- Randy Acord
Infobox Person
name = Randall Keith "Randy" Acord
image_size =
caption =
birth_date = birth date|1919|2|27
birth_place = Clarendon, Donley County,Texas , USA
death_date = death date and age|2008|5|19|1919|2|27
death_place = Fairbanks,Alaska
occupation =United States Air Force pilotHistorian ;Museum curator
spouse = Marion Acord (until his death)
children =
residence =Fairbanks, Alaska
religion =
party =
footnotes =(1) Acord established partly at his own expense the Alaska Air PioneerMuseum atPioneer Park in Fairbanks to preserve thehistory ofaviation for future generations.(2) Acord received the
Alaska -Siberia nLend Lease Award for his contributions toRussia n-North America n relations duringWorld War II .(3) Acord continued to fly well into his eighties. Randall Keith Acord, known as Randy Acord (
February 27 ,1919 –May 19 ,2008 ) [Social Security Death Index:http://ssdi.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/ssdi.cgi] was ahistorian of Americanaviation who in 1992 founded the Alaska Air PioneerMuseum atPioneer Park in Fairbanks,Alaska . http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ap/tx/5795244.html] Acord was a native of Clarendon, the seat of Donley County in theTexas Panhandle some sixty miles east of Amarillo. He attended college for two years and worked as anelectrician , when onAugust 18 ,1941 , he enlisted in theUnited States Army Air Corps in Lubbock, Texas. [ [http://aad.archives.gov/aad/record-detail.jsp?dt=893&rid=1521979 NARA - AAD - Display Full Records - Electronic Army Serial Number Merged File, ca. 1938 - 1946 (Enlistment Records) ] ] In 1943, Acord was a young test pilot stationed at Ladd Field, nowFort Wainwright , an Army post in Fairbanks. He flew planes with the Cold Weather Testing Station and experimented with heating systems and landing planes withski s. He left the thenUnited States Air Force with the rank of major. Subsequently, he was awarded the Alaska-Siberia Lend Lease Award for his contributions toRussia n-North America n relations duringWorld War II . Acord had a vast knowledge ofaeronautics . He recorded anoral history of the technical details of his flights. His wife of fifty years, Marion Acord, who survived him, took detailed notes for the benefit of future researchers. Mike Cox, a former manager at Pioneer Park, which houses the aviation museum, said that Acord possessed a "depth of knowledge about anything related to aviation . . . a treasure trove of information." [http://www.newsminer.com newsminer.com • Fairbanks, Alaska ] ] Acord conceived the idea for the museum in the late 1970s when the military was considering closing Fort Wainwright. However, the post remains open. The museum opened to the public in 1992 after Acord spent thousands of dollars of his own money to overcome construction setbacks. Acord told the "Fairbanks Daily News-Miner " that "There is so muchhistory going away nowadays. People don't record events, and then they pass on, and it's gone. I would like to see this history passed on to the younger people of this country."Acord flew a small carrier for several years and went into business as a food distributor to outlying
village s. He continued to fly until he was in his early eighties. He died in Fairbanks from complications ofpneumonia . He was a member of the Air Force Memorial Foundation, chaired byH. Ross Perot . [ [http://www.airforcememorial.org/registry/index_results.asp?last_name=a Air Force Memorial Foundation ] ] He was a member of theFederal Aviation Administration "Master Pilot Award List". [ [http://www.faa.gov/safety/awards/wright_bros/list/ FAA - Master Pilot Award List ] ]References
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