PORTSMOUTH Up to 40,000 people or more are expected each day of the Thunder Over New Hampshire air show on Sept. 11 and 12 at the Portsmouth International Airport at Pease.
The U.S. Air Force Thunderbirds are the featured attraction over the two-day event that is being put on by the New Hampshire Air National Guard at the 157th Air Refueling Wing located at the airport. The gates each day at the base will open at 9 a.m. and close at 5 p.m.
The Thunderbirds last visited Pease in September 2011.
Here’s what you need to know in making plans to attend:
By Senior Master Sgt. Timm Huffman, 157th Air Refueling Wing / Published May 16, 2021
NH Adjutant Gen. David Mikolaities passes the organizational flag to incoming commander of the NH Air National Guard, Brig. Gen. Jed French, at a change of command ceremony May 15 at Pease Air National Guard Base. French assumed command from outgoing commander, Brig. Gen. Laurie Farris, who was then promoted to major general as assistant to the commander of Air Mobility Command at Scott Air Force Base, Ill. Looking on is State Command Chief Master Sgt. John Symington. Photo by Staff Sgt. Charles Johnston, NHNG Deputy State PAO.
Newly promoted Maj. Gen. Laurie Farris children, Drew and Taylor, pin stars to her uniform at a promotion ceremony held May 15 at Pease Air National Guard Base. Farris is assuming a position as the assistant to the commander of Air Mobility Command, Scott Air Force Base, Ill. Photo by Staff Sgt. Charles Johnston, NHNG Deputy State PAO.
By SHAWNE WICKHAM | The New Hampshire Union Leader | Published: April 25, 2021 (Tribune News Service) The Thunderbirds are coming to New Hampshire in September, when Pease Air National Guard Base hosts its first air show in more than a decade. Landing the U.S. Air Force s elite jet demonstration team means submitting a request two years in advance, accepting whatever date the Thunderbirds offer, and building an air show around them, explained Major Shannon Van Splunder, the air show director. Not everyone who puts in gets them, she said. It s a competition. You have to write up a justification; you ve got to show you re really serious about putting on an air show.
Many National Guard members who supported COVID-19 response efforts in 2020 spent much of the year conducting tests, sanitizing facilities, providing logistical support and delivering meals and personal protective equipment, Air Force Master Sgt. Erich B. Smith reported.
Now, the Guard can add another mission to a fight that is approaching the one-year mark: supporting vaccinations.
As early as mid-December, select Guard units were preparing to support local health officials by collecting, securing, transporting and –when requested – administering COVID-19 vaccinations.
“We’ve been able to rotate people through very regularly, very easily,” said Sgt. 1st Class Jennifer Boisvert, with the New Hampshire Army National Guard and a noncommissioned officer in charge at one of the sites. “From the time you drive in, to the time you get your vaccination, you’re probably only here for about 20 minutes.”
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