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Maynard
Cusworth
1992
Aviator of the Year

Originally from New York State, Maynard
Cusworth’s Air Force career spanned three decades. In 1966, he was
stationed at Shaw Air Force Base in Sumter, and, in 1972, he retired as
a Lt. Colonel.
For 19 years, Cusworth taught flight
instruction to hundreds of students. According to the FAA, 100 percent
of his students passed their aviation exams. He helped organize the
Jamil Flying Fezzes, a charitable flying group that transports children
to Shrine treatment facilities. For 10 years, he has flown more than 200
trips and logged 1,194 flying hours, contributing his time and talent to
those in need.
Still flying today, he has already
amassed more than 18,000 hours in military and general aviation flights.
He once said his flights for crippled or burned children were far more
meaningful to him than all his years in military service. In 1992,
Cusworth was named South Carolina Aviator of the Year.
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Special Note:
Maynard was the oldest pilot to ever land an airplane at
Wright Paterson AFB, last year, when he flew his Mooney
there for the 463rd Troop Carrier Wing Reunion, at 84 years
young.
He is now 85 and still passing his physicals and flight
checks. He retired after 28 years of active Air Force duty,
and then, 20 years as my chief pilot.
Jim Hamilton
08/30/2006 |
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October 8, 2004
Six–year–old burn victim thrives with
local Shriners’ help
For four years Darby Langley has gone to the
Shriners Burn Hospital in Cincinnati for treatment
By Natasha Whitling
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Darby and Tunie take flight out of Owens
Field in the Flying Fez for Darby’s
treatment at the Shriners Burns Hospital in
Cincinnati, Ohio. |
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As her plane flew 10,000 feet above the
Appalachian mountains, six–year–old Darby Langley curled up
for a quick nap on her mother’s lap. Darby and her mother,
Tunie, were on a mercy flight, soaring safely in the hands
of the Flying Fezzes. Their flight was one of over 500 mercy
flights out of Owens Field to Shriners’ hospitals across the
US and Canada in the past 10 years.
Pilots Durham Harrison and Maynard
Cusworth, both long time Shriners and members of the
Jamil Temple, were taking Darby for a check–up at the
Shriners Burns Hospital in Cincinnati, Ohio. The temple
purchased the Piper Seneca 2 plane for $35,000, and they
hold fundraisers and dinners to help cover the maintenance
costs. “Insurance alone is $7,000 a year,” Ron Griffin, a
Flying Fez in training, said. “But it’s worth it.”
 |
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Pilot Maynard Cusworth, Ron Griffin, Tunie
Langley, Darby Langley, and pilot Durham
Harrison in front of the Flying Fezzes
airplane |
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Darby was two years old when 39.5% of her
body was covered in third degree
burns as a result of a kitchen
accident. At that time, Darby’s family was living in
Gainesville FL. The burn hospital there told Tunie they were
not equipped to handle a case like Darby’s, and they
recommended the Shriners.
I said ‘whatever you have to do, as long
as you save her,’” Tunie said. “They wouldn’t even show me a
bill. A nurse told me they don’t have to be regulated by our
insurance company. There are no restrictions. If Darby needs
ten rolls of bandages, she’ll get it.”
Darby spent two months at the Burns
Hospital initially and has returned countless times for
therapy and reconstructive procedures. This trip she was
having one of her final consultations for a surgery that
would allow her to have hair. Darby’s injury had left her
without any hair on the left side of her head.
With the aid of a saline balloon, Darby
will be able to have a full head of hair. In May of this
year, the doctors inserted a ballon underneath the portion
of her scalp that had hair and have been slowly injecting
saline into the balloon in order to stretch her scalp enough
to allow them to pull the skin with the hair over the scars.
“I’m so excited,” Tunie said. “She’s such
a girlie girl. She likes me to curl her hair. Now she’ll
have enough for me to do it.” |
More information on the Jamil Flying
Fezzes
see Jim
Hamilton's page
or WLTX
Website
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