Boeing is bidding goodbye to the world’s first “jumbo jet” as the final 747 aircraft was delivered last month to Atlas Air some 50 years after the wide body made aviation history.
“Thousands of Boeing employees – including some of the so-called "Incredibles" who developed the jet in the 1960s – watched the last delivery of the historic plane, which brought air travel to the masses and represented an indelible slice of Americana,” reported Reuters on Jan. 31, 2023. “Known as the "Queen of the Skies," the 747 was the world's first twin-aisle jetliner, which Boeing designed and built in 28 months and Pan Am introduced in 1970.”
Among those bidding adieu to the final 747 was actor and pilot John Travolta, in person at the Seattle area manufacturing plant in Everett, Washington, and British billionaire and founder of Virgin Atlantic airline called the 747 “a wonderful beast.”
"It gave America and Boeing the leadership role in aviation," Branson told Reuters.
Boeing announced it was going to end the 747 lines in July 2020 with a production rate down to half an aircraft per month. Last year, according to Reuters, Boeing delivered five 747s total, a far cry from the jet’s heyday when Boeing delivered 70 of the popular aircraft in 1990.
“The last 747 rolled out on Dec. 7, capping the program at 1,574 total. The plane has since completed inspections and flight tests, flying to Portland over the holidays to get a paint job,” reported Reuters.
CNN reported that according to “aviation analytics firm Cirium at the end of 2022, only 44 passenger versions of the iconic plane are still in service. However, over 300 Boeing 747 freighters remain in use.”
Boeing says that the 747 is the result of the work of some 50,000 Boeing people called “The Incredibles.”
These mechanics, engineers, construction workers, and others spent 16 months in the 1960s to produce the first 747.
“The incentive for creating the giant 747 came from reductions in airfares, a surge in air-passenger traffic and increasingly crowded skies,” says Boeing’s history of the aircraft. “Following the loss of the competition for a gigantic military transport, the C-5A, Boeing set out to develop a large advanced commercial airplane to take advantage of the high-bypass engine technology developed for the C-5A. The design philosophy behind the 747 was to develop a completely new plane, and other than the engines, the designers purposefully avoided using any hardware developed for the C-5.”
The result was massive in all aspects:
The very first 747 rolled out of the Everett plant on September 30, 1968, with its maiden flight taking place on February 9, 1969. Certified later that year, it officially entered service with Pan Am on January 22, 1970.
The first ever airplane to get the “jumbo jet” moniker, the wide-body 747 made its mark over the last 50 years. Here are some of the highlights of the 747 throughout its history:
“The 747 went into service in the early 1970s, at a time of major societal change. It drove exponential growth in air travel, tourism, and connections between people around the world. In its first year, a fully-loaded 747 cut the cost of flying a passenger by half. Flying became instantly more accessible,” reported CNN.
NPR said that the Boeing 747 truly transformed the way we travel.
“The jumbo jet transformed an industry, bringing luxurious amenities and lengthy nonstop flights to the masses — all in a design that was both enormous and elegant,” said NPR.