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[16] [17] The retired vehicles from the system are now on display at the Connecticut Trolley Museum in East Windsor, Connecticut. [18] In 1979, the Windsor Locks tornado ripped through the eastern portions of the airport. The New England Air Museum sustained some of the worst damage. It reopened in 1981.
In 1981, the first current building was built after a tornado destroyed the then Bradley Air Museum's previous outdoor location along Route 75 in 1979. The museum has since added a restoration hangar in 1989, a storage building in 1991, a military hangar in 1992, a 58th Bomb Wing Hangar in 2003, and a storage hangar in 2010.
The following places in Windsor Locks are on the National Register of Historic Places. David Pinney House and Barn – 58 West St. (added August 25, 1977) Enfield Falls Canal – along Connecticut River from Windsor Locks north to Suffield CT at a location directly across the Connecticut River from Thompsonville (added May 22, 1976)
The J. R. Montgomery Company Industrial Complex is a historic factory complex located on an island between the Enfield Falls Canal and the Connecticut River in Windsor Locks, Connecticut. It is next to the Windsor Locks Canal State Park Trail. [1] The site has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since 2017. [2]
The 103rd Airlift Wing (103 AW) is a unit of the Connecticut Air National Guard, stationed at Bradley Air National Guard Base at Bradley International Airport, Windsor Locks, Connecticut. If activated to federal service with the United States Air Force , the 103 AW is operationally-gained by the Air Mobility Command (AMC).
Windsor Locks station is an Amtrak and CT Rail train station in Windsor Locks, Connecticut, on the New Haven–Springfield Line. It is served by four Amtrak services - the Amtrak Hartford Line shuttles, Northeast Regional , Valley Flyer , and Vermonter - as well as CT Rail Hartford Line commuter rail trains.
The Yankee Terminal Radar Approach Control (Yankee TRACON, (FAA LID: Y90) is a terminal air traffic control facility located in Windsor Locks, Connecticut operated by the Federal Aviation Administration.
On October 2, 2019, a Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress privately owned by the Collings Foundation crashed at Bradley International Airport, Windsor Locks, Connecticut, United States. Seven of the thirteen people on board were killed, and the other six, as well as one person on the ground, were injured.