McConnell Air Force Base in Kansas is named after the McConnell brothers, Fred, Thomas, and Edwin, who gained a measure of fame during World War II. “The flying McConnell brothers,” brought up in the pre-war aviation milieu in Wichita, joined the Army Air Corps together, trained together, and served together. Their mother, Anna, pinned on their wings at the completion of their pilot training at Luke Field in Phoenix, an event widely reported in newspapers.
On July 10, 1943, the brothers flew three B-24 Liberators on a 13th Air Force mission from Henderson Field on Guadalcanal, in the Solomon Islands, to Bougainville. On the return trip, Tom and his aircraft and crew were lost in bad weather. Fred went on to fly a total of 61 combat missions in the Pacific theater; Edwin flew 56 missions and was then transferred Stateside.
Fred remained in the Army Air Forces after the war, and in October 1945 he was transferred to the Army Air Field in Garden City, Kansas. On October 21, Fred and his wife, Mary Louise, known as Blondie, departed Wichita en route to Garden City in Fred’s 1931 blue-and-yellow open-cockpit Fleet Model 8 biplane. In the front cockpit with Blondie were linens for their new house in Garden City. Twenty-five miles west of Wichita, the Fleet hit a power line and crashed. Blondie survived; Fred, however, who, according to the Civil Aeronautics Administration accident report, was not wearing his seat belt, was killed.
In 1954 Blondie and her children, Tommy, Nancy, and Kittie Lou, attended the dedication of McConnell Air Force Base. Kittie Lou was very young when her father was killed, but remembers him and this detail of the dedication: “General H.R. Spicer sent a B-17 to pick us up.” Edwin McConnell died in 1997 at the age of 76, and in 1999 the base was re-dedicated to include his name. And that would have been the end of the story had it not been for Jim Bumgarner’s aviation maintenance class.
Jim Bumgarner is all about airplanes. After flying more than 70 missions as a C-47 engineer during the Korean War, Bumgarner returned to Missouri, where he worked for the Army Air Guard and ran a fixed-base operation at Skyhaven Airport in Warrensburg. When the University of Central Missouri started an aviation program in 1968, he became chief of maintenance and oversaw development of the operation into a program comprising more than 40 aircraft. Students under his supervision maintained the fleet, and when one student casually mentioned that an airplane had been abandoned on his family farm in Kansas, Bumgarner’s curiosity was piqued.
He drove over and found a fuselage center section. After some detective work, he found parts of the airplane’s empennage hanging in a neighbor’s shed, some landing gear parts and a baggage compartment door at a nearby high school, and the fuselage aft of the cockpit serving as an ornamental windmill in the garden of a farmer. (Bumgarner welded a replacement to trade him for the fuselage.) An area adjacent to the farm’s accident site had over the years become a junk pile, filled with barbed wire, corrugated
tin siding, and trash. In Bumgarner’s words, “Anything that was airplane, we pulled out of it.” A tree at the site had to be felled to free a wingtip it had grown around. The accumulated material was just enough to fill the back of his pickup.
Bumgarner determined the make of the aircraft from the singular construction of the wing ribs. A serial number on the baggage compartment door enabled him to obtain extensive documentation from the Federal Aviation Administration. The airplane was a Fleet Model 8, and its last registered owner was Fred McConnell. A block of 15 serial numbers had been allotted for the model; seven were produced. The only other extant Fleet Model 8 that Bumgarner knows of is in the New York State Museum in Albany.
The restoration started as a blue chalk line snapped on the concrete floor of the hangar. Most of the parts had to be painstakingly reproduced. Bumgarner fashioned the top wing spar, a single piece of laminated wood, 28 feet from tip to tip. One of the few pieces of original equipment is the airplane’s Heywood Air Starter. Bumgarner was lucky enough to locate dies to stamp the unique hat section wing ribs. “If I had to do it over again,” he says, “I’d start with soft aluminum and send them to be hardened later.” To determine the dimensions needed to fabricate the struts, a New York student heading home for vacation was dispatched to the museum in Albany with a camera and tape measure.


Comments
I was one of Jim's students at CMSU in the early 1980's and was actually with Jim during the recovery of this aircraft on my friend's family farm. In fact I was the first to sit in the back seat after we loaded the remains in the back of Jim's pick-up! Reading this article brings the story alive and puts a human touch on what was then just rusting steel tubing and bent aluminum. The student mentioned in this article was my room mate at the time and we both worked under Jim's supervision as apprentice aircraft mechanics. Mark and I have gone on to rewarding careers in aviation much of which I credit to mentors like Jim Bumgarner. A few years ago on a memorial day trip my family stopped in Warrensburg and I was honored to get a flight in this wonderfully restored aircraft with my old friend and mentor at the controls. Many thanks to Lem Shattuck and the Smithsonion for publishing this article that brings back so many great memories and honors not only the McConnell brothers for their service to this country but also recognizes one of the great aviators,craftsman and mentors Jim Bumgarner. John Calvert Savannah Georgia April 2008
Posted by John Calvert on April 6,2008 | 05:59PM
Dear Mr. Calvert, I was perusing this page, once again, to get some information for someone and happened to see your comment. HOW EXCITING to hear that you were one of Jim's students and that you've had a ride in the Fleet! It just gave me chills! Fred and Blondie (Mary Louise)McConnell, my parents would be thrilled to know about the fun people are having in their old plane. Jim is such a fantastically talented and gracious person and my husband and I are extremely excited about making a trip back to meet him and see the plane one of these days. YES, many, many thanks to Lem Shattuck for writing the story and to the Smithsonian for honoring this American Treasure, Jim Bumgarner. As I said in the magazine, my father and Tom would have been so humbled to know of the honors as they were simply doing what needed to be done, just like all the other men and women who sacrificed, and are continuing to do so. My father wanted to fly anything he could get his hands on, and he and my mother packed an astronomical amount of adventures into their short time together. I loved hearing your comment. Thank you for sharing!! Kittie Lou (McConnell-English)
Posted by Kittie Lou McConnell-English on April 9,2008 | 04:25PM
Kittie Lou, I was working on some genealogy stuff when I came across this posting from you. Do you remember me? We met at my brother Duane's funeral in Jan. 1989. I was living in the San Diego area then. I have since retired to Columbus Ohio. I would love to hear from you. I have been trying to locate some of our other cousins such as Emmit, Freddy and Wesley. Perhaps you have information on them. Sincerely Your Cousin Joan
Posted by Joan McConnell-Maginn on June 19,2008 | 04:24PM
Dear Mr. Calvert, I am a niece of Fred McConnell. My father was his older brother. I was eight years old in 1944 and we visited Uncle Fred and Aunt Blondie in Texas. Uncle Fred was stationed I believe at Luke Field near Ft.Worth. The most memerable part of the visit for me was a ride in Uncle Fred's air plane. I remember he put me in the front cock pit and we took off flying above his farm and walnut grove. After the second fly by he landed the plane and came rushing forward to see if I was alright. He had mistaken my laughing and shouts of joy for crying, afraid he had frightened me. It was my first airplane ride and I shall never forget it or my wonderful Uncle Fred.
Posted by Joan McConnell-Maginn on June 19,2008 | 04:39PM