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| The Yorkshire Air Museum - the Airstrip You have chosen to view the QTVR panoramas, you may need to install QUICKTIME on your computer. |
In the early 1980s, the original air traffic control tower and adjacent buildings were derelict and overgrown. Every year, a service at the French Memorial in Elvington Village had attracted an increasing band of veterans, some of whom had married local girls and stayed in the area. One memorable summer, a French film crew used the airfield to dramatise a novel by distinguished writer Jules Roy, about his experiences as an aircrew Bomb Aimer with the French squadrons here. In 1983, a band of devoted volunteers set to work to clear 40 years' of undergrowth and to restore and upgrade the buildings. Always self-supporting, the museum was able to buy the land and buildings in the summer of 1993. The museum's first Open Day was on 11th August 1985. A wartime film made by the French authorities showed Elvington as it had been in 1944. The volunteer workers were thus able to set up an accurate replica, right down to the packet of Woodbine cigarettes on top of the 'ops' desk in the control tower. The Yorkshire Air Museum opened to the public for the first time on 31st May 1986. In the years since, we have had a great and growing support from a wide range of interested parties and now have a membership numbering one thousand, worldwide, with a thriving Yorkshire Air Museum (Canada) Branch. VR Photography: John Munden, Tony Quinn © Red Door VR Limited. |
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