By Randy Malmstrom
Boeing Model 100 painted as a P-12 on static display at the Museum of Flight in Seattle. Photos courtesy of Don England.
Editor’s notes: This aircraft was originally constructed in 1929 as manufacturer’s number 1143 by Boeing as a Model 100, a civilian version of the F4B/P-12 fighter (like the F4B-1/-2 and P-12/P-12D models, the rear fuselages of the Boeing Model 100s were covered in fabric), being equipped with a Pratt & Whitney R-1340 Wasp radial engine. On July 1, 1929, it was delivered to the Pratt & Whitney aircraft engine company in Hartford, Connecticut, as N-number NX872H to be used as an engine testbed, where it was used to test the R-985 Wasp Junior, the R-1535 Twin Wasp Junior, and the R-1690 Hornet engines.

On September 27, 1933, the aircraft was purchased by air show pilot Milo Burcham, who would set a new flight record three months later, on December 29, 1933, by flying upside-down for 4 hours, 5 minutes, and 22 seconds, a record that stood for nearly 60 years until it was broken by Joann Osterud on July 24, 1991. Burcham called his Boeing “Blue Flash” and performed aerobatics at airshows and air races such as the National Air Races held in Cleveland, Ohio, and Los Angeles. Flown as NR872H, Burcham also made further modifications to the aircraft, such as fairing over the space between the landing gear V-struts and replacing the fabric covering of the rear fuselage frame with sheet metal panels. In addition to his airshow routines, Burcham flew the aircraft in movies such as Men with Wings, released in 1938.

In WWII, Burcham worked as chief engineering test pilot for Lockheed Aircraft and was the pilot who made the first flights of the Lockheed Constellation and the Lockheed XP-80 Shooting Star. Sadly, Burcham was killed on October 20, 1944, during a test flight of YP-80A 44–83025, when the aircraft’s engine flamed out on takeoff from Burbank Airport due to a failure in the main fuel pump.

By the end of WWII, Boeing Model 100 N872H was acquired by movie pilot Paul Mantz, who also acquired Boeing Model 100 N873H. N872H was damaged by the time Mantz bought it, and had it modified to resemble a two-seat Curtiss F8C Helldiver flown on the USS Saratoga in the 1949 Gary Cooper film Task Force. Paul Mantz later merged his operations with those of fellow pilot Frank Tallman to form Tallmantz Aviation, but after Mantz’s death in 1965 during a filming sequence for the movie “Flight of the Phoenix”, a large part of the aircraft collection accumulated by him and Tallman was auctioned off in 1968. Among the planes that were auctioned was Boeing Model 100 N872H, which was in need of restoration.

After passing through several owners, the aircraft was purchased in 1976 by Boeing chief test pilot Lew Wallick and Seattle-based attorney and pilot Bob Mucklestone. According to the November 1979 issue of EAA’s The Vintage Airplane, the aircraft was 85% complete when the two pilots bought it. The completion of the restoration was overseen by Orville Tosch of Aircraft Industries at Boeing Field (King County International Airport), Seattle.

The aircraft was issued the U.S. Army Air Corps serial number 29-354, which had been assigned to a P-12 of the 57th Service Squadron at Selfridge Field, Michigan, before it was lost in an accident over Lake Erie near Cleveland on September 1, 1931. The aircraft also has the insignia of the 95th Pursuit Squadron, known as the “Kicking Mules”. Wearing USAAC colors, the aircraft made its first post-restoration flight on September 19, 1977. After its restoration, Wallick flew the aircraft to the Fairchild Air Force Base Open-House and fly-ins held at Watsonville, California and Oshkosh, Wisconsin. At the time, the aircraft was the oldest Boeing-built airplane flying.

In 1987, Wallick and Mucklestone donated the Boeing Model 100 to the Museum of Flight in Seattle, where it remains on display in the museum’s Great Gallery to this day.
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Raised in Fullerton, California, Adam has earned a Bachelor's degree in History and is now pursuing a Master's in the same field. Fascinated by aviation history from a young age, he has visited numerous air museums across the United States, including the National Air and Space Museum and the San Diego Air and Space Museum. He volunteers at the Planes of Fame Air Museum in Chino as a docent and researcher, gaining hands-on experience with aircraft maintenance. Known for his encyclopedic knowledge of aviation history, he is particularly interested in the stories of individual aircraft and their postwar journeys. Active in online aviation communities, he shares his work widely and seeks further opportunities in the field.




























