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Mon, Jun 30, 2008

Niagara Falls Aviation Museum Gets New Home

Museum Will Move To Buffalo And Get New Name

An aviation museum in Western New York is nearing a positive end to its turbulent struggle after eviction from its location in Niagara Falls in January.

Thanks to a $1 million bequest from a longtime trustee, the Niagara Aerospace Museum will be getting a new name and a new location for its collection of aircraft and artifacts outlining aviation history in the region. Reported by the Buffalo News, G. Wayne Hawk, president of the museum, announced Friday the museum will be relocated to the city of Buffalo and will be now known as the Ira G. Ross Aerospace Museum.

An exact location in Buffalo has not been officially chosen for the new museum, but the museum board is focusing on a possible location on the waterfront near the Buffalo & Erie County Naval and Military Park according to museum director Jacek “Jack” Wysocki.

For museum supporters, the announcement provided closure to recent troubles placing the museum’s future “up in the air.” The museum originally began its life in vacant space in shopping mall in Niagara Falls, but had moved to rented space on the first floor of a former office building downtown in recent years to draw more tourists visiting the popular waterfalls the city is known for. In 2004, the building was taken over by the Seneca Gaming Corp. as part of its casino complex and the museum was forced to close on January 8, 2008. Museum aircraft such as a 1917 Curtiss JN4 Jenny, a Bell X-22A VSTOL prototype, and a Bell P-39 Airacobra along with artifacts were placed into storage following the closure.

The move to Buffalo and the renaming are the terms of a $1 million endowment from the late Dr. Elizabeth Olmsted-Ross, an aviation pioneer and former member of the museum board of directors, who died in September.

The new name is in memory of Ross’s husband, a pilot and pioneering physicist and engineer who oversaw Curtiss-Wright Corporation’s flight research department in Buffalo and later headed Calspan, the Cornell University Aeronautical Laboratory.

FMI: www.niagaramuseum.org
 

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