Showing 1711 - 1720 of 1839

Christmas Greetings

December 24, 2010

Santa's Balloons and Arctic Airships

Story | From the Archives

Although the reindeer-powered sleigh is the form of transportation most usually associated with Santa Claus, the right jolly old elf displays an unexpected interest in lighter than air flight by launching festive fire balloons over the North Pole while a polar bear watches admiringly. Santa wasn't the last to attempt an LTA mission to the Pole, though - on May 11, 1926, the airship Norge took off from Spitsbergen, Norway. 

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Rutan Voyager

December 23, 2010

Rutan Voyager

Story

On December 23, 1986, nine days, three minutes, and 44 seconds after taking off, Dick Rutan and Jeana Yeager touched down at Edwards Air Force Base, CA, in the Rutan Voyager aircraft to finish the first flight around the world made without landing or refueling.

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Lunar Eclipse December 2010

December 21, 2010

Imaging the Lunar Eclipse

Story

I was pleasantly surprised when the clouds rolled out and the weather turned out to be favorable for the total lunar eclipse last night!

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Story Time

December 20, 2010

Welcoming our littlest visitors to the Air and Space Museum

Story | At the Museum

I was recently inspired by a fellow Smithsonian educator’s blog post at the National Museum of American History. Megan’s tips for bringing young children to the museum were so helpful that I wanted to join in the conversation with tips for bringing young children to the National Air and Space Museum.

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Eclipse Sequence

December 17, 2010

Total Lunar Eclipse

Story

The Moon is one of the most easily recognized celestial objects and arguably the easiest one to observe. It is simple to view the changing phases from day to day, with your naked eyes. Binoculars or a telescope will reveal countless craters, ancient lava flows, and other intriguing lunar features.

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Archives - Microfilm

December 15, 2010

Under the Lime-Green Leisure Suit

Story | From the Archives

Getting ready to move gives you a chance to pull all those old boxes out from the back corners of your closets.  You know what's in them - like that box with Uncle Bob's 1970s lime-green polyester leisure suit - but it's always good to double check these things.  It's no different when you're preparing to move an archival collection. 

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Curtiss-Wright Patent

December 10, 2010

The Curtiss-Wright Corporation Collection – Patent Files

Story | From the Archives

In 1929, the Curtiss Aeroplane and Motor Company merged with the Wright Aeronautical Corporation to form the Curtiss-Wright Corporation. The merger of these two companies created one of the largest aircraft manufacturers in the country, which held numerous patents for aircraft.

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Robert Hutchings Goddard

December 03, 2010

Robert Goddard and the Smithsonian

Story

Former Secretary of the Smithsonian, Charles Greeley Abbot helped get the Space Age under way. In late September 1916, he received a letter from Robert Hutchings Goddard. Four long paragraphs later, Goddard revealed that he had been investigating rocket propulsion.

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Staff Move <i>Helldiver</i> into Mary Baker Engen Restoration Hangar

November 24, 2010

First Aircraft Moves Into Udvar-Hazy Center Restoration Hangar

Story

This week, the Museum moved its first aircraft into the Mary Baker Engen Restoration Hanger in the new wing of the Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center in Chantilly, VA. The aircraft is the Curtiss SB2C Helldiver, the same type of aircraft flown by former Museum director, Don Engen during World War II.

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Thaddeus Lowe Balloon Reconnaissance at Battle of Fair Oaks

November 18, 2010

A New History of the Museum

Story

 

Built in 1918, the Aircraft Building housed most of the Museum's aviation collection for decades.  Taken in 1938, this photo also shows a tank and artillery piece displayed by the front door.

Featured in National Air and Space Museum: An Autobiography

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