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Oakland Aviation Museum

AC with 0 elementsAerospace museum stubsAerospace museums in CaliforniaAlameda County, California building and structure stubsCalifornia museum stubs
Museums in Oakland, CaliforniaNon-profit organization stubsOakland International Airport
BT 13An59842OAMdec08 (4418612013)
BT 13An59842OAMdec08 (4418612013)

Oakland Aviation Museum, formerly called Western Aerospace Museum, was founded in 1981 as a non-profit organization operating an aviation museum located at North Field of Oakland International Airport in Oakland, California. It has over 30 vintage and modern airplanes, both civilian and military, and other displays that highlight noted aviators and innovators.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Oakland Aviation Museum (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Oakland Aviation Museum
Beachy Street, Oakland

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Latitude Longitude
N 37.7331 ° E -122.21271388889 °
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Oakland Aviation Museum

Beachy Street
94614 Oakland
California, United States
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BT 13An59842OAMdec08 (4418612013)
BT 13An59842OAMdec08 (4418612013)
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Boeing School of Aeronautics

The Boeing School of Aeronautics was started by Boeing to compete against the Wright brothers' Wright Flying School and Curtiss Flying School in San Diego, California. Founded in 1929 at Oakland Municipal Airport in Oakland, California, the school started with a staff of 19 and 100 students. It was licensed by the Aeronautical Chamber of Commerce, which licensed aviation schools in that time period.By 1937, the school had expanded operations to 41 staff and 500 students. In October 1938, General Arnold brought in the top three aviation school representatives to request they establish an unfunded startup of Civilian Pilot Training Program schools at their own risk. These were Oliver Parks of Parks Air College, C. C. Moseley of the Curtiss-Wright Technical Institute, and Theophilus Lee, Jr., of the Boeing School of Aeronautics; all agreed to start work. This expanded in 1940 to include training of 5000 U.S. Army Mechanics. The school expanded to 14 buildings and 1000 students at its peak in 1942. Commercial pilot training was suspended to customer United Airlines to meet wartime demand in August that year. By 1943, the CPTP contract had expired and Boeing absorbed the school operations into the parent company. The facilities remained under the new name United Air Lines Training Center which continued to train mechanics under a Navy contract until 1945, before closing. The school operated early Boeing aircraft. These included the Boeing Model 81 and Model 100 pursuit fighter in 1928 and the Boeing Model 203 in 1929. Students would help design, develop, test fly and maintain Boeing aircraft, providing the parent company sales and engineering feedback. Several original aircraft were designed by students and teachers, such as the 1939 Thorp T-5, and T-6.The Oakland Aviation Museum is based at the former Boeing building.