Close
Boeing Images
Cart (0)
Login / Register
0
Selected
Invert selection
Deselect all
Deselect all
Click here to refresh results
Click here to refresh results
Go to Login page
Hide details
Conceptually similar
Model 377 Stratocruiser Manufacturing
377 Stratocruiser Manufacturing
Model 377 Stratocruiser Manufacturing
377 Stratocruiser Assembly Line
377 Stratocruiser
Model 377 Stratocruiser Nose Section Manufacturing
377 Stratocruiser Rollout
First Model 377 Stratocruiser Nose Section
Boeing 377 Stratocruiser Polishing
Lower Lobe of Nose Section for First Model 377 Stratocruiser
Rasing up a 377 Stratocruiser Tail at Boeing
377 Stratocruiser Rollout
YC-97 Fuselage Manufacturing
377 Stratocruiser Rollout with Tilted Tail
YC-97 Stratofreighter Manufacturing
YC-97 Stratofreighter Manufacturing
KC-97 Refueling Booms Manufacturing
YC-97 Under Construction in Plant 2 at Boeing Field
Boeing 377 Stratocruiser Rollout
First 377 Stratocruiser Rollout
Similar tones
View images with similar tones
Model 377 Stratocruiser Manufacturing
The Stratocruiser, Model 377, was the last of the Boeing propeller-powered luxury airliners. Known as the First Lady of the Airways, it first flew in 1947 as the elegant, civilian offspring of the C-97, a military freighter that carried soldiers and equipment during World War II. A circular stairway led from the cabin to a lower deck luxury lounge. As a sleeper, it held 28 upper- and lower-bunk units. The first Stratocruiser began service in 1949 between San Francisco to Honolulu. Only five years later, the Boeing Dash 80 prototype for the Model 707 made its first flight, and the Stratocruiser became obsolete. It found a new career as special transport for large sections of spacecraft. With its fuselage swollen by a superstructure, the once-elegant Stratocruiser became known as the Pregnant Guppy and, even larger, as the Super Guppy.
Add to lightbox
Add to cart
Unique identifier
BI212266
Boeing ID
p6803
Type
Image
Size
5100px × 3950px 19MB
License type
RM
Keywords
1940s
abundance
adults
airplanes
busy
commercial
commercial passenger planes
factories
factory workers
fuselages
ground shots
hangars
head on views
historic production status
interiors
left front views
male
manufacturing
monoplanes
nose sections
perspective lines
photos
propeller planes
repetition
scanned from film negative
several/groups
stairs, lifts and ladders
structural systems
tail rudders
tails
unpainted
viewed from above
vintage / retro
Restrictions