The Wings Museum is an aviation museum located in Sussex, United Kingdom. It is housed in a 12,000 square feet (1,100 m2) hangar-like former farm building in Brantridge Lane, between Handcross and Balcombe. The museum displays mainly World War II-related flying memorabilia and equipment which have been donated,[1][2] or which have been recovered and restored by volunteers.[3]
History
The museum was originally located at Redhill Aerodrome.[4] By 2011 it had relocated to Brantridge Lane.[5]
In 2013, the museum hosted a fundraiser for the upkeep of the Bomber Command Memorial in nearby Green Park.[6][7]
In 2015, volunteers restored a Bristol Beaufighter Mk1f which had crashed 75 years earlier.[8]
Aircraft collection
Visitors to the museum can walk inside a complete fuselage from a Douglas C-47 Dakota which was used on D-Day[9] and later during the filming of the television series Band of Brothers.[10]
There are some very rare aircraft from World War II and some of them are the only ones of their type in the UK.
Turbine engine aircraft
Hawker Siddeley Kestrel XS694 (under restoration and parts in storage)
Piston engine aircraft
North American B-25J-25-NC 44-30861 (under restoration)
Bell P-63 King cobra - 43-11137 (under restoration);[11] the museum has five more in storage
Douglas A-20 Boston (displayed as found)
Nakajima B5N2 Kate (very large fuselage and wing section)
Douglas C-47 Dakota (fuselage from Band of Brothers)