Gimli Glider museum commemorates 'amazing aviation story' - Action News
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Manitoba

Gimli Glider museum commemorates 'amazing aviation story'

An Air Canada Boeing 767 that ran out of fuel more than 12,000 metres above the ground and somehow landed without any casualties has had its story further cemented in history.

Glider ran out of fuel mid-air in 1983 but coasted to a landing on an abandoned air strip in Gimli, Man.

Gimli Glider museum vice-president Steve Bannister (left), president Barb Gluck (centre) and Gwen Harp held a soft opening for the new museum dedicated to the story of the glider landing in 1983. (Steve Bannister)

An Air Canada Boeing 767 that ran out of fuel more than 12,000 metres above the ground more than 30 years agoand somehow landed without any casualties has had its story further cemented in history.

"Everybody kind of knows the famous story of theGimliGlider, but up until now there's never been a museum or exhibit dedicated to this amazing aviation story," saidSteve Bannister.

He and a group of other organizers have put together a museum in the Manitoba Interlake town commemorating that story.

The front of plane that crashed on an airstrip. People next to race cars stand in front of it.
The Gimli Glider coasted to a landing on an abandoned air strip in Gimli more than 30 years ago. Everyone walked away unharmed. (Canadian Press/Winnipeg Free Press/Wayne Glowacki)

TheGimli Glider precariously coasted down from great heights and landed on an old runway in Gimil, about 85 kilometres north of Winnipeg, on July 23, 1983. A fuel miscalculation would've cost the crew and passengers their liveswere it not for the quick thinking and masterful piloting skills of Captain Robert Pearson.

Staff held a soft opening for the new museum on Friday and have already started to receive positive feedback.

"Folks are realizing it's a quality exhibit it's certainly worth the time and the effort," said Bannister, who is a retired Air Force pilot and flying instructor.

Walls in the exhibit are filled with photos of the plane and rescue crews from that fateful day more than 30 years ago.

Patrons can learn more about the Gimli Glider's unlikely landing through a series of displays at the museum. (Steve Bannister)

Patrons have a chance to step into a mock cockpit or have their pictures takenwithin a fuselage rebuilt from parts from the actual plane.

An interactive screen gives museum-goers a chance to watch and read the storiesof Gimli locals who were about town that day, and who recount what they saw.

The Gimli Glider exhibit will hold a grand opening on June 23. (Steve Bannister)

"This is the only place you can actually see and hear the local stories from the folks who were actually there," said Bannister.

A grand openingis planned for July 23, the anniversary of the landing, from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. CT.

The museum is located in the Lakeview Resort and Conference Centre in Gimli, near the First Avenue and Centre Street intersection.

"It's a good news aviation story ... it's one worth preserving," Bannister said.

Corrections

  • An earlier version of this story said the exhibit's grand opening is June 23. It's on July 23.
    Jun 15, 2017 10:44 AM CT

With files from Janice Grant