Blue Angels to return to Brunswick in September
The Navy s flight demonstration squadron, known for its aerial acrobatics, will be back for the first time since 2017.
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BRUNSWICK, ME – SEPTEMBER 5: The Blue Angels fly in a diamond formation during the Great State of Maine Airshow at Brunswick Landing in Brunswick, ME on Saturday, September 5, 2015. (Photo by Whitney Hayward/Staff Photographer
Photo by Whitney Hayward/Portland Press Herald file photo
The Blue Angels Navy flight demonstration team, known for its close formation flights and acrobatics, will return to Brunswick in September for the first time since 2017.
The Blue Angels have traditionally been the headlining attraction at the Great State of Maine Air Show that takes place about every other year at the former Brunswick Naval Air Station. The 2020 air show was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
10 years after the Navy, former base has bounced back
The Brunswick Naval Air Station had been part of life in Brunswick and Topsham for half a century, and a vital part of the local economy. Author: Don Carrigan Updated: 9:37 PM EDT May 26, 2021
BRUNSWICK, Maine People in Brunswick and Topsham remember it well. In 2005, the Navy
and the federal government sent a message they had been dreading: the Brunswick Naval Air Station would close.
But on May 31, 2011, the base officially closed. By that time, the Midcoast Regional Redevelopment Authority had been working for several years to plan for life after the Navy. Steve Levesque was leading that work and still is, but said he still recalls the harsh reality of the closing.
By Staff
Steve Levesque, longtime executive director of the Midcoast Regional Redevelopment Authority who led the transformation of Brunswick’s shuttered naval air station into a thriving business community, will retire Dec. 31.
Levesque, a 2018 Mainebiz Business Leader of the Year, will be succeeded by Kristine Logan, MRRA’s deputy director of innovation and development and director of the TechPlace business incubator at Brunswick Landing, according to a news release Thursday.
Logan will begin her new role in January 2022 and over the coming months will work with the MRRA board of trustees and staff to make the transition.
The change caps a 41-year career for Levesque, who has served as MRRA’s first and only executive director since its formation in 2008. He previously was executive director of the Brunswick Local Redevelopment Authority, which developed the master plan for the reuse of U.S. Naval Air Station Brunswick.