The Flying White House

Presidential airplanes, past and present.

  • By Rebecca Maksel
  • AirSpaceMag.com, November 06, 2008
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White House


Air Force One was in need of refurbishing by the time Richard Nixon took office in 1969, and the new president was greatly involved with the interior redesign, which took three months. Nixon placed an emphasis on privacy, doing away with the open floor plan favored by Lyndon Johnson, asking instead for a three-room suite for himself and his family that could be used as a combination office, lounge, and bedroom. The press corps was relegated to a small suite, which they shared with security.


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Thanks for the interesting article on presidential planes, well done. It is by accident I learned of President Franklin Roosevelt's trip to the Casablanca Conference by seaplane, and if I have done my homework correctly the first trip by airplane by a sitting president. My uncle was in World War 2 and I was reading a letter he had sent to his parents. He said he was preparing for an inspection and recalled that his previous inspection was by the president. I thought it a bit strange that the president would be inspecting a Navy unit in Brazil. After doing a little research I learned that Roosevelt's plane had landed at Natal on his trip home from the conference and had indeed inspected the VP-74 Squadron. According to squadron members he met with some of the officers following the inspection and talked to them about the war. The few remaining squadron members still take a great deal of pride that they were inspected by President Roosevelt. I found it fascinating that a small piece of American history would become a part of our family history.

When I was 18 years old, I had the priviledge of flying in the Sacred Cow as A Civil Air Patrol Cadet. Myself and five other cadets had won a trip to Mexico on the Cadet Exchange program in 1957. We flew from Andrews AFB to Mexico City. We were allowed to sit in the Presidential compartment with its bullet proof picture window and play cards with a deck provided by the sergeant who had been assigned to the plane from the beginning. The cards had the presidential seal on them. I don't recall whether we were shown the elevator, but it was such a pleasure to fly on the plane. You can probably verify my story through CAP records. Glad to hear the plane is now at the Air Force Museum. My CAP Squadron at Gentile AF Depot in Dayton had a small part in the initial fund-raising for the Museum.

By the way, our return from Mexico was on a C-47 flown by Air Force Reserve pilots who had never flown out of a 7,000-foot-high airport. They attempted to take off too soon, and our plane came up, dropped back down on the right wheel, bounced across the runway and hit a landing light with the left wheel, which shattered. We made it back into the air, then proceeded to Brownsville for customs, then on to Maxwell AFB for an overnite. Then we flew to Andrews, where I caught at C-119 to fly back to Wright-Patterson. I'd taken pictures throughout the trip. When we arrive at WPAFB, I snapped a picture of the C-119. An Air Policeman grabbed my camera and rolls of film and exposed them, scolding me for taking pictures in a classified area. Oh well.

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