ANCHORAGE, Alaska (KTUU) – Imagine having to fly into the remote corners of Alaska in an open cockpit airplane. Headlong into the wind, rain and snow for your entire flight.
That was the drawback and the reality of early aviation in Alaska.
That is, until the arrival of the Fairchild 71, a Canadian built airplane from 1928 through 1930 featuring a 50-foot wing span, a powerful engine and an enclosed cabin. It could haul six passengers and 3,000 pounds of freight, all without the need for a formal runway. The perfect bush plane. It was credited with opening up the northern reaches of Canada and Alaska.
In the Restoration Shop at the Alaska Aviation Museum in Anchorage, work is progressing on a 1929 Fairchild 71. It is one of the few examples of the plane left in the world…