Experience the History of Aviation
Fantasy of Flight: An Attraction on a Higher Plane
Specials

Kermit Weeks

Click on any image below to view a larger version, or click on the link below to view the high resoluition version of the image.

« Back

Born in 1954, Kermit Weeks has been involved in aviation since his childhood. By 1977, Kermit had built the Just over one thousand men earned their pilot's wings at the all African-American Tuskegee Army Air Base in Alabama during WWII. Florida resident Dr. Yenwith Whitney (third from right) learns to fly the P-40 in early 1944.
Low-Res - 600px × 400px
Hi-Res - 3456px × 2304px
Low-Res - 600px × 464px
Hi-Res - 2595px × 2010px
Born in 1954, Kermit Weeks has been involved in aviation since his childhood. By 1977, Kermit had built the "Weeks Special," an aerobatic aircraft of his own design and qualified for the United States Aerobatics Team. The "Weeks Solution" biplane was Kermit Weeks' second aerobatic aircraft.
Weeks constantly seeks new ways to share his enthusiasm for aviation. His mission for Fantasy of Flight is to create experiences that will help visitors For Fantasy of Flight founder Kermit Weeks, the creation of his aviation-themed attraction was a natural extension of a lifelong, unbounded passion for aviation and aircraft.
Low-Res - 600px × 400px
Hi-Res - 3456px × 2304px
Low-Res - 477px × 600px
Hi-Res - 1100px × 1385px
Weeks constantly seeks new ways to share his enthusiasm for aviation. His mission for Fantasy of Flight is to create experiences that will help visitors "light that spark within" and "reach beyond themselves." For Fantasy of Flight founder Kermit Weeks, the creation of his aviation-themed attraction was a natural extension of a lifelong, unbounded passion for aviation and aircraft.