Update (2/27/18): I put this diary up yesterday. This morning I found better photos of Queenie, the first jet Air Force One used by Presidents Eisenhower and Kennedy, substituting them for the original photos in the diary.

I'm a docent at Pima Air & Space Museum, where I conduct hour-long tram tours of 150 outdoor display aircraft. When welcoming visitors at the start of the tour, I ask if anyone wants to know more about a particular airplane. Nine times out of ten, the one people want to hear about is our former Air Force One, a VC-118 (Douglas DC-6) used by Presidents Kennedy and Johnson.

I wrote about the museum's presidential fleet aircraft in an earlier post, describing their history and that of other Air Force One aircraft. Since then I've learned more about these famous planes, in the process clarifying (and sometimes correcting) what I knew before.

I'll share that knowledge in this and future posts, but frankly, I'm mostly doing it for me. With so many airplanes to talk about in just one hour, I can only give a few seconds to each. When it comes to the Air Force One, I simplify the story and skip over details. Every now and then, though, a visitor will want to know the details, and I need to be sure I'm able to give the correct answer.

This is Pima Air & Space Museum's Air Force One:

VC-118A Liftmaster
VC-118 Liftmaster used as Air Force One by JFK & LBJ

Folklore has it this was JFK's favorite plane, despite having jet Air Force Ones at his disposal. I don't know if it really was. I do know the early presidential jets used by JFK and later LBJ needed long runways. The piston & prop powered VC-118 didn't, so it got a lot of use, not only for visits to American cities with small airports, but also for weekend trips home: Hyannisport for the Kennedys, Austin for the Johnsons.

Prior to the Kennedys, there was no standard paint scheme for presidential aircraft. Roosevelt's C-54, the Sacred Cow, was polished aluminum. Truman's VC-118, a plane similar to the one at Pima Air & Spece, had a fancy paint job with an eagle motif. Eisenhower went back to polished aluminum with his two VC-121 Lockheed Constellations, Columbine II and III.

VC-54 Sacred Cow
FDR's Sacred Cow

VC-118 Independence
Truman's Independence

VC-121 Columbine III
Ike's Columbine III

In the last year of Eisenhower's presidency, 1959, the USAF purchased three new Boeing 707-120s for what I'll call the presidential fleet (properly described as the USAF's 89th Special Airlift Wing, which provides airlift for the president, vice president, combat commanders, and other senior government officials). These three aircraft, designated VC-137As, were called Special Air Mission (SAM) 970, 971, and 972 (as a side note, SAM 971 is also on display at Pima Air & Space).

They were the first aircraft to wear this new USAF VIP livery:

vc137-1
VC-137A SAM 970 with original paint & markings as used by Eisenhower, 1959-60

Certainly, this was a substantially different look from the Air Force Ones we know today, which was introduced by the Kennedys in 1962.

The USAF didn't see the first three jets as presidential aircraft. They were meant to be general-purpose VIP transports. While they had executive seating and sophisticated communications equipment, they lacked other features the USAF wanted in its first jet age Air Force One. That airplane, an extended-range Boeing 707-353B, had been contracted for and was under construction, but would not be delivered until late 1962.

Regardless of USAF intentions, the first of the three 1959 VC-137s, SAM 970 (nicknamed "Queenie"), became the de facto "first jet Air Force One" when Eisenhower flew on it in August 1959. Ike used Queenie from then until he left office, and JFK used it up until October 1962, when the new 707-353B, the famous VC-137C known as SAM 26000, was delivered. At that point SAM 26000 became the official Air Force One aircraft and SAM 970 became a backup, remaining in the presidential fleet until 1996, transporting vice presidents and other high-ranking officials.

I love to tell museum visitors about the origin of the distinctive and universally-recognizable blue & white livery worn by Air Force One, starting with the story of the red & white paint on Queenie and its sister ships. This story too is a mixture of folklore and fact, but I'm getting closer to the facts. Every time a visitor asks me a question about the paint I do a little more research in order to give a better answer to the next visitor, and I'm at the point now where I think I have it pretty much straight.

Eisenhower was fine with Queenie's original livery and markings. Kennedy, though, was unhappy with its appearance (some historians say he thought the colors were "too imperial"). Jackie, presumably, didn't like it either. Nor did the new first family like its "U.S. Air Force" and "Military Air Transport Service" markings. Even before going to work on the exterior design of the new Air Force One to be delivered in 1962, they had the old markings removed from Queenie and its sister ships, replaced with a "United States of America" logo on the top of the fuselage and a prominent American flag on the tail, the better to represent the nation, not just the USAF.

BI24510
Queenie (SAM 970) with modified markings as used by JFK, 1961-62 (Boeing file photo)

Air Force One's blue & white livery, the distinctive design we know today, was created by American industrial designer Raymond Loewy (famous for the Studebaker Champion and Avanti, the Coca-Cola bottle, the paint scheme of the Greyhound Bus Scenicruiser, and the Lucky Strike logo). Some say Jackie hired Loewy, some say Loewy approached the White House on his own. From all I can put together, while Jackie was nominally in charge of designing the new Air Force One, and both the president and first lady were involved at all stages of the process, it was Loewy who created the exterior design. Jackie, to give her her due, did the creative work on the new jet's interior design.

Screen Shot 2018-02-25 at 10.12.08 AM
Early Raymond Loewy design submission

You can see that Loewy retained some red in his initial design. The USAF, fearful of potential mid-air collisions, wanted red markings to make the aircraft more visible in the air. It was JFK himself who insisted on getting rid of the red altogether. It was also JFK who suggested the font for the prominent United States of America lettering on top, one closely resembling that used in the header of the Declaration of Independence.

US-original-Declaration-1776
Original printing of the Declaration, printed July 4, 1776

Loewy's design, first seen on the new Air Force One delivered in October 1962, featured polished aluminum on the wings and lower fuselage; slate blue under the nose and on the engine nacelles; a gold stripe below the cabin windows; a darker shade of blue (cyan) above the cockpit, down the middle of the fuselage, and on the tail; white on top of the fuselage; and presidential seals on both sides of the nose.

SAM 26000 AF1
SAM 26000, the most famous Air Force One of them all

After the new Air Force One, SAM 26000, was fielded in October 1962, the older Air Force Ones—the VC-118 and Queenie—were repainted in the new livery. Loewy's design became the standard for subsequent Air Force Ones, including the VC-25 Boeing 747s in use today.

Air_Force_One_over_Mt._Rushmore
VC-25 SAM 28000

Although presidents can and do fly on other presidential fleet aircraft as the need arises, only those aircraft specifically designated for presidential travel wear the full Air Force One livery. Other aircraft in the presidential fleet, the ones used for general VIP travel, have similar but different paint, minus the two-tone blue and presidential seals.

SAM 26000
SAM 26000 in its post-Air Force One days, wearing a VIP transport paint scheme

No matter what airplane the president flies in, its call sign is Air Force One. There's a story there too, which I share with museum visitors. Back in the day, presidential aircraft used standard USAF call signs, an "Air Force" prefix followed by the aircraft tail number. Eisenhower's Columbine II, the Lockheed Connie he used during his first term in office, flew under the call sign "Air Force 8610." This was fine, so the story goes, until the day Ike and Air Force 8610 entered the same airspace as United Flight 8610, and an air traffic controller came up on the radio to ask which was which. A Secret Service officer flying with the president heard the radio call and became concerned. He shared his concern with Eisenhower's staff, and thus was born "Air Force One," a call sign that cannot be confused with any other.

Some kind of incident involving Air Force 8610 and United Flight 8610 did occur, and everyone agrees it led to the creation of the Air Force One callsign. Folklore comes in with the details. It either happened in the airspace over New York City, or somewhere over Florida, or over Virginia while Ike was flying to North Carolina to give a speech. It either happened in 1953 or 1954. The truth is out there somewhere. And I will eventually root it out!

I'll close with a bonus photo of the Kennedys disembarking from Queenie, the first jet Air Force One, in happier times, May of 1962.

jfk_queenie
VC-137B SAM 970, May 1962