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On a tour of the National Air and Space Museum, Secretary Wayne Clough (at left) and Director Jack Dailey pause in a gallery showcasing the Wright Flyer. On a tour of the National Air and Space Museum, Secretary Wayne Clough (at left) and Director Jack Dailey pause in a gallery showcasing the Wright Flyer.
(Eric Long)
  • History of Flight

In The Museum: The Secretary’s First Impressions

The Secretary’s first impressions

  • By Linda Shiner
  • Air & Space Magazine, January 01, 2009

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    On a recent visit to the National Air and Space Museum, new Smithsonian Secretary G. Wayne Clough called his first few months at the institution a “whirlwind.” Clough, a civil engineer, came to Washington, D.C., last July to begin his tenure as the Smithsonian Institution’s 12th Secretary. For the past 14 years, he had been president of the Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta.

    “The Smithsonian has so many moving parts,” said Clough. “I’ve made 25 visits to different parts of the Smithsonian and had a chance to see the people who make it work. And everywhere you go there’s always some surprise.” One of those surprises, Clough said, was learning of the impact the Museum’s Center for Earth and Planetary Studies (CEPS) is having on the travels of the NASA rovers Spirit and Opportunity, now in their fifth year of rolling around Mars. Accompanied by NASM director Jack Dailey, Clough observed images from both rovers that had just come in from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California. As one of the leaders of the group directing the rovers’ mission, CEPS chairman John Grant has participated in selecting many of the sites the rovers have investigated, and receives data from JPL daily.

    Clough and Dailey also paid a visit to the Museum’s Paul E. Garber Preservation, Restoration and Storage Facility in Maryland. Restorers there are readying air- and spacecraft for display at the Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center in nearby Virginia.

    “We keep getting more artifacts and less space,” remarked Dailey, “and even though we still have quite a bit of room out there [at Udvar-Hazy], when we complete the transfer, we’ll have airplanes and spacecraft remaining. Our plan is to make them available for loans to other museums. None of us can adequately display all that’s available, but we are partnered with museums throughout the country, and cooperatively we can get these treasures on view for people to see.”

    Dailey also pointed out that it’s not just the artifacts that are being moved to the Udvar-Hazy Center; the restoration work itself will be done there. For years, seeing the restorers at work had been a favorite reason for aviation fans to visit the Garber facility, but that space couldn’t accommodate as many people as walk through the museums. When a new restoration hangar is constructed at the Udvar-Hazy Center, all visitors will have the opportunity to watch craftspeople and restorers take apart the Museum’s famous machines and put them back together again.

    “But I’m gonna make a bet with you,” said Clough, “that some things will still be out at Garber after all is said and done. You need a kind of boneyard with an operation like this.”

    Like the construction of the first phase of the Udvar-Hazy Center, the new $74 million hangar, which will also include space for Museum archives and a conservation laboratory, is to be privately funded. Work began in October. The $311 million Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center, which opened in December 2003, was the largest construction project the Smithsonian had ever undertaken, and the first one funded entirely by private contributions. Those two construction projects and others at the Smithsonian depend on philanthropy, Clough noted, but there is also a critical role for the government to play.

    “Jack has been a wonderful fundraiser for new construction,” Clough said. “It’s tougher to support basic maintenance. That’s the job of the federal government.

    1 2

    On a recent visit to the National Air and Space Museum, new Smithsonian Secretary G. Wayne Clough called his first few months at the institution a “whirlwind.” Clough, a civil engineer, came to Washington, D.C., last July to begin his tenure as the Smithsonian Institution’s 12th Secretary. For the past 14 years, he had been president of the Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta.

    “The Smithsonian has so many moving parts,” said Clough. “I’ve made 25 visits to different parts of the Smithsonian and had a chance to see the people who make it work. And everywhere you go there’s always some surprise.” One of those surprises, Clough said, was learning of the impact the Museum’s Center for Earth and Planetary Studies (CEPS) is having on the travels of the NASA rovers Spirit and Opportunity, now in their fifth year of rolling around Mars. Accompanied by NASM director Jack Dailey, Clough observed images from both rovers that had just come in from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California. As one of the leaders of the group directing the rovers’ mission, CEPS chairman John Grant has participated in selecting many of the sites the rovers have investigated, and receives data from JPL daily.

    Clough and Dailey also paid a visit to the Museum’s Paul E. Garber Preservation, Restoration and Storage Facility in Maryland. Restorers there are readying air- and spacecraft for display at the Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center in nearby Virginia.

    “We keep getting more artifacts and less space,” remarked Dailey, “and even though we still have quite a bit of room out there [at Udvar-Hazy], when we complete the transfer, we’ll have airplanes and spacecraft remaining. Our plan is to make them available for loans to other museums. None of us can adequately display all that’s available, but we are partnered with museums throughout the country, and cooperatively we can get these treasures on view for people to see.”

    Dailey also pointed out that it’s not just the artifacts that are being moved to the Udvar-Hazy Center; the restoration work itself will be done there. For years, seeing the restorers at work had been a favorite reason for aviation fans to visit the Garber facility, but that space couldn’t accommodate as many people as walk through the museums. When a new restoration hangar is constructed at the Udvar-Hazy Center, all visitors will have the opportunity to watch craftspeople and restorers take apart the Museum’s famous machines and put them back together again.

    “But I’m gonna make a bet with you,” said Clough, “that some things will still be out at Garber after all is said and done. You need a kind of boneyard with an operation like this.”

    Like the construction of the first phase of the Udvar-Hazy Center, the new $74 million hangar, which will also include space for Museum archives and a conservation laboratory, is to be privately funded. Work began in October. The $311 million Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center, which opened in December 2003, was the largest construction project the Smithsonian had ever undertaken, and the first one funded entirely by private contributions. Those two construction projects and others at the Smithsonian depend on philanthropy, Clough noted, but there is also a critical role for the government to play.

    “Jack has been a wonderful fundraiser for new construction,” Clough said. “It’s tougher to support basic maintenance. That’s the job of the federal government.

    “One of the things that surprised me is something everybody else around here takes for granted,” he continued. “It’s the fact that these museums are open every day of the year but Christmas. And you have 24 million people tromping around through these buildings, and that is taking a toll on them. Universities have a toll as well, but we close down for periods between semesters specifically so we can get the buildings back in shape. We don’t have that kind of luxury here. So because we are serving the American people in significant ways, the government has an obligation to support that mission.”

    After his stop at the National Air and Space Museum, the new Secretary was headed to a meeting to establish a strategy for the many Smithsonian Institution Web sites. “We need to bring young people into these museums in a much bigger way than we’ve done in the past,” he said. “Some of that we’ll do with

    the Web.”

    Still, at the Udvar-Hazy Center, he couldn’t help noticing that a lot of high school kids were working as docents and helping to teach other students about the collection. “I think that’s really important,” he said. “A lot of the visitors to our museums are youngsters and they relate to youngsters.”

    One of the surprises Clough encountered during his travels around the Smithsonian was at the Udvar-Hazy Center, where he tried his hand at the Wright Model B simulator. He found out that the Model B was a lot harder to fly than it looks; his performance, he said, was not impressive. And another surprise: As he struggled with the controls, the person giving instructions to the one-time university president was a high school student.


     
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