World 40 Rarest Junior Wings
This article is a part of The Captain’s Log, Issue 40-4, Spring 2016
Written by Lane Kranz
To celebrate the Captain’s Log 40th Anniversary we have put together a list of the World’s 40 Rarest Junior Wings. I have collaborated with the world’s greatest junior wing collectors to assemble this list. Many thanks to Dave Cherkis, Bill Gawchik, Jose Gonzales, Cameron Fleming, and Bryan Mellon for sharing wings from their outstanding collections as well as their expertise. Together, the six of us voted on the Top 10 and we present this list to celebrate 40 Years of collecting. Also, a very honorable mention to long time collector, mentor, and friend Stan Baumwald for being the “godfather” of junior wings and his contributions, as well.
Collecting junior wings is certainly a ‘niche’ hobby. WAHS member Bryan Mellon shared his story on how he got started collecting junior wings. In 1980, Bryan was five years old and his family moved to Japan. He flew four different airlines between Richmond and Tokyo. At the end of the trip, he had four different junior wings (Eastern, Delta, Western, and Northwest) and he was hooked on collecting. Today, Bryan is a pilot for Alaska Airlines and he still has those original four wings from his trip.
My experience started in the early 1980s as a young teenager. I started collecting timetables, post cards, junior wings, and just about anything airline related. In 1985 I attended my first Airliner’s International convention in San Jose, California. I was in heaven. These were my kind of people! I was hooked. Over the next few years I began to realize that I needed to narrow my focus to junior wings and timetables. One story comes to mind from my early days as a junior wing collector. I was a college student in 1989 and I didn’t have much money. I ran into Stan Baumwald at an airliner show and he was selling a Texas International junior wing for $40. He told me it was really rare and hard to find, but $40 was just too much for my college student budget. I passed on that one. I spent the next 20 years regretting my decision as that wing is extremely rare and hard to find. I eventually found another one, but it cost me a lot more than forty bucks! I guess they call that perspective. Today, I’m a pilot for Delta Air Lines and collecting junior wings is still one of my greatest passions.
I realize this list is quite subjective and everyone will have their own opinion. However, the purpose of this list is to showcase the best of the best from the world’s greatest junior wing collectors. Here are the 40 Rarest
Junior Wings in the World:
Keep Collecting,
Lane
Tags: Aeroposta, Aeropostal, Air Florida, Air Panama, airlines, American Airlines, anniversary, Bahamasair, British Airways, BWIA, Capital Airlines, Eastern Airlines, El Al, featured, Hawaiian Airlines, Icelandair, Japana Airlines, junior wings, KLM, Metro International, Mexicana, Pacific Northern Airlines, Pan Am, Panagra, Philippine Airlines, SAM Columbia, SAS, Saudia, Scanair Sunjet, Tasman Empire Air Lines, Texas International, Trans Australia, Trans European Airlines, West Coast Airlines, wings, Zoom Airlines
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Michael Thompson
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Can anyone give a date for the issuing of the ANSETT ANA Junior Flying Club wings?
Thanks in advance
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Michael
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TAA
You don’t mention, the much rarer 50 hours Junior Flyer
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Fly the Branded Skies
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I thought I had finally crossed the Saudia wings off my list today until I actually looked at them and realized I’d instead managed to procure an entirely different (and older) set of wings. Which is great in a way. But it means the hunt continues… https://uploads.disquscdn.com/images/fb6881b782fc13c0eead0f093557ddd12b5c4df2d1efcd8e555f5ebe635032d7.jpg
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