Kermit Weeks

Kermit Weeks (born July 14, 1953 in Salt Lake City, Utah)[1][2] is an American aviation enthusiast, pilot, and aircraft collector. He has competed in aerobatics, designed aircraft, and promoted aviation and vintage aircraft restoration.[3]

Kermit Weeks
BornJuly 14, 1953 (1953-07-14) (age 70)
Known forAerobatics, author
SpouseTeresa Blazina
RelativesLewis George Weeks
Weeks' first homebuilt aircraft, the Der Jager D-IX
Weeks' first self-designed and built aircraft, the Weeks Special

Oil and gas royalties[4] from the Weeks Royalty, derived from his grandfather Lewis George Weeks' work,[5] provide Weeks with the funds, capital, and resources to pursue the preservation of historic aircraft.[6]

Life and career

Weeks and his family moved to Miami, Florida when he was 14, and he began flying model aircraft and competing on the high school gymnastics team. At 17, with only model airplane flying experience, he began building his own home-built Der Jager D-IX (a biplane powered by a four-cylinder Lycoming O-320 engine).[7] During his final year of high school Weeks spent almost all his spare time building his airplane; he finished it in about four years, and test flew it at age 21.[8]

Weeks later learned to fly. He eventually purchased a Pitts S-2A in order to fly in aerobatic competition.[8] In 1973 Weeks began entering aerobatic flying competitions while pursuing an aeronautical engineering degree at Miami-Dade Junior College, the University of Florida, and Purdue University.[9]

By 1977 Weeks had built the "Weeks Special," an aerobatic aircraft of his own design, and qualified for the United States Aerobatics Team. In 1978 he was a runner-up among 61 competitors worldwide, earning three Silver medals and one Bronze medal in the FAI World Aerobatic Championships staged in Czechoslovakia. Over the span of a dozen years, he placed in the top three in the world five times and won a total of 20 medals in World Aerobatics Championship competition. He has twice won the United States National Aerobatics Championship[10] and has won several Invitational Masters Championships in worldwide competitions.

During the late 1970s, Weeks began to acquire, restore, and preserve vintage aircraft. By 1985 he had accumulated enough vintage aircraft to start the Weeks Air Museum in Miami. A non-profit facility, it housed much of his private collection and historic aircraft owned by the museum. Weeks then acquired a 250-acre site near Polk City, Florida, 20 miles southwest of Walt Disney World, for an aviation-themed attraction called Fantasy of Flight.

In 1992, as development plans finalized for Fantasy of Flight, Hurricane Andrew struck the Miami area, virtually destroying the Weeks Air Museum facility and seriously damaging most of the vintage aircraft within it. Some of the collection, including a Grumman F4F Wildcat, P-51C Mustang, AT-6 Texan, and a recently repaired Stinson L-1 Vigilant, have been restored and are now displayed and flown at Fantasy of Flight, which opened in 1995.

On May 26, 2000, Weeks married Teresa Blazina in Sedona, Arizona.

In 2008 Weeks published a children's book, All of Life Is a School, featuring airplane characters. In 2009 he won a bronze Independent Publisher Book Award for the book. He followed it up with "The Spirit of Lindy" in September 2012.[11]

In 2012 Weeks was awarded the Lloyd P. Nolen Lifetime Achievement in Aviation Award by the Wings Over Houston Airshow. In 2010 he won the Freedom of Flight Award by Bob Hoover. In 2008 Weeks was inducted into the Florida Aviation Hall of Fame, and in 2006 was named a "Living Legend of Aviation."[12]

In 2017 Weeks started producing and selling 'Naked in Jamaica', a Jamaican styled Rum, and retailing blackberries grown at his property in Florida.

Aircraft collection

Weeks at Fantasy of Flight in 2013

Weeks maintains one of the largest private collections of flight-worthy historic aircraft in the world, most of which are at his Fantasy of Flight facility in Polk City, Florida. The collection contains over 140 civilian and military planes including rare originals as well as reproductions of historic aircraft, such as the Spirit of St. Louis.[13]

Another famous replica in Weeks' collection is the iconic Gee Bee Model Z, a racing plane originally built in 1931 and destroyed the same year during a world speed record attempt.[14] It was involved in the opening scene of the 1991 film The Rocketeer.

Weeks owns one of the four remaining original P-51C Mustangs in the world, with an estimated worth of over US$3 million. In addition, Weeks also owns a P-51D Mustang which came later in the war. Both use the Packard-Merlin V-12 engine of Rolls-Royce design. Both the P-51C and P-51D frequently fly together, most notably during the event dubbed Mustangs and Mustangs which takes place every April where the P-51s and a number of antique Ford Mustangs are exhibited side by side.[14] Weeks is rebuilding an Allison powered Mustang P-51A.

Other original aircraft in the collection include a Short Sunderland flying boat. One of the seven Sunderland aircraft in existence, it is the only one that is reported to be maintained in airworthy condition, as well as the only airworthy 4 engine passenger flying boat. Weeks purchased the Sunderland in England in February 1993 and after a five-month restoration it was flown to the U.S, making stops in Ireland, Iceland, and Canada before arriving at the 1993 EAA AirVenture Oshkosh event. Following the show it was flown to Fantasy of Flight and regularly flew for the following years. However, since 1996 it has remained in the display hangar. It is still in good condition, and Weeks has expressed interest in flying the Sunderland again. During a 2020 Youtube video interview, Weeks stated the flying boat will be returned to the water and air following a complete renovation of the museum in the near future.

Also on display is one of six existing Martin B-26 Marauder medium bombers from WWII. This aircraft was acquired in the mid-1990s and flown to the museum shortly afterward, and it has remained the only airworthy B-26 since the 1995 crash of the Commemorative Air Force's example that occurred in Midland, Texas. Like the Sunderland, this aircraft has not flown since the late 1990s or possibly the early 2000s. It is unclear when the aircraft will fly again. Among the Collection is also a Curtis P-40 Warhawk (TP-40N trainer variant). It is the only airworthy P-40 type airplane with dual seating and controls; it makes frequent appearances at surrounding air shows and has been featured in the films Death Race and Tora! Tora! Tora!.

Weeks is also known to have owned the largest number of Grumman J2F Duck aircraft since the U.S Navy, having purchased four of the rare aircraft; two have since been sold while one is frequently flown by Weeks, including amphibious water landings. The 4th aircraft is currently under restoration at the museum and Weeks hopes to fly both JF2 Ducks side by side in the near future. A Ford Trimotor, an early civil transport aircraft used by commercial airlines in the 1930s is also part of the collection; it has been used in films including the 1930 TWA promotional film, Coast to Coast in 48 Hours, appearing on screen with Amelia Earhart, and the 1984 adventure film, Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, in which the plane is shown being piloted by Harrison Ford as Indiana Jones.[14] Weeks has recently purchased the iconic Sikorsky S-38 replica, Osa's Ark. This historical aircraft is the only S-38 that still flies and was featured in the 2004 film, The Aviator.

Most of the aircraft are functional and able to be flown; Weeks has stated that every aircraft in his collection has been flown by him, is being flown currently, or will be flown in the future.[14]

References

  1. Fantasy of Flight website; Kermit Weeks Biography page Archived March 5, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  2. Fantasy of Flight website; press release
  3. Thomas J. Finneran. Mr. Kermit A. Weeks: Epitome of Enduring Leadership Characteristics – Passion, Vision and Perseverance. ISBN 1249595282.
  4. Famous Astronaut visits Fantasy of Flight!, "...the lawyer that negotiated my famous geologist grandfather’s oil-royalty in Australia. It has been my grandfather’s generosity that has allowed me to share my passions and good fortune with others." January 23, 2012
  5. Stephens, Mark (January 15, 2001). "Mad For Airplanes". Forbes. The money for all this fun comes from the Weeks Royalty, a 2.5% levy on oil and gas production from the Bass Straits of southeast Australia--Australia's biggest oil field.
  6. Stephens, Mark (January 15, 2001). "Mad For Airplanes". Forbes. Retrieved September 17, 2017.
  7. "Kermit Weeks". Sport Aviation: 45. January 1984.
  8. "Kermit Weeks". Today's Pilot August 2004. Archived from the original on March 20, 2012. Retrieved March 17, 2012.
  9. "Kermit Weeks Creator and Owner". Fantasy of Flight. Archived from the original on June 7, 2010. Retrieved September 23, 2009.
  10. "Blame Snoopy". Archived from the original on October 20, 2006. Retrieved November 23, 2006.
  11. "Kermit Weeks' Official Facebook Page".
  12. "Wings Over Houston presents lifetime achievement award". Retrieved September 27, 2012.
  13. 1927 Spirit of St. Louis, fantasyofflight.com
  14. "Private Collections". Modern Marvels. Season 1. Episode 28. June 19, 2005.
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