Captain Sully discusses impact of retiring Charlotte museum visionary
Located on the campus of Charlotte Douglas International Airport, this modern-day Smithsonian affiliate has welcomed more than 60 thousand visitors since opening last summer.
'Passion in the job puts perfection in the work.' That quote by Aristotle is alive and well at the Sullenberger Aviation Museum. Case in point: Stephen Saucier.
You won't recognize the name or face because museum president Stephen Saucier works in the background, rolling up his sleeves, behind the scenes.
But you may recognize Captain C.B. 'Sully ' Sullenberger- best known for his actions as Captain of US Airways Flight 1549 — the iconic 'Miracle on the Hudson.' His aircraft has found a new home here- in the museum that bears his name, in the capable hands of Saucier. The plane is the crown jewel of notable aviation exhibits in the modern-day museum that aims to inspire, educate, and elevate the next generation of aviators and innovators.
'Stephen is wonderful. His passion is on par with ours. We're overjoyed. This exceeded our expectations,' praises Sullenberger about the Miracle on the Hudson exhibit Saucier helped create. He says he can't imagine anyone else other than Saucier being the shepherd of this important story both he and his wife Lorrie feel so dearly about.
Saucier, who worked closely with a dedicated team to make this happen says, 'I was honored and very respectful to make use of his name and tell his story and attract those audiences that can come and be part of this next generation.'
Captain Sully became the hero pilot behind the most successful ditching in modern aviation history — after a flock of geese hit his plane on departure from New York's LaGuardia Airport — knocking out both engines — leaving the powerless jet with just enough altitude and airspeed to glide to a safe landing in the icy Hudson River.
Remarkably, thanks to Sullenberger and his highly skilled flight crew, everyone on board survived. And thanks to the vision of Saucier and many others, the restored plane is not only surviving, but thriving on display in its final destination: a 35,000-square-foot state-of-the-art gallery, part of a 105,000-square-foot museum adjacent to Charlotte Douglas International Airport.
'What we like so much about Stephen, he treats it with the same care, the story, that we do… because of the lives involved, the fact that we were all able to survive… it would have been so tragic had anyone not. And Stephen gets that, he feels the same way we do,' Sullenberger continues.
For years the Airbus was displayed in a temporary exhibit in a borrowed hangar, without its own building, until being displaced in storage. In an attempt to rehome it, Saucier would lead a museum without walls- spearheading a $34 million capital campaign that would eventually manifest into this magnificent modern museum.
'I had many conversations with Captain Sullenberger and wife Lorrie about working together. We became good friends discussing how we could preserve the history of The Miracle on the Hudson — one of our country's most iconic aviation events, representing the indomitable human spirit,' Saucier says.
It's been said every job is a self-portrait of the person who did it. After eight years of autographing his work with excellence, Saucier is finally stepping down as president of the museum.
'I've been part of an incredible journey, an incredible group of people, a collective effort, and I just thought it was time for the next generation to take the museum to the next level,' he said.
While a new leader will soon take over, Saucier's passion will live on.
'I've literally wanted to fly since I was 5 years old, and I was fortunate to be able to do that. Stephen has that same passion, that same drive, the need to inspire, and that's what this is all about,' Sullenberger says.
Visit sullenbergeraviation.org to see the Miracle on the Hudson exhibit up close and personal.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Buzz Feed
2 days ago
- Buzz Feed
20 Kitchen Gadgets People Regret Buying
If Amazon sales have ever tempted you into buying new, seemingly convenient gadgets for your kitchen, this is your official sign to reconsider. Recently, I asked Tasty readers about the kitchen gadgets they regret buying the most, and I'm honestly taking notes. Ahead, I've rounded up 20 different appliances people wish they had never bought. Hopefully, this can save a few of you from buyer's remorse: "A vacuum marinating box. In theory, it makes marinating more efficient as the vacuum draws the marinade into the meat quickly. In practice, it's a pain to get set up, the pump gets lost in the cupboard, and it doesn't actually work as well as a good, old-fashioned plastic bag. I should have known there was a reason it was marked down from $35 to $5!" —Stephen, 33, Ohio "I have a potato chip maker that sits in my cabinet. It was cool the first and second time we made them, but honestly, they're not that good, and slicing the potatoes that thin is a pain in the butt. Maybe I'll wow my grandkids with it, but for now it's hiding up on the shelf." "Turkey baster. We got it for a turkey once and then never used it." —Anonymous "Many hyper-specific 'Make your own X!' gadgets are my family's main regrets. A SodaStream and ice cream-making attachment for our KitchenAid comes to mind. You can only use them for specific foods and recipes, and it's more of a hassle than it's worth, especially now that I've found homemade ice cream recipes that don't need a maker or mixer." "Why did I buy the sous vide gadgets? I have never used them." —wickedmatcha306 "My automatic can opener." "A knife set. Only use three to four, and the rest sit in the knife block." —Anonymous "I bought a food chopper for garlic and herbs, but it didn't do a good job, required just as much work and time, and was hard to clean." "I bought an egg cooker that I've only used once, which makes hard-boiled eggs without tons of water. The thing works and was only $10, but nothing prepares you for the horrible screeching sound it makes when the eggs are done. The instructions don't make any mention of it. The noise scared me and my cats to death! I promptly cleaned up, put it back in its box, and threw it into the furthest recesses of my cabinet, never to see the light of day again. Regardless of the convenience and price, that screeching sound just isn't worth it!" —fluffycactus311 "Microwave omelette maker. Useless. My omelette turned out like a piece of old leather, and I followed the instructions." "Waffle maker. It takes up so much space!" —Sandra, Instagram "I bought one of those breakfast sandwich makers. Total waste of money." "Pasta roller. Not the attachment for the KitchenAid mixer, a standalone pasta roller that you can clamp to a table or countertop to roll out lasagna, fettuccine, or linguine. I've had it for 20 years and haven't used it even once. Oh, I've thought about using it plenty of times, but it's so much easier just to use dried pasta or even to get fresh pasta from the Italian store down the street from me." —Aubrey W "I bought a specialty large colander that fits my Delta sink that has a ledge to place items on. It's huge. I never use it. It doesn't store well, but I'm afraid to throw it away because what if one day I have to make five boxes of spaghetti or something?" "I carried around an apple corer across the country and into a new house, and finally I realized I'm not gonna make apple pie if I haven't in the last 10 years..." —Robin, Instagram "Juice extractor. I hate the cleanup." "Peeler and garlic press. I prefer using a knife to peel carrots/potatoes or chop the garlic. I forgot that I have both of these." —Anonymous "Ravioli maker. I've never used it." "Spätzle maker. I've used it once." —Adrienne, Instagram "Cheese cutter — just use a knife." What else belongs on this list? Let me know in the comments or fill out the anonymous form below! Note: Responses have been edited for length/clarity.


New York Post
02-07-2025
- New York Post
Sinkhole in fashionable part of historic city uncovers massive medieval building
Archaeologists in a historic city recently came across the remnants of an expansive medieval hospital. The discovery was announced by the City of York Council on June 9. The ancient remains were found in a 'void,' or sinkhole, that had recently opened on the street of St Leonard's Place in York in the United Kingdom. 'The archaeological find was discovered as work was taking place to repair the sinkhole on St Leonard's Place,' the council said in a statement. 'The void, which is in the middle of the road outside York Theatre Royal, was made safe before contractors and archaeology teams began investigation works.' The find is believed to be the remnants of St. Leonard's Hospital — built between the 12th and 13th centuries. Pictures show ancient bricks hiding several inches beneath the street. 4 'The archaeological find was discovered as work was taking place to repair the sinkhole on St Leonard's Place,' the council said in a statement. Stephen – The hospital was 'one of the largest' in Northern England during the Middle Ages, the council said. The property originally stretched from York's Museum Gardens to the city's Theatre Royal, the council's statement noted. After the English Reformation, the area was used as a royal mint – earning the name 'Mint Yard.' 4 The find is believed to be the remnants of St. Leonard's Hospital — built between the 12th and 13th centuries. City of York Council 'Mint Yard [was] demolished several hundred years ago and a road made on top of it,' the statement added. By the 19th century, the city council said, the Mint Yard buildings were 'a warren of residencies, yards and stables and were demolished to make way [for] the new Georgian streetscape in 1836, as it became one of the most fashionable parts of the city at the time.' The council added, 'The demolished parts of the city walls were then used to create a base for their new road, which we now know as St Leonard's Place.' 4 The hospital was 'one of the largest' in Northern England during the Middle Ages, the council said. City of York Council Kate Ravilious, a member of the City of York Council, thanked the public for their patience during the archaeological work. 'We knew that there is a lot of complex archaeology in the area dating back to the Roman legionary fortress,' Ravilious said in a statement. 'Throughout the works, we have been [alert] to this while doing all we can to get off site as quickly as possible. However, these finds, while fascinating, have set our timescales back a bit.' 4 The council added, 'The demolished parts of the city walls were then used to create a base for their new road, which we now know as St Leonard's Place.' City of York Council The discovery comes over a month after experts found proof of a gladiatorial fight with a lion in the same English city. The findings came after experts analyzed a skeleton from a Roman cemetery outside of York. Experts said that gladiators' remains presented 'unusual lesions.' Fox News Digital reached out to the City of York Council, but did not immediately hear back.
Yahoo
30-06-2025
- Yahoo
I won the ‘orphan lottery' in Russia and Canada transformed my life: ‘If you hadn't been adopted, you'd be on the streets. Or dead.'
It wasn't until the lime-green S7 Airlines Airbus touched down on the sunbaked Siberian runway that it hit me, a strange, powerful feeling I couldn't shake. For the first time in my life, I felt something close to home. My story began at Baby House No. 1 in Novosibirsk, Russia, one of thousands of children left behind in the wake of the Soviet Union's collapse, a time when survival often meant giving up what mattered most. Yahoo News Canada presents 'My Canada," a series spotlighting Canadians — born-and-raised to brand new — sharing their views on the Canadian dream, national identity, and the triumphs and tribulations that come with life inside and outside these borders. In the early 1990s, international adoption became a growing conversation across Canada. Against all odds, I won what felt like the orphan lottery when a couple from British Columbia's Fraser Valley chose me to be their own. I was privileged to grow up on a farm in Chilliwack, surrounded by open fields, muddy boots and the kind of freedom most kids only dream about. I had a brother and sister adopted from Ukraine, and together with our cousins, we spent our days building forts in the back acreage, racing bikes down gravel paths and hiking up into the mountains to find secret lookouts perched high above the valley. I always knew I was adopted, but that knowledge carried a quiet weight. I often felt like an outsider — like I'd been plucked from one world and dropped over 8,000 kilometres away into another that didn't quite fit. Questions about my identity bubbled beneath the surface: Why was I given up? Did my 'real' family look like me? Did they ever think about me the way I thought about them? My adoptive family never shut down my questions. Instead, they listened with compassion and promised that one day, when I was ready, I could return to the place that had always whispered to a part of me they knew they couldn't reach. That day finally came when I turned 15-years-old. My father and I embarked on the long journey over to Russia on what was supposed to be a roots trip — a chance to see where I came from, to walk the streets of Novosibirsk and to visit the orphanage that once cradled my earliest days. I thought I would feel like a visitor. I was wrong. The moment the wheels touched the ground, a current of emotion surged through me. I didn't have memories of this place, but my body did. The air smelled different. The language sounded both familiar and foreign. And everywhere I looked, I saw children who could have been me — some with hopeful eyes, others already hardened by what they had seen. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Corné Van Hoepen (@cornevanhoepen) We visited the orphanage. It was quiet, timeworn and hauntingly familiar, as if the walls themselves remembered me. A caregiver named Ludmilla still knew my name. I had been known during my stay as Yura, derived from my birthname Yuri. She pointed to the small room where I used to sleep and said something I'll never forget: "You were lucky. So many never leave." That sentence lodged itself in my heart. For the first time, I truly understood what I had been given — not just a home, but a future. A chance. I saw how fragile that opportunity was, how easily my story could have been different. That trip didn't just show me where I came from; it rewired something inside me. It gave shape and meaning to the life I'd lived in Canada, filling in the blank spaces I hadn't even known were missing. My former caregiver didn't sugarcoat what my life would have looked like if I wasn't adopted. She looked me in the eye and said, matter-of-factly, 'If you hadn't been adopted, you'd be on the streets. Or dead.' The words hit harder than I expected. Not because they were cruel, but because I knew they were true. I stood there, in the building where my life had started, trying to picture the version of me who never left. The boy who aged out of the system unnoticed. Who maybe learned to survive, but never had the chance to thrive. It was a version of myself I could almost feel in the walls — a shadow life I'd narrowly escaped. I thought about my bedroom back home on the farm in Canada. A large, extended family who had embraced me with open arms. The quiet, everyday things I'd once taken for granted suddenly felt sacred. That moment cracked something open in me. Gratitude, grief, guilt — it all came rushing in at once. I realized then that my story wasn't just about where I came from. It was about what I did with the chance I'd been given. To me today, being Canadian means more than just citizenship. It means living with compassion, responsibility and a deep sense of purpose. I didn't just inherit a new country; I inherited a second chance at life. As an adoptee, I view everything I have — my education, my freedom, my family — as a gift that countless others never received. That truth fuels something in me: a drive to give back, to live meaningfully, and to make my life count not just for myself, but in honour of the life I could have lived. Canada gave me the space to become who I am, and now it's my turn to turn that privilege into purpose.