Community NewsEvents Calendar

Air Force One Experience Now Open at National Harbor

Exhibition featuring former Pan Am Boeing-747, recreated as Air Force One, provides rare glimpse into presidential travel

The Boeing 747 is a complete replica of the real Air Force One. (Photo by Mary Wadland)

NATIONAL HARBOR, Nov. 8, 2018—After days of being hauled by barge from Rhode Island down the Atlantic Ocean, up the Chesapeake Bay and Potomac River, the Air Force One Experience is now open for visitors at National Harbor. The actual Boeing 747, a former Pan Am plane and then a cargo plane, has been transformed into a replica of the president’s aircraft. It is available for tours from 10 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. daily (801 National Harbor Blvd., National Harbor, Md. 20745,) until at least the first of next year. It may remain for a longer engagement.

The plane was transported by barge from New England. (Courtesy photo)

It took more than two years and 150 workers to transform the Boeing 747 and create the Air Force One Experience. The plane is approximately 63 feet tall (more than four stories high) and 232 feet long. It has a wing span of approximately 196 feet and weighs around 200 tons.

The plane was developed in Rhode Island and is the brainchild of The Children’s Democracy Project, a for-profit developed by a group of businessmen who wanted to find creative ways to bring learning alive for children and to educate them on history, policies, ideas and processes in American Democracy through unique, hands-on venues that are non-partisan. Visitors will be able to tour the plane and enjoy a 60-minute learning experience via audio tour as well as a once-in-a-lifetime chance to feel what it’s like to be president on Air Force One.

The audio tour is narrated by United States (ret.) Chief Master Sergeant Howie Franklin who was a steward on Air Force One for almost 20 years serving Presidents Ford, Reagan, Bush (both presidents) and Clinton. Franklin, and other stewards who flew on Air Force One also served as consultants in the authentic recreation of the plane. Franklin toured the plane after its arrival to National Harbor, along with two other former flight attendants Becky Schulz (the first woman flight attendant on Air Force One), and Henry Brown who served three presidents as a flight attendant on Air Force One. “The Air Force One Experience brought back so many memories for me,” said Schulz. “It is amazing what they’ve done here.”

Brown, Schulz and Franklin walked through the plane and remarked on how much it resembles the actual Air Force One. The three had not been together in the 20 years since they last flew on Air Force One.

The front of the plane’s presidential quarters has been restored. There’s an exhibit hall in the back of the plane where visitors can see the inner workings of a 747, including overhead cabling mechanisms that turn the plane and the actual “black box,” (orange on this plane.)  Since most U.S. airlines have retired the 747, known as the “Jumbo Jet” and “Queen of the Skies,” this is a rare glimpse into an icon for long-haul travel and aviation history as well as America’s flying White House.

While the exhibit has been well received by those interested in history as well as aviation, the experience is particularly recommended for children and discounted tickets are available for school groups. Tickets are $25.99 for adults, $15.99 for children ages 4 to 12 and $19.99 for seniors and military. Ticket pricing excludes tax.  A teacher’s guide is available on the Air Force One Experience website that can be downloaded and used in the classroom prior to a visit.

For more information, teacher’s guide or tickets, visit www.airforceoneexperience.com or call 844-302-1379.

Mary Wadland

Mary Wadland is the Publisher and Editor in Chief of The Zebra Press, founded by her in 2010. Originally from Delray Beach, Florida, Mary is a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Hollins College in Roanoke, VA and has lived and worked in the Alexandria publishing community since 1987.

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Back to top button