The George Bush Stearman
Thank you all again for the replies/feedback!
My initial interest in doing a repaint for the Vertigo Stearman was in making a repaint of the N2S-1 BuNo. 3347, as restored to full original factory specifications by AirCorps Aviation, owned/operated by Paul Ehlen. Fortunately, thanks to Robert41, I was able to get some great detail shots of the aircraft from Oshkosh 2015, and then back in October, I actually got to visit AirCorps Aviation, where the Stearman was undergoing its annual inspection, and I was able to photograph every last stencil and other detail I could find (such as the stenciled numbering system for the strut mountings). During most of the year, when not flying, the aircraft can be seen publicly displayed at the new Wings of the North Museum, at Flying Cloud Airport, in Eden Prairie, Minnesota (where Paul Ehlen also keeps his P-51D "Sierra Sue II" (the most period-authentic flying P-51D), his Craig Army Air Field AT-6D (the most period-authentic flying AT-6D), his TBM Avenger, and soon to be added, his F4U-4 Corsair). Having already made repaints of Ehlen's Mustang and T-6, by doing the Stearman too, I thought I'd be able to cover the full collection (only that it keeps getting bigger!).
This particular aircraft was assigned to Naval Air Station Minneapolis, which consisted of "A Base" Wold-Chamberlain Field (which is today KMSP-International, named after two Minnesota pilots killed in WWI) and "B Base" Fleming Field (the South St. Paul airport, named after a Navy pilot from South St. Paul who was posthumously awarded the congressional medal of honor for his actions in the Battle of Midway). One of the Naval aviators to train here during WWII was former president George H. W. Bush. His first introductory flight was in an NP-1, from Minneapolis, on November 21, 1942, and by February 9, 1943, he completed his primary flight training in Minneapolis, having logged 82.5 hours in that span of time and passed all checks with no extra time or rechecks.
(Some sources will only state that Bush trained at Wold-Chamberlain Field/Minneapolis, while some other sources state that he trained at Fleming Field - since it was all-encompassing, he could very well have flown from both locations. I grew up visiting Fleming Field just about every weekend, which is also where the Minnesota Wing of the Commemorative Air Force is based (with their B-25 and other WWII warbirds), and being told as a small child that a former president trained there during WWII, only added to the lore/attraction.)
One of the aircraft he flew during that time was Stearman 3347. George H. W. Bush flew this aircraft on January 28, 1943, and again on February 5th, 1943. This span of time took his open-cockpit flight training right through much of the coldest portion of a Minnesota winter - the average temperature on January 28, 1943 was only 16-degrees Fahrenheit. Two other Stearmans he flew during his flight training are on display at the Naval Aviation Museum in Pensacola and at the Pearl Harbor National WWII Museum. (George H. W. Bush logbook scans courtesy of AirCorps Aviation)