Santa Clara County, CA — The Moffett Field Historical Society is scheduled to reopen the Moffett Field Museum today, closed for repairs since late February.

The museum documents the history of the former Naval Air Station, its use as a training base during World War II and the role the military installation played during the Korean War, the Cold War and the years beyond.

Read more: https://www.losaltosonline.com/

Hangar_One_at_Moffett_Field_1963
This is a view of the huge dirigible hangar with doors open at both ends at the NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, California. Lockheed Missiles and Space Company under contract to the NASA-Marshall Space Flight Center was to use the hangar for construction and assembly of the nation’s first nuclear stage rocket engine. Airplanes are on the ground at right, and in the background is San Francisco Bay. The ready-made “factory” structure was erected in 1931-1933, to house the dirigible Macon, which crashed off the California coast in 1935. It has been used by the Navy for blimps and aircraft. The floor area 1,138 feet by 308 feet, covers over eight acres or enough to hold seven football fields. The height of the hangar is 198 feet, ample for the company to erect the RIET (Reactor-In-Flight Test) stage in an upright position. The program was eventually canceled.
Photo: NASA
Historic Moffett Field Museum Reopens

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