Paul E.
Yelp
There's a reason the Flying Heritage Collection is unanimously given 5 star reviews by Yelpers. Well two reasons: 1) These are authentic, gorgeous, sometimes battle-proven World War II aircraft. 2) They can STILL fly and are flown on special times throughout the year! Trust me, this isn't your typical aviation museum.
Almost every major plane that served in World War II is on display or occasionally in the air in this museum. Whether it was Allied or Axis, both of these power's air forces are given an equal representation. Each aircraft has its own unique story and for those of you who are not aviation buffs, the Flying Heritage Collection has an excellent mix of media and displays on World War II.
Some examples of the aircraft they have here: Curtiss P-40C Tomahawk, Focke-Wulf FW 190 A-5, Hawker Hurricane Mk.XIIA, Me 163 Komet, Me Bf 109 E-3, Mitsubishi A6M3-22 Reisen Zero, Nakajima Ki-43(one of the very few left that is considered airworthy), North American B-25J Mitchell, North American P-51D Mustang(which was reunited with its original pilot after 58 years!), Po-2, Supermarine Spitfire Mk.Vc(a combat vet, part of "Free Czech" Squadron for RAF), Il-2M3 Shturmovik, and many others!
I'd give the Flying Heritage Collection a 6th star for educating visitors on the less well known but heroic history of the "Night Witches". The "Night Witches" were the all-female Russian pilots who flew Polikarpov Po-2 bombers(unsophisticated & slow yet reliable biplanes) against German military units from 1942 to the end of the war. The women of the 588th Night Bomber Regiment(aka 46th "Taman" Guards Night Bomber Aviation Regiment flew over 23,000 sorties, became the most highly decorated female unit in the Soviet Air Force and had 23 pilots receive the "Hero of the Soviet Union" title. There is a great video on them which tells one of the many courageous stories of the men and women who served in World War II.
Paul G. Allen, co-founder of Microsoft, established the Flying Heritage Collection during the late 90's and his passion for these planes really shows. The museum is well maintained and everything on display looks clean and orderly. It really is special to see something that was flown over 60 years ago taxiing on the runway then watch it soar above the clouds as it was in WW2 today.