Skip to content

Pender bi-plane flies north

N3N
plane
The N3N bi-plane was built by the U.S. Navy in 1942. It’s a rare model equipped to land on the water.

The late Bill Thompson’s yellow N3N bi-plane made its last flight out of Pender Harbour on June 25, but its flying days are far from over.

The N3N has made hundreds of flights for Pender festivals, events, ceremonies or simply evening jaunts into the sky.

“It was very significant to Pender Harbour. There was quite a crowd out to see it go,” Bill’s widow Wilma Thompson said. “It was a pretty emotional thing for me because we’ve had it for 25 years.”

Originally built as a training plane by the U.S. Navy in Philadelphia in 1942, the Thompsons purchased it in 1990. Bill spent the next 12 years rebuilding and caring for the plane, but most of all, flying the plane.

“Well, let’s put it this way: it was almost a nightly flight, and it never went up without a passenger,” Wilma said. “My husband took over 300 people for a ride. That was free gratis and for nothing. That wasn’t for hire – that was for pleasure.

“He never ever went up alone,” Wilma continued. “He spent too many years himself -– before he got his pilot’s licence – as a youngster wishing he could go for a ride in an airplane. I had a list so long I never got to the end of it. Everybody wanted to go.”

The bi-plane was purchased by Buffalo Joe McBryan, president of Buffalo Airways in Yellowknife, NWT.

“I didn’t buy it for resale, and I didn’t buy it for any other reason except that I always wanted a bi-plane,” McBryan said.

He found out about the airplane from tourists going through his hangar. A woman told him about the bi-plane and said that it was up for sale. Within a few days, McBryan had committed to buy it.

“So that’s really it, it’s moving to Yellowknife and it will live here forever,” McBryan said. “A lot of people buy these airplanes and restore them as war birds – but I’m not interested in the war. I’m more of a peace-peace, make love not war type guy. So I won’t be making it into a war bird. It will be just used to fly around.”

The N3N is being moved to Pitt Meadows to be serviced before making its way up north. When he was told about the significance of the N3N, McBryan made a standing invitation to the Pender Harbour community.

“It’s got a good home and they’re all welcome to come up here and visit her,” he said. “If they come up, I’ll take them for a ride in her.”