Evergreen Aviation & Space Museum

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Evergreen Aviation and Space Museum
Established 1991 (as the Evergreen Museum)
Location McMinnville, Oregon, United States
Type Private: aerospace
Director Phil Jaeger
Website SpruceGoose.org

The Evergreen Aviation & Space Museum is an aviation museum which displays a number of military and civilian aircraft and spacecraft, most notably, the Hughes H-4 Hercules "Spruce Goose". The museum is located in McMinnville, Oregon, across the street from the headquarters of Evergreen International Aviation. Oregon Route 18 separates the museum from the company operations and McMinnville Municipal Airport. An IMAX theater opened in 2007, and a second exhibit hall focusing on the Titan II ICBM and space technology opened in 2008.

The H-4 Hercules
The H-4 Hercules

Contents

[edit] History

First envisioned by Capt. Michael King Smith, son of Evergreen International Aviation founder Delford Smith, the Evergreen Aviation and Space Museum is the realization of his dream. The museum first began with a small collection vintage aircraft on display in a hanger located at the headquarters and was called the Evergreen Museum. In March of 1990, the current owner of the Spruce Goose, the Disney Corporation announced that it was closing the exhibit located in Long Beach, California. The Aeroclub of Southern California was notified and they immediately began the search for a new home for the Spruce Goose. In 1992, the Evergreen Museum won the bid with a proposal to build a museum around the aircraft and feature it as a central exhibit.

The disassembly of the aircraft began in August of 1992. The plane was disassembly and shipped up the coast and up the Columbia River from Long Beach, CA to Portland, OR From there, it went down the Willamette River to Dayton, OR where it was transfered to trucks and driven Evergreen International Aviation. It arrived in February of 1993.

Evergreen Museum was renamed the Evergreen AirVenture Museum in 1994. In 1997, the name is again changed to The Captain Michael King Smith Evergreen Aviation Educational Center.

For the next 8 years, the plane went through a detailed restoration, where volunteers removed all the old paint and repainted the entire aircraft. This was only a small part of what was done as restoration.

In September of 2000, the main parts of the aircraft were completed. The fuselage, wings, and tail were all transported across the highway and into the new museum building, which was still being built at the time. For the next year, crews spent their time assembling the wings and tail to the fuselage. These were completed in time for the museums opening on June 6, 2001. The control surfaces (flaps, ailerons, rudder, and elevators) were assembled later. The last piece was put into place on December 7, 2001.

The Evergreen IMAX theater was completed in 2007, after much delay (initially, it was supposed to have been completed mid-late 2006).

Work began on the space museum building in September 2006. The building is identical to the aviation museum. It was completed in May of 2008 and had its grand opening on June 6, 2008, exactly 7 years after the aviation museum had its grand opening.

Michael K. Smith was killed in a car accident in 1995. The F-15 displayed on a pedestal in front of the EIA headquarters (across the highway from the museum) and a new bronze statue on the pathway between the aviation and space museum are in memory of Capt. Smith.

[edit] Key holdings

SR-71 instrument panel
SR-71 instrument panel
Panorama of the museum, taken from under the wing of the Hercules
Panorama of the museum, taken from under the wing of the Hercules

Also on display are many different aircraft engines.

The exhibit also includes many helicopters, reflecting Evergreen Aviation's original helicopter fleet.

[edit] Gallery

[edit] References

  1. ^ [1]]

[edit] External links

Coordinates: 45°12′15″N, 123°08′40″W

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