SAN DIEGO, CA USA — The San Diego Air & Space Museum turned 50 years old Friday and marked the occasion by releasing a guidebook on its history and collections.

The attraction opened in Balboa Park as the San Diego Aerospace Museum on Feb. 15, 1963, featuring a reproduction of the Navy’s first seaplane, the Curtiss A-1; a 1929 Fleet Model 7; the original rocket engine from the Bell X-1; and artifacts relating to aviation pioneer John J. Montgomery.

The institution moved to a larger, nearby facility a couple of years later as the number of exhibits grew, and was planning to move again in 1978 when the building was struck by fire. According to the museum, more than 50 aircraft and other exhibits were consumed by flames, but some archival material was saved.

The museum said it was discovered years later that the blaze was started by teenagers, who were not charged. Several days after the museum fire, an arsonist destroyed the Old Globe Theatre.

Then-Mayor Pete Wilson created a fund to pay for a rebuilding effort, which concluded with a reopening in the south end of the park in 1980. The museum said many San Diegans made donations to rebuild its collections and archives.

 

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San Diego Air & Space Museum celebrates 50th anniversary