NVAHOF Deputy Director Dr. Dan Bubb & Mike Biehn
NVAHOF Executive Director TD Barnes and Secretary Jeff Wedding


Jeff Wedding at NVAHOF display

NVAHOF Executive Director TD Barnes, Secretary Jeff Wedding, and 2013 NVAHOF Enshrinee Col. Gail Peck, former commander the Red Eagle MiG Squadron

June 13-16, 2019
Sparks, Nevada

Connie May and TD Barnes

NVAHOF Executive Director TD Barnes and Director Communications & Public Affairs Connie May joined past NVAHOF Enshrinee Frank Murray and future Enshrinee Tony Bevacqua in attending the 23rd SR-71/U-2 reunion at the Nugget Hotel in Sparks. In addition to their Nevada Aerospace Hall of Fame leadership positions, Barnes and May are also long-time members of the Blackbird and the Roadrunners Internationale Associations, both involving spy planes developed in Nevada.
As he has done for many of the past reunions, Director Barnes prepared and presented the Final Flight Tribute at the banquet.

2019 BB Final Flight Tribute Video

MGen Pat Halloran

Lots of memories and war stories

SR-71 Pilot Barry MacKean, NVAHOF Director TD Barnes, SR-71 Pilot Ed Yielding

 

Lt Col Thomas “Vito” Massa, AsPS President and ACC Aerospace Physiology Program Manager, and TD Barnes, Former Area 51 Special Projects and the current Exec Director of NVAHOF, the Nevada Aerospace Hall of Fame

 

On 8 May 2019, TD Barnes, former Area 51 Special Projects and the current Executive Director of the Nevada Aerospace Hall of Fame, joined a long list of distinguished speakers before the Aerospace Physiology Society when he was presented the Smith W. Ames Memorial Lecture at the Aerospace Physiology Society luncheon at the Rio All Suites Hotel, Las Vegas, Nevada. Barnes conducted a presentation depicting the Central Intelligence Agency’s pioneering Aerospace Physiology with its high flight in the U-2, A-12 Mach-3+ surveillance planes followed by the YF-12 Kedlock Project, the M-21/D-21 Mach-3 mothership/drone flights, the Soviet Migs, and other projects declassified by the CIA. For his lecture and prior participation at Area 51, Barnes was presented the 2019 Smith W. Ames Award before a large attendance of Air Force, Navy, and Marine Corps professionals in the science and practice of Aerospace Physiology.

 

Nevada, the Battleborn State, became the nation’s West Coast Line of Defense for the US Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps, and Coast Guard during World War II. NASA followed with two tracking stations along its High Range flight test corridor across Nevada and its nuclear rocket engine development at NRDS, the Nuclear Rocket Development Station at Jackass Flats. The Atomic Energy Commission established the Nevada Proving Grounds for atomic bomb testing and the Central Intelligence Agency created Area 51 for flight testing its spy planes and other black projects. 

Because so much remains unknown about Nevada’s unique aviation, and aerospace history, NVAHOF, through its student participant program is capturing from those who were there this fragile and elusive history through its oral history investigation, collection, and recordation program. The NVAHOF shares this knowledge and documentation as a public service to agencies, academia, historians, authors, media, and publications. Much of this oral history comes from external sources for which NVAHOF can not vouch for its accuracy.

NVAHOF is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit corporation dependent on private and corporate tax-deductible donations to finance its educational and annual induction of deserving individuals and organizations into the NVAHOF for participation and contributions that advanced aerospace and aviation from within the state of Nevada.

Dr. Darell Pepper, Ph.D., Editor-in-Chief, Computational Thermal Sciences, Professor of Mechanical Engineering, University of Nevada Las Vegas, Department of Mechanical Engineering and TD Barnes, Former Area 51 Special Projects and the current Exec Director Nevada Aerospace Hall of Fame

 

On April 16, 2019, NVAHOF Executive Director TD Barnes spoke as the plenary speaker before the American Society of Thermal and Fluids Engineers (ASTFE) at its 4TH Thermal and Fluids Engineering Conference at the Westin Las Vegas Hotel & Spa, Las Vegas, NV, USA. Following the banquet with over 500 attendees, Director Barnes spoke on the declassified CIA projects at Area 51 where both thermal and special fuels were pioneered for the Central Intelligence Agency’s Mach-3+ A-12, high-flying reconnaissance plane that preceded the Air Force’s SR-71.

Nevada, the Battleborn State, became the nation’s West Coast Line of Defense for the US Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps, and Coast Guard during World War II. NASA followed with two tracking stations along its High Range flight test corridor across Nevada and its nuclear rocket engine development at NRDS, the Nuclear Rocket Development Station at Jackass Flats. The Atomic Energy Commission established the Nevada Proving Grounds for atomic bomb testing and the Central Intelligence Agency created Area 51 for flight testing its spy planes and other black projects. 

Because so much remains unknown about Nevada’s unique aviation, and aerospace history, NVAHOF, through its student participant program is capturing from those who were there this fragile and elusive history through its oral history investigation, collection, and recordation program. The NVAHOF shares this knowledge and documentation as a public service to agencies, academia, historians, authors, media, and publications. Much of this oral history comes from external sources for which NVAHOF can not vouch for its accuracy.

NVAHOF is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit corporation dependent on private and corporate tax-deductible donations to finance its educational and annual induction of deserving individuals and organizations into the NVAHOF for participation and contributions that advanced aerospace and aviation from within the state of Nevada.



Nevada Aerospace Hall of Fame