlikely that I will ever get to visit his museum but it's a good feeling that such places remain and go from strenth to strength to strength.
These aircraft are no less important than the canon that fired at Gettysburg or the arrow that flew at Agincourt.
Good luck for the future
Yours Faithfully
Ted Andrews
Posted by Ted Andrews on November 4,2008 | 06:25 AM
I am researching the Hanriot HD 1 and am delighted to learn that Ed Malloney is still around. I met his son in 1982!
I have very little info on Ed's HD1. Has anybody got any history or photographs before and during restoration?
Posted by Chris Warrillow on January 5,2009 | 03:19 PM
it pleases me greatly to visit this outstanding aviation website....i first met Ed Maloney in early 1956 just after he oppened the doors to his air museum in Clarmont, Calif.,..I had just recently enrolled in the aviation maintenance course offered at nearby Mt. San Antonio Jr. College...Ed greated me and a friend of mine with open arms as a fellow aviation enthusiest....I spent many hours as a volunteer renovating some of Ed's precious aviation relics...The time I spent with Ed and his early collection of warbirds has been the most memorible of my 50+ years in aviation...I was always greatly impressed with Ed's fantastic knowledge of every aspect of aviation...a true walking encyclopedia of aviation knowledge...
Posted by gene shafer on January 24,2009 | 06:14 PM
What a wonderful story. I'm so glad that there are men like Ed Malloney to preserve our aviation heritage. Growing up in Orange County, California I was bitten by the avaiation bug as a young boy. My father was an engineer at Autonetics and later at Rockwell International in Seal Beach. I was exposed to avaiation and space flight at all of the great "pitstops"; such as McDonald Douglas in Huntington Beach, El Toro MCAS, Tustin LTA, Seal Beach Naval Weapons Station, Chino Airport and John Wayne airport. My favorite thing to do on a Saturday was to visit the Movieland of the Air museum and climb on the old BT-13 stored outdoors or wander through the other aircraft on display outside. When no one was looking I'd slip away and walk down to the south end of the airport and climb into the de Havilland Vampire stored there among the other planes. I'd rock the controls while I pretended to fight off the boogies attacking my hometown. Years later I'd do the same thing at the Army Aviation Museum at Ft. Rucker while I was in flight school there, but instead of a small fighter I sat with a few classmates in a de Havilland DHC-4 Caribou. We would sit in the cockpit until the wee hours of the morning just talking about our love of flying. I only hope my love of flying trickles down to my daughters.
Posted by Kevin White on April 15,2009 | 11:32 AM
i have searched to world over for active flying p-38 planes.
two years ago i spent the day with the planes in chino and have not been able to return.
at that itme you were putting together a p-39.
a too-young-to-join young man my pathfinder uncle(p-38)squeezed me into his p-38(without the knowlege of the army airforce) for a ride before he left for europe.
he passed away last month and we had spent hours upon hours with he serving as my flight instructor(i am license holder)and would pay just to sit at the controls of a p-38.
i did get my uncle to write a book about his experiences including being hit by a u-boat on his way over and making it to ireland in a raft----480 miles-----and then onto chasing romal in north africa before becoming a path finder.
he refused to return after the war in a tanker so he and his buddy took a b-25 and flew it back by way of africa to brazil to miami and left it on a run way there.
you have heard enough from me as i could go on and on.
thanks
john d powless,
presently the #1 senior singles player(tennis)in the world in my age group
Posted by john d powless on June 3,2010 | 06:12 PM
Does anyone know Chris Warrilow whereabouts? I did some work with him around 1985/6 and would love to get in contact agian.
Posted by Tyrone Trimmings on September 16,2012 | 08:00 AM