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James S.
McDonnell The history of the Boeing Company and the companies with which it shares a common heritage parallels the exciting history of humankind learning to fly. The men and women of the Boeing Company and the aircraft they have built from the first cloth-and-wood airplanes to today's sleekest fighters and jetliners have played a pivotal role in shaping the history of aerospace.
During the school year, an educational program on "The Mystery of Flight" is available by reservation to students. During the summer, the exhibit is open for public tours. Reservations are required for all visits to the Prologue Room.
Visitors can view
large-scale models (1/7-scale) of the F-15
Eagle, F/A-18 Hornet
and AH-64 Apache attack
helicopter. Wind-tunnel size (1/4-scale) models include commercial jetliners,
military transport aircraft and Air
Force One. Displays of rockets and missiles include a full-scale
model of a Harpoon radar-guided missile. At the exhibit's center are
full-size
engineering mockups of the Mercury and Gemini spacecraft that carried
America's first astronauts into space. Also on display are scale models
of the Space Shuttle and the International Space Station.
The James S. McDonnell
Prologue Room is named in tribute to "Mr. Mac" who founded the St. Louis-based
McDonnell Aircraft Co. in 1939. Often quoting Shakespeare's "what's
past is prologue," Mr. Mac believed we should honor and learn from our
past but not live in it.
Part of the Defense unit of The Boeing Company, the exhibit represents all of Boeing throughout history and is located on the lobby level of the Bldg. 100, adjacent to Lambert-St. Louis International Airport. June 2004 |