- Delta Heritage Museum
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Coordinates: 33°39′23″N 84°25′23″W / 33.656410°N 84.422927°W
Delta Heritage Museum Established 1995 Location 1060 Delta Boulevard
AtlantaType Aviation museum Website Delta Heritage Museum The Delta Heritage Museum is an aviation and corporate museum located in Atlanta, Georgia, United States. The museum is housed in two 1940s-era Delta Air Lines maintenance hangars, which were used until the 1960s when the Delta Technical Operations Center, formerly known as the Jet Base, was completed. The museum is a nonprofit organization and relies on volunteers, donations, special event rentals and Museum Store sales. The Delta Museum is considered an ongoing project and it collects various items year round.
Delta employee ID or prior arrangement is required to access the campus in which the museum is located.
Contents
Origins
The idea for a Delta museum originated when a group of retirees started a campaign to find one of Delta's Douglas DC-3's in 1990. After some searching, the employees struck gold when they found DL Ship 41, Delta's first DC-3 to carry passengers, in Puerto Rico performing cargo services. The group bought the plane from the cargo airline and the Delta Air Transport Heritage Museum was started. From 1993 to 1999, the plane was painstakingly restored to its 1940's condition by active and retired Delta mechanics. Ship 41 is considered the most perfectly restored passenger transport DC-3 in the world.[citation needed] In 2001, Delta Ship 41 was the winner of the first National Trust for Historic Preservation award presented to an aircraft.
On May 23, 1995, the Delta Air Transport Heritage Museum was incorporated under Georgia law as an independent nonprofit corporation, organized exclusively for public charitable uses and purposes and qualified under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.[1]
Historic Hangar 1
Hangar 1 houses a modified Lockheed L-1011 that was bought from the Walt Disney Corporation and cut down to just the cockpit and first class cabin. This particular L-1011 was the first L-1011 manufactured by Lockheed. The cockpit is fully lit with all controls still movable. The cabin is a museum store where Delta memorabilia can be purchased.
Also in Hangar One is the Monroe Cafe, a full scale replica of Delta's former Monroe, Louisiana headquarters. It served as Delta's headquarters from 1934 to 1941, when headquarters were moved to Atlanta. The "hub" of Hangar One is the Delta Archives. It houses more than 200,000 images, 1,000 films, one of the world's largest airline uniform collections, as well as an aviation reference library.
Hangar 1 also houses the museum's restored aircraft which includes:
- Ship 41, the prize of the Delta museum which is Delta's first DC-3 to carry Delta passengers.
- A 1931 Travel Air 6000, symbolizing the airline's first passenger aircraft.[2]
- Other exhibits
Historic Hangar 2
The Spirit of Delta is housed in Hangar 2. Delta Ship 102, the company's first Boeing 767-200 was acquired in 1982. It was paid for "by voluntary contributions from employees, retirees and Delta's community partners." The effort, called Project 767, was spearheaded by three Delta flight attendants to show the employees' appreciation to Delta for "solid management and strong leadership during the first years following airline deregulation."[citation needed] The aircraft was repainted in a commemorative paint scheme and toured the country to celebrate the airline's 75th anniversary in 2004.[3] The airplane remained the flagship of the Delta fleet until March 2006, when it was replaced with a 777-200 Delta Spirit as the flagship and donated by Delta on March 3, 2006 after a farewell tour around the United States.
Collections, exhibitions, and facilities
The Museum's collections and facilities include:
•The Spirit of Delta, Delta’s first 767. Bought by employees, retirees, and friends and donated to Delta in 1982. Interior contains two exhibitions.
•“Ship 41”, the first DC-3 to carry Delta passengers. Restored by volunteers and a core mechanic team, 1993-1999. Winner in 2001 of the first National Trust for Historic Preservation award presented to an aircraft.
•A 1931 Travel Air, symbolizing Delta's first passenger aircraft.
•A 1936 Stinson Reliant SE. Nicknamed the “Gull Wing,” this unique aircraft served as an instrument trainer for Northeast Airlines pilots in 1941-1942.
•Professionally managed archives of artifacts related to Delta and its ancestor airlines. The Archives maintains over 200,000 images, 1,000 films, and one of the world's largest airline uniform collections in a museum.
•Aviation reference library.
•Temporary exhibits.
•Replica of the first Delta station in Monroe, Louisiana.
•An 800-square-foot (74 m2) museum shop, housed in a redesigned section of the hull of the first L-1011 ever built.External links
References
Atlanta landmarks Museums Apex Museum · Atlanta Contemporary Art Center · Atlanta Cyclorama & Civil War Museum · Atlanta History Center · Callanwolde Fine Arts Center · Delta Heritage Museum · Fernbank Museum of Natural History · Fernbank Science Center · Hammonds House Museum · High Museum of Art · Imagine It! The Children's Museum of Atlanta · Jimmy Carter Library and Museum · Joel Chandler Harris House (Wren's Nest) · King Plow Arts Center · Margaret Mitchell House & Museum · Martin Luther King, Jr., National Historic Site · Michael C. Carlos Museum · Museum of Contemporary Art of Georgia · Museum of Design Atlanta · Rhodes Memorial Hall House Museum · Robert C. Williams Paper Museum · William Breman Jewish Heritage & Holocaust Museum · World of Coca-Cola
Skyscrapers Downtown 25 Park Place · 40 Marietta Street · 55 Marietta Street · 191 Peachtree Tower · 270 Peachtree Street · Atlanta Hilton · Briarcliff Hotel · Candler Building · Centennial Hill (55 Allen Plaza · Peachtree Summit · 30 Allen Plaza · TWELVE Centennial Park · 45 Allen Plaza/W Atlanta Downtown Hotel & Residences) · Centennial Tower · Coastal States Building · Equitable Building · Flatiron Building · Georgia Power · Georgian Terrace Hotel · Georgia-Pacific Tower · Healey Building · Hurt Building · Hyatt Regency Atlanta · J. Mack Robinson College of Business Administration Building · Marriott Marquis · One Park Tower · Peachtree Center (North Tower · South Tower · International Tower · Harris Tower · Marquis One · Marquis Two) · Rhodes-Haverty Building · Richard B. Russell Federal Building · Robert W. Woodruff Volunteer Service Center · Sam Nunn Atlanta Federal Center · Southern Bell Telephone Company Building · State of Georgia Building · SunTrust Plaza · The Metropolitan · Westin Peachtree Plaza Hotel · William-Oliver Building · Winecoff Hotel
Midtown 1010 Midtown · 1075 Peachtree · 1100 Peachtree · 1180 Peachtree · 1280 West · AT&T Midtown Center · Atlantic Center Plaza · Bank of America Plaza · The Campanile · Coca-Cola · Colony Square (Colony Square 100 · Colony Square 400 · W Atlanta-Midtown) · CNN Center · Four Seasons Hotel Atlanta/GLG Grand · Mayfair Condominiums · One Atlantic Center · One Georgia Center · Promenade II · The Proscenium · Spire · Viewpoint · Atlantic Station (171 17th Street · 201 17th Street · 271 17th Street · The Atlantic · TWELVE Atlantic Station)
Buckhead 2828 Peachtree · 3344 Peachtree · 3630 Peachtree · Atlanta Plaza · Buckhead Grand · Mansion on Peachtree · Paramount at Buckhead · Park Avenue Condominiums · Park Place · Realm · Resurgens Plaza · Terminus (Terminus 100 · Terminus 200 · 10 Terminus Place) · The Pinnacle · Tower Place
Perimeter Center Concourse Corporate Center V & VI (King & Queen towers) · Park Towers I & II · Three Ravinia Drive
Sites of Interest Commercial Atlantic Station · Briarcliff Plaza · Clermont Lounge · Lenox Square · Mary Mac's Tea Room · Phipps Plaza · Ponce City Market (Sears Building/City Hall East) · Underground Atlanta · The Varsity
Government Industrial DuPre Excelsior Mill (Masquerade) · Ford Factory · Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills · Georgia Railroad Freight Depot · King Plow Arts Center
Monuments & Memorials Atlanta from the Ashes · Carnegie Education Pavilion · Millennium Gate · Oakland Cemetery · Stone Mountain Confederate Memorial · World Athletes Monument
Parks & Nature Performing Arts Alliance Theatre · Atlanta Symphony Hall · Atlanta Civic Center · Buckhead Theatre · Center for Puppetry Arts · Eyedrum · Fox Theatre · King Plow Arts Center · Plaza Theatre · Shakespeare Tavern · The Masquerade · The Tabernacle · Tara Theatre · Variety Playhouse · Woodruff Arts Center
Residential (Former) Asa G. Candler, Jr. (Callanwolde) · Water T. Candler (Lullwater) · Joel Chandler Harris (Wren's Nest) · Edward H. Inman (Swan House) · Martin Luther King, Jr. · Ferdinand McMillan (The Castle) · Margaret Mitchell · Edward C. Peters (Ivy Hall) · Amos Giles Rhodes (Rhodes Hall) · Rufus M. Rose
Sports Former 688 Club · Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium · Atlantic Steel Mill · Coca-Cola Olympic City · DeGive's Opera House · 3rd Georgia Governor's Mansion (John H. James mansion) · Henry Grady Hotel · Kimball House · Loew's Grand Theatre · Masonic Temple · National Museum of Patriotism · Omni Coliseum · Piedmont Hotel · Ponce de Leon amusement park · Ponce de Leon Park (ballpark) · Ponce de Leon Springs · Rich's · Riverbend Apartments · Roxy Theatre · SciTrek · State Square · Terminal Station · Turner Broadcasting tower · Union Stations: 1853 · 1871 · 1930
Planned Atlanta Symphony Center · Center for Civil & Human Rights
Categories:- Delta Air Lines
- Aerospace museums in Georgia (U.S. state)
- Museums in Atlanta, Georgia
- Culture of Atlanta, Georgia
- Transportation museums in Georgia (U.S. state)
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