Survivors
- Denmark
- F-100F GT-927 Denmark Flying Museum, Billund
- France
- F-100D 52736 is on display at the Musée de l'Air et de l'Espace, Paris / Le Bourget,
- Two French F-100s seen in Balbala wrecking yard, Djibouti, in May 2010.
- Germany
- French Air Force F-100D 42136 is displayed at the Schwäbisches Bauern Technical Museum, Eschach-Seifertshofen
- French Air Force F-100D 42185 is displayed at the Schwäbisches Bauern Technical Museum, Eschach-Seifertshofen
- F-100F 56-3944 of the USAF is on display at The Virtual Museum, Flugausstellung Leo Junior, Hermeskeil
- Netherlands
- F-100D 54-2265 to French AF. Returned to USAF, repainted in USAF markings and in 1976 to gate guardian at RAF Wethersfield, England. Removed 20 January 1988 and reported at the time to be destined for AMARC, to be held in storage on behalf of USAFM (now NMUSAF). A/c is now on display at Militaire Luchtvaartmuseum, Kamp van Zeist, Soesterberg, Netherlands, marked as 54-1871.
- Taiwan
- F-100A on display Chengkungling barrack in Central Taiwan. It was formally displayed at the National Taiwan University campus, Taipei.
- F-100A on display at the Chung Cheng Aviation Museum.
- Turkey
- F-100C 54-1766 (c/n 217-27) on display at the Turkish Air Force Aviation Museum, Etimesgut, Ankara.
- F-100C 54-2009/3-089 on display at the Istanbul Aviation Museum.
- F-100C 54-2013 (c/n 217-274) on display at Konya Air Force Base, Konya.
- F-100D E-245 on display at the Istanbul Aviation Museum.
- F-100D 16690 on at the Eskisehir Aviation Museum, Eskisehir.
- F-100D 55-2763 (c/n 224-30) on display at Diyarbakir Air Force Base, Diyarbakir.
- F-100F 56-3788/8-788 on display at the Istanbul Aviation Museum, Istanbul.
- United Kingdom
- F-100D 54-2165 Imperial War Museum, Duxford
- F-100D 54-2174 Midland Air Museum, Coventry
- F-100D 54-2196 Norfolk and Suffolk Aviation Museum, Bungay
- F-100D 54-2223 Newark Air Museum, Newark
- F-100D 54-2613 Dumfries and Galloway Aviation Museum, Dumfries
- F-100F 63938 formerly of the French Air Force was on display at the Lashenden Air Warfare Museum, Ashford, England, an aircraft accident at the museum damaged 938 and the remains will be shipped to the National Museum of the United States Air Force at Wright-Patterson AFB in Dayton, Ohio, USA.
- United States
- YF-100A 52-5755 is on display at Keesler AFB Air Park, Keesler AFB, Mississippi
- F-100A 52-5759 is on display at USAF History and Traditions Museum, Lackland AFB, Texas
- F-100A 52-5761 is on display at New England Air Museum, Bradley International Airport, Connecticut
- F-100A 53-1688 (N100X) is in storage at the Mojave California Airport.
- F-100C 53-1709 is displayed as F-100D 55-2879, Castle Air Museum (former Castle AFB), Atwater, California
- F-100C 53-1716 on display at the entrance to the 177th FW, Atlantic City International Airport, Egg Harbor TWP, New Jersey.
- F-100C 54-1752 is on display at Dyess Linear Air Park, Dyess AFB, Texas
- F-100C 54-1785 is on display at Prairie Aviation Museum in Bloomington, Illinois
- F-100C 54-1823 is on display at Pima Air & Space Museum (adjacent to Davis-Monthan AFB), Tucson, Arizona in the markings of the 4510th Combat Crew Training Wing, Luke AFB, Arizona, 1968.
- F-100C 54-1851 is on display at Museum of Aviation, Robins AFB, Georgia
- F-100C 54-1986 is on display at Air Force Armament Museum, Eglin AFB, Florida - displayed as F-100C 54-1954 as flown by local northwest Florida resident and Medal of Honor recipient, Colonel George Bud Day, USAF Ret
- F-100D 54-2145 is on display at Air Power Park near Langley AFB in Hampton, Virginia
- F-100D 54-2299 is on display at Joe Davies Heritage Airpark, Air Force Plant 42, Palmdale, California
- F-100D 55-0884 is on display at Rickenbacker ANGB, Ohio
- F-100D 55-3805 is on display at Bradley ANGB, Connecticut
- F-100F 56-0951 is on display at Davis-Monthan AFB Heritage Air Park, Arizona
- F-100D 56-2928 is on display at Dobbins AFB in Marietta, Georgia.
- F-100D 56-2940 is on display at Cannon AFB, New Mexico
- F-100D 56-2967 is on display at Myrtle Beach AFB Warrior Park at the former Myrtle Beach AFB, South Carolina.
- F-100D 56-2992 is on display at Carolinas Aviation Museum, Charlotte/Douglas International Airport, Charlotte, North Carolina.
- F-100D 56-3055 is on display at 162nd Fighter Wing, Tucson ANGB, Tucson International Airport, Tucson, Arizona
- F-100D 56-3081 is on display at MAPS Air Museum, Akron/Canton Airport Ohio (www.mapsairmuseum.org)
- F-100D 56-3154 is on display at Lone Star Flight Museum, Galveston, Texas.
- F-100D 56-3288 is on display at the Aerospace Museum of California, Sacramento, CA
- F-100D 56-3417, High Wire Mod, is on display at Wings Over the Rockies Air and Space Museum (former Lowry AFB), Denver, Colorado
- F-100D 56-3436 is on display at Maxwell AFB, Alabama
- F-100D 56-3440 is in storage at the Paul E. Garber Preservation, Restoration, and Storage Facility of the National Air and Space Museum, Suitland, Maryland
- F-100F 56-3812 is on display at Duncan Legion Park in Duncan, Arizona
- F-100F 56-3832 is on display at Evergreen Aviation and Space Museum, McMinnville, OR.
- F-100F 56-3837 is on display at National Museum of the United States Air Force, Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio
- F-100F 56-3844 is in flying condition and flies displays with the Collings Foundation, based in Houston, TX.
- F-100F 56-3894 is on display at Selfridge Air Museum at Selfridge ANGB, near Mount Clemens, Michigan.
- F-100F is on display in Riverside Park, Independence, Kansas
- F-100F GT-842 (N417FS) is in storage at the Mojave California Airport.
- F-100F GT-996 (N418FS) is in storage at the Mojave California Airport.
Read more about this topic: North American F-100 Super Sabre
Famous quotes containing the word survivors:
“I want to celebrate these elms which have been spared by the plague, these survivors of a once flourishing tribe commemorated by all the Elm Streets in America. But to celebrate them is to be silent about the people who sit and sleep underneath them, the homeless poor who are hauled away by the city like trash, except it has no place to dump them. To speak of one thing is to suppress another.”
—Lisel Mueller (b. 1924)
“I believe that all the survivors are mad. One time or another their madness will explode. You cannot absorb that much madness and not be influenced by it. That is why the children of survivors are so tragic. I see them in school. They dont know how to handle their parents. They see that their parents are traumatized: they scream and dont react normally.”
—Elie Wiesel (b. 1928)