The Evergreen Aviation & Space Museum is an independent, 501(c)(3) non-profit, aviation museum in McMinnville, Oregon. Its exhibits include the Hughes H-4 Hercules (Spruce Goose) and more than fifty military and civilian aircraft, unmanned aerial vehicles (drones), and spacecraft. The museum complex includes four main buildings: the original aviation exhibit hall, a large screen digital theater, a second exhibit hall focused on space technology, and a water park.

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Evergreen Aviation and Space Museum
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Established1991 (as the Evergreen Museum)
LocationMcMinnville, Oregon, United States
Coordinates45°12′14″N 123°8′36″W
TypeAerospace museum
FounderDelford M. Smith and Michael King Smith
DirectorBrandon Roben
Websiteevergreenmuseum.org
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The museum is located across the highway from the former headquarters of Evergreen International Aviation and across Oregon Route 18 from McMinnville Municipal Airport (KMMV).

Founded by the owner of Evergreen International Aviation, portions of the museum facilities were purchased out of bankruptcy liquidation in April 2020 by Oregon winery The Stoller Group, but the museum is still an independent, non-profit entity.

History

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First envisioned by Michael King Smith, a former captain in the United States Air Force and son of Evergreen International Aviation founder Delford M. Smith, the Evergreen Museum opened in 1991 with a small collection of vintage aircraft in a hangar at company headquarters.

In March 1990, The Walt Disney Company announced that it would close the Long Beach, California, exhibit of the Spruce Goose. The Aeroclub of Southern California began looking for a new home for the historic aircraft. 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.[1]

The disassembly of the aircraft began in August 1992. The parts were sent by ship up the Pacific Ocean, Columbia River, and Willamette River to Dayton where it was transferred to trucks and driven to Evergreen International Aviation. It arrived in February 1993.[2] For the next eight years, the plane went through detailed restoration. Volunteers removed all the paint, replaced worn parts, and repainted the entire aircraft, among many other tasks.[3] In September 2000, the main aircraft assemblies were complete. The fuselage, wings, and tail were transported across the highway and into the new museum building, still under construction. Over the next year, crews assembled the wings and tail to the fuselage. These were completed in time for the museum's 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 name of the museum has evolved. Initially known as the Evergreen Museum, it changed in 1994 to the Evergreen AirVenture Museum. In 1997, the facility was renamed the Captain Michael King Smith Evergreen Aviation Educational Center in memory of Smith, who died in an automobile accident in March 1995.

In September 2006, work began on the space museum building, a twin to the aviation museum. By this time, the museum had acquired several space-related items, and the original building was running out of room. The new building was completed in May 2008 and had its grand opening on June 6, 2008, exactly seven years after the aviation museum opened.[4] In 2009, the museum became an affiliate in the Smithsonian Affiliations program.[5]

Attempts to obtain a retired Space Shuttle were unsuccessful.[6]

Financial difficulties

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The museum's B-17G (S/N 44-83785) was acquired by the Collings Foundation.

Several of the aircraft on display at the museum were placed up for auction in February 2014 following the bankruptcy of Evergreen International Aviation.[7] By the following January, a bank was attempting to sell 15 aircraft that belonged to the museum founder.[8] A deal was reached four months later for the museum to purchase 25 aircraft from a bankrupt for-profit corporation with the assistance of the Collings Foundation and a developer from Maine named George Schott.[9][10] While the museum received 16 of these aircraft and a new lease on the aviation building, the space building and waterpark were listed in a foreclosure auction in November.[11] The two buildings were purchased by Jackson Family Wines in January 2016.[12] However, the Michael King Smith Foundation filed for bankruptcy four days later and attempted to block the sale.[13]

In July 2016, the space building and waterpark were purchased for $10.9 million by The Falls Event Center, a company owned by Steve Down. The deal allowed the museum to pay off its remaining debt. Plans at the time called for the construction of an adjacent hotel.[14] However, the FBI began investigating Down for fraud in October 2017. After two World War II fighter airplanes were sold despite the museum's protests, his companies failed to pay a lease and an additional two aircraft were used as collateral for a loan, the museum sued Down's companies.[15] Subsequently, the Falls Event Center filed for bankruptcy.[16]

Recovery

In April 2020, after being in official bankruptcy status four times in five years, the museum gained renewed financial stability when The Stoller Group, owner of vineyards in the area and a winery in nearby Dayton, purchased 285 acres (115 ha) of land that included a portion of the museum and the water park; the company immediately started repair and renovation work at the museum and water park, and announced plans to expand the 50-acre (20 ha) vineyard located on the open greenspace of the grounds.[17]

Facilities

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Martin Titan II SLV Space Launch Vehicle

As of 2019, two exhibit centers are open to the public: The original structure is the aviation center with the Spruce Goose as centerpiece. Other aircraft, spanning the entire history of aviation, are arranged in the building, some parked under the wings of the Spruce Goose or suspended from the ceiling.[citation needed]

The space flight center is in a building the same size as the aviation center. Because there are fewer space-related holdings, the center includes a large number of panels and other displays that chronicle the history of space flight. Visitors can operate flight simulators for landing the Space Shuttle as well as for docking a Gemini capsule and performing a Moon landing of the Lunar Excursion Module. The building also exhibits overflow holdings from the aviation center, usually the higher-performance jet aircraft.[citation needed]

Two of the main attractions of the space flight center are a Titan II SLV satellite booster rocket and a SR-71 Blackbird.[18] The Titan II sits upright in a specially constructed display extending two stories below the floor, in order to fit the 114 foot tall rocket inside the building. The exhibit includes a re-created Titan II SLV Launch Control Room outfitted with actual furnishings and equipment donated from Vandenberg Air Force Base.

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A T-55 tank at the museum

An F-15 Eagle is displayed on a pedestal in front of the former EIA headquarters across the highway from the museum. A bronze statue stands by on the pathway between the aviation and space museum. Both are marked in Smith's memory.[19]

A smaller building contains the Evergreen Digital theater featuring a seven-story wide by six-story tall screen and multi-channel surround sound.[citation needed]

A radio control air flight field is located behind the aviation center.[citation needed]

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Panorama of the museum, taken from under the wing of the Hughes H-4 Hercules

Wings and Waves Waterpark

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Exterior of the waterpark, showing the mounted Boeing 747-100

Wings & Waves Waterpark opened June 6, 2011.[20] The 71,350-square-foot (6,629 m2) waterpark, Oregon's largest, features 10 slides and a 91,703-gallon wave pool with the intent of tying into the educational focus of the Evergreen Museum Campus with its "Life Needs Water" interactive display in the H2O Children's Science Center.[21] The four big slides begin inside a retired Boeing 747-100 that sits atop the roof, 62 feet (19 m) above the splash landing. Additionally, across from the museum building is another Boeing 747, this one being a 747-200 delivered to Singapore Airlines in August 1973 as 9V-SIB. This aircraft would serve multiple other airlines until it was acquired by Evergreen International Airlines in 1995, where it would remain until it was retired and donated to the museum in 2013.

In April 2020, The Stoller Group purchased 285 acres of land near the museum and became owner of the museum buildings and water park, with plans to restore the water park and build a 90-room hotel.

Collection

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SR-71 instrument panel
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An SR-71 Blackbird under the wing of the Spruce Goose (taken before the SR-71 was moved to the new space building)

Aircraft

Also on display are many aircraft engines and helicopters, reflecting Evergreen Aviation's original helicopter fleet.

Spacecraft

  • Foton-6 Space Capsule
  • Martin Titan II SLV Space Launch Vehicle
    • This missile, Serial Number 66-4319 or B-108, is the last of the 108 Titan-II ICBMs to be fabricated. One of 14 Titan-IIs converted for science, weather, and military satellite launches, it is only one in the group not to be launched. The exhibit includes the Titan II launch control center equipment used in California for launching the Titan 23G.
  • Titan IV
    • One of only two remaining Titan IV launch vehicles. On outdoor display. The exhibit includes the core stages for Titan IVB #K-40 and some parts for the solid rocket motors.[26]
  • Mercury Space Capsule
  • NASA X-38 V-131R
  • PGM-11 Redstone
  • North American X-15 (painted with AF Ser. No. 56-6672). A full-scale wooden mockup of the X-15, it is displayed along with one of the rocket engines.
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90° panorama of the museum, including the Hughes H-4 Hercules, aka Spruce Goose

See also

References

Bibliography

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