When NAS Glenview closed in 1995, plans were made to redevelop the former property into the Glen Town Center.[1] The Glenview Hangar One Foundation was founded by A. C. Realie in 1996 to preserve the eponymous 180,000 sq ft (17,000 m2) hangar and turn it into a museum.[2][3][4] The foundation's efforts led to Hangar One and the former control tower being placed on the National Register of Historic Places in November 1998.[5][6] However, two years later, the group argued that the hangar should be removed as its historic integrity had been significantly compromised.[7] A large open area on the site of the former base was dedicated as Navy Park in October 2003.[8][9]
Establishment
The museum opened in a 2,800 sq ft (260 m2) store in the former base control tower in June 2004.[10] It was forced to close in March 2005 after the developer elected not to renew the one-year lease.[11][12] The museum moved to a nearby 900 sq ft (84 m2) space, where it reopened on 7 July 2006.[13][14]
In December 2012, a General Motors FM-2 Wildcat, BuNo 57039, was recovered from Lake Michigan. The group partnered with another organization, Bring It Home, Glenview, to advocate that it should be placed in the museum.[15][16][a]
A feasibility study was commissioned in June 2015 to evaluate the possibility of building a 16,000 sq ft (1,500 m2) facility at one of three locations.[14] To raise money for the new museum, the foundation produced a film about naval flight training in Lake Michigan during World War II that debuted in May 2016.[18][19] The study was completed in August 2018.[20] However, the Glenview Park Board rejected a proposal to build the museum in Gallery Park in October 2020.[21]
Exhibits
Exhibits at the museum include an R-2600 recovered from Lake Michigan, displays about George H. W. Bush and Butch O'Hare and a pew from the base chapel.[22]