As the nation reflects on the 80th anniversary of the end of World War II, CAF Airbase Georgiaโone of the largest flying museums in the Southeast and a founding partner of the Georgia WWII Heritage Trailโis advancing one of its most ambitious restoration efforts: returning a rare P-47N Thunderbolt to flight.
Built in 1945, this P-47 served with the Puerto Rico Air National Guard and the Nicaraguan Air Force before its final flight in 2006. Airbase Georgia began a full restoration in 2022. With only about 13 airworthy Thunderbolts remaining nationwide and in England, the project represents a nationally significant contribution to preserving Americaโs aviation heritage while strengthening Georgiaโs leadership in WWII education and interpretation.
As a founding site of the Georgia WWII Heritage Trail, Airbase Georgia plays a central role in telling the aviation story of Georgiaโs wartime home front and ensuring that living history experiences remain accessible to residents, students, and visitors across the state.
โRestoring this P-47 is about honoring the men and women who built, maintained, and flew these aircraftโand ensuring future generations can learn from and be inspired by them,โ said Airbase Leader Joel Perkins. โEvery donation brings us one step closer to seeing this Thunderbolt roar back to life as a flying tribute to American innovation, service, and sacrifice.โ
Trail leadership underscored the statewide significance of the aircraftโs return to flight.
โThe Georgia WWII Heritage Trail was created to connect people with the stories, sacrifices, and innovations that shaped our state during the war,โ said Trail Chair Ed Coleman. โAirbase Georgiaโs restoration of the P-47 directly strengthens that mission. Once flying, this aircraft will not only preserve history, it will bring it to life for communities across Georgia.โ
Airbase Georgia is widely recognized across the Commemorative Air Force for undertaking historically significant restorations. Volunteers have returned multiple WWII aircraft to flightโincluding the SBD-5 Dauntless, P-63 Kingcobra, LT-6 Mosquito, and PT-19 Cornellโand are nearing completion on an N2S Stearman biplane. The P-47N, however, is the most complex and comprehensive restoration the all-volunteer unit has attempted.
Over the past three years, volunteers have documented thousands of components, repaired major structural elements, and fabricated intricate parts in collaboration with AirCorps Aviation, a nationally known leader in WWII aircraft restoration. Nearly $350,000 has already been invested by donors, bringing the aircraft to a pivotal phase of the project.
In 2026, the restoration team will focus on rebuilding the rudder assembly, restoring hydraulic systems, fabricating precision-machined fittings, and completing bellcrank mechanismsโcritical steps toward returning the aircraft to flight.
To support this work, Airbase Georgia is participating in the Commemorative Air Forceโs national โ12 Planes of Christmasโ campaign, seeking to raise $25,000 to fund essential systems work that will move the aircraft closer to airworthiness.
Perkins emphasized the projectโs educational impact:
โReturning the P-47 to flight is not only an engineering achievement; it is an investment in education and inspiration. Once airborne, the Thunderbolt will serve as a living classroomโconnecting students, families, and aviation enthusiasts to the people and stories that shaped World War II, and ensuring that the sights, sounds, and lessons of Americaโs aviation heritage remain alive for generations to come.โ
As part of the Georgia WWII Heritage Trail, the flying Thunderbolt will enhance the Trailโs statewide mission to connect Georgians with the wartime experiences, from the home front to the skies, that shaped the modern world. Its return to flight marks a unique opportunity for communities across the state to witness history in motion.
Donate today and help bring the P-47N Thunderbolt back to life: https://fundrazr.com/22eLrc
About the CAF Airbase Georgia
CAF Airbase Georgia, based in Peachtree City, Ga., was founded in 1987. The Airbase is one of the largest units of the Commemorative Air Force (CAF) and one of the largest WWII flying museums in the Southeast. The group maintains and flies seven vintage military aircraft including a P-51 Mustang, an FG-1D Corsair, an SBD Dauntless, an LT-6 Mosquito, a P-63A Kingcobra, a PT-19 Cornell and a T-34 Mentor. Under restoration are an N2S Stearman and P-47 Thunderbolt. The Airbase, composed of more than 300 volunteer members, is a founding partner of the Georgia WWII Heritage Trail launched in 2021. The Airbase is part of the CAF, a non-profit, tax-exempt organization that relies on contributions of time and funds to conduct its mission. For more information, go to https://airbasegeorgia.org/.








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