Stories of daring, stories of technological feats, stories of prevailing against the odds ... these are the stories we tell at the National Air and Space Museum. Dive in to the stories below to discover, learn, and be inspired. 

Showing 341 - 350 of 1678

December 07, 2021 Remembering Pearl Harbor Story

Glenn Lane told his incredible survival story to former Museum curator Jim Zimbelman who met him at and an airport by chance in 2007—he was returning from a reunion event at Pearl Harbor with a jacket that displayed the words 'USS Arizona Survivor.’ Read about the man that survived two battleships bombings in less than one hour.

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December 06, 2021 The NACA's Essential Role in Early Aircraft Technology Story

Congress created the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics, or NACA, in 1915 to supervise and direct American aeronautical research. Spurred by Smithsonian Secretary Charles D. Walcott, the NACA soon became the nation's preeminent aeronautical research organization and attracted some of the nation's most creative engineers. 

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December 03, 2021 “You Have Left Them Behind”: Jackie Cochran and the T-38 Talon Story | Air and Space Photos

Jackie Cochran’s record-setting T-38 Talon is now on display at the Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center. Discover the relationship shared between these two aviation icons.

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December 01, 2021 NASA's Role in the Jet Age Story

NASA is usually associated with spaceflight, but its first "A" stands for Aeronautics. Throughout the latter half of the 20th century, Dr. Richard T. Whitcomb of NASA led the development of several key technologies: area rule in the 1950s and '60s, supercritical wings in the 1970s, and winglets in the 1970s and '80s.

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December 01, 2021 Training for the Shuttle: From the Personal Papers of Sally Ride and David Brown Story | From the Archives

In the era of the Space Shuttle from the 1980s to the early 2010s, NASA astronauts would receive numerous information booklets and other written materials which would explain to them how to operate the Space Shuttle. The Museum's Archives holds two rich collections related to this intense technical training in the personal papers of Sally K. Ride and David M. Brown.

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November 30, 2021 Yesterday's Airports of Tomorrow Story

By 1940 the modern airport had come into being. Today's airports are basically similar, but over the years airport designers have had some interesting ideas when planning for the future of air travel. 

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November 29, 2021 Enos: The Forgotten Chimp Story

In October 1961, three chimpanzees were brought to Cape Canaveral to join two already there. One of the new arrivals was Enos, a native of Cameroon in west central Africa. Discover the story of the often forgotten chimp and his contribution to human space travel.

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November 28, 2021 Making the Modern Airliner Story

The mid-1930s were a difficult time for airlines. To survive in these challenging times, airlines needed bigger, better, and faster airplanes that could profitably fly passengers as well as mail. By the mid-1930s, the first modern, high-performance airliners were taking to the air. 

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November 26, 2021 Meet Members of the Ninety-Nines Story

In 1929, a group of 99 women pilots decided to form an organization for social, recruitment, and business purposes. Living in a society that limited women's social and economic independence, these group formed for women to mutually support each other in the aviation profession. Thus the Ninety-Nines were born.

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November 23, 2021 Columbia Comes Home Story | Air and Space Photos

With the most recent restoration efforts complete, Apollo 11 command module Columbia was carefully wrapped in multiple layers of protective cover as it prepared to leave the Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center to journey home. Director Chris Browne reflects on transporting Columbia to the Museum on the National Mall.

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