ames 
      Smith McDonnell was the fourth child of a cotton grower in Little Rock, 
      Arkansas. Born on April 9, 1899, he graduated from high school in 1917 and 
      served briefly in the Army. He studied physics at Princeton University, 
      where he flew a plane for the first time. After graduating from Princeton, 
      he took graduate courses in aeronautical engineering at the Massachusetts 
      Institute of Technology then joined the Commissioned Reserve of the U.S. 
      Army Air Service to become a military pilot.
      He spent one year in the 
      Army and then went job-hunting. His first professional job was as an 
      aeronautical engineer and pilot for the Huff-Daland Airplane Company in 
      Ogdenburg, New York. Over the next 15 years, he gained valuable experience 
      while he worked for eight different companies, including Consolidated 
      Aircraft Company, Stout Metal Airplane Company, and Hamilton Aero 
      Manufacturing Company. He was involved in the design of the 3-AT Trimotor 
      at Stout and was responsible for designing the series of monoplanes for 
      Hamilton that resulted in the H-45 and H-47 metal transports.
      In April 1927, he heard 
      about a competition offered by the Guggenheim Foundation for the design of 
      a safe, light, training aircraft. The next year, McDonnell and two 
      colleagues, Constantine Zakhartchenko and James Cowling, decided to leave 
      Hamilton, which was being absorbed by the United Aircraft and 
      Transportation Corporation, and organize J.S. McDonnell Jr. & Associates. 
      The three entered the "Doodlebug" in the competition, but it didn't win, 
      and the hard economic times of the Great Depression kept it out of 
      production.
      In 1931 McDonnell joined 
      the Great Lakes Aircraft Corporation briefly and then moved to Glenn 
      Martin's company in Baltimore, Maryland, where he became Chief Engineer 
      for Landplanes. He worked on the B-10/B-12 series there as well as other 
      planes for the export market.
      But he still wanted his 
      own company, and in 1938, he resigned from Martin, managed to find 
      funding, and on July 6, 1939, incorporated the McDonnell Aircraft 
      Corporation in the State of Maryland.
      It did not have a 
      promising start. The company rented quarters next to Lambert Field in St. 
      Louis, Missouri, and from there, submitted numerous proposals to the Army 
      and Navy. But business was extremely poor the first year, and the company 
      lost money. The United States, however, was beginning to prepare for war, 
      and in September 1940, McDonnell Aircraft received its first military 
      engineering contract. The company spent most of the war years 
      manufacturing parts for the various aircraft being produced by other 
      manufacturers as well as building some training aircraft. Its contract for 
      the XP-67, which looked promising, was cancelled when the prototype didn't 
      perform as well as expected.
      McDonnell engineers were 
      interested in applying jet propulsion to combat aircraft and, since most 
      of the more established Navy contractors were busy with production 
      aircraft, the Bureau of Aeronautics chose McDonnell to develop a 
      jet-powered, carrier-borne fighter. This plane, the XFD-1, became, on July 
      21, 1946, the first jet fighter to take off from and land on the deck of 
      an aircraft carrier.
      Helicopters also held 
      interest for McDonnell and the company began in June 1943 to study the 
      design and construction of rotors. An award to construct the first 
      twin-engine/twin-rotor helicopter, the McDonnell XHJD-1, came on May 15, 
      1944. McDonnell also acquired control of the Platt-Le Page Aircraft 
      Company, which held an Army contract to build the XR-1 helicopter. But 
      Platt closed and none of its innovative rotary aircraft were produced.
      On March 7, 1945, the 
      company received its first major production contract—for 100 FH-1 
      Phantoms. A few days later, the Navy ordered a second, more advanced 
      prototype, the XF2D-1. But the war's end reduced the number of FH-1 
      Phantoms to 60 as well as ending most of the work McDonnell had been doing 
      for other aircraft companies. These events, along with the closing of 
      Platt-Le Page, led to a financial loss in 1946.
      The company, however, 
      became profitable again the next year with the production of the F2H 
      Banshee, development work on two escort jet fighters—the XF-85 Goblin and 
      XF-88 Voodoo—for the U.S. Army Air Force/U.S. Air Force, and more 
      helicopter work. The F2H-2s became the first McDonnell military aircraft 
      to see action when they started serving in the Korean War.
      McDonnell continued to 
      grow and in July 1951, bought its own plant at Lambert Field. The early 
      1950s also saw the ordering of the first McDonnell aircraft to be built in 
      quantity for the U.S. Air Force—the F-102. The company reached a 
      significant milestone in December 1953 when it delivered its 1,000th 
      aircraft.
      In 1953, McDonnell also 
      received the contract that would lead to production of several thousand 
      F-4 Phantom II fighters, the single most significant fighter built by 
      McDonnell and one of the legendary aircraft of the twentieth century. 
      Production began in October 1954, and the Mach 2 fighter made its first 
      flight as a Navy interceptor on May 27, 1958, under the F-110 "Spectre" 
      designation. A superior plane, the Phantom made McDonnell one of the 
      world's leading aircraft companies, with more than 5,000 being built for 
      the United States and foreign nations before production ended in 1979.
      During the second half of 
      the 1950s, the company concentrated on producing F3H Demons and F-101 
      Voodoos. The first flight of the Phantom II prototype took place on May 
      28, 1958. The company also received its first export contract, providing 
      F2Hs for the Royal Canadian Navy.
      McDonnell was also 
      interested in missiles, and it had received a Navy contract in 1944 for a 
      radio-controlled device, the KUD-1 Gargoyle. A number of contracts for 
      missiles followed, including the Talos surface-to-air missile, the GAM-72 
      Quail decoy, and the MAW anti-tank missile. The company also conducted 
      research in the fields of hypersonic flight and re-entry vehicles. 
      
      Its crowning achievement 
      was its selection on January 12, 1959 by the National Aeronautics and 
      Space Administration to produce the Mercury spacecraft, the first U.S. 
      piloted orbital spacecraft. The first Mercury spacecraft, called 
      Freedom 7, lifted into space on May 5, 1961, with Alan Shepard aboard. 
      The program included two suborbital missions and four orbital flights. 
      McDonnell also produced the follow-on Gemini capsule, a two-person 
      spacecraft that was 50 per cent larger than the earlier capsules. Ten 
      successful missions were flown, including the world's first space 
      rendezvous and the first space docking. McDonnell was also chosen in 1965 
      by the Air Force to develop the Manned Orbiting Laboratory, which was 
      cancelled in 1969.
      In light of the company's 
      move into the space field as well as its diversification into other 
      business areas, its shareholders voted in 1966 to change the company's 
      name to the McDonnell Company.
      The company's sole 
      reliance on military business, however, led to some uneasiness among 
      management about its future prospects. In 1963, James McDonnell had 
      attempted unsuccessfully to acquire control of Douglas Aircraft. But in 
      1966, Douglas was experiencing a serious financial crisis and needed cash 
      desperately. McDonnell and some of his company officers also held stock in 
      Douglas, which gave it a strong bargaining position. McDonnell offered to 
      buy Douglas stock, which allowed Douglas to obtain some much-needed cash 
      to continue operations. He also offered to keep Douglas' officers on 
      board, including Donald Douglas, Sr. and his son, Donald Douglas, Jr. 
      Thus, stockholders of both companies accepted the union, the government 
      approved the merger, and on April 28, 1967, McDonnell Douglas Corporation 
      began operations.
      McDonnell Douglas 
      Corporation
      
      McDonnell Douglas Corporation (MDC) was one of the most dominant aerospace 
      companies in the world. It began operations on April 28, 1967, when 
      Douglas Aircraft Company merged with the McDonnell Company. The merger was 
      essentially a takeover by McDonnell of the financially troubled Douglas, 
      with James McDonnell as chairman. The merged company's products included 
      military and commercial aircraft, spacecraft and boosters, missiles, data 
      processing services, and electronics products. At the time of the merger, 
      it had over 140,000 employees. The company existed until another aerospace 
      giant, Boeing, acquired it in 1996.
      MDC 
      became the fourth largest U.S. plane builder, after Boeing, North 
      American, and Lockheed. It had two main components: Douglas Aircraft 
      Company in California included the Aircraft and the Missiles and Space 
      groups and the McDonnell Company based in St. Louis, Missouri. 
      After 
      the merger, MDC's first major project was its DC-10 wide-body airliner. 
      American, United Air Lines, and Northwest ordered the aircraft, which was 
      competing with Lockheed's L-1011 TriStar. The first DC-10 rolled out on 
      July 23, 1970, and the first flight took place on August 29. Although the 
      plane outsold the TriStar, with a total of 446 built during the program's 
      lifetime, it split the market with the Lockheed plane and lost money.
      
      In the 
      meantime, production of the DC-9 airliner, which had rolled out in the 
      early 1960s, continued with more than 300 delivered by mid-1968, including 
      the military C-9A Nightingale. The DC-9 was one of the first airliners to 
      share production internationally on a large scale—Canada and Italy both 
      produced major components that were assembled in California. It evolved 
      into a stretch version—the MD-80, which entered airliner service in late 
      1980. Another early 1960's airliner, the DC-8, ended production in May 
      1972, with 556 planes completed. 
      In the 
      military sector, the company built the new F-15 for the U.S. Air Force. 
      The F-15 first flew on July 27, 1972, and entered production soon after.
      In spite 
      of the new business, total production dropped in the decade after the 
      merger, and MDC employment fell from its high of 140,000 in 1967 to about 
      57,000 in 1976 before it began to grow again.
      MDC's 
      space group continued building its Delta expendable launch vehicles (ELVs) 
      that had launched satellites since 1960. A Delta orbited the world's first 
      synchronous domestic communications satellite, Canada's Anik-1, in 1972. A 
      Delta 2914 placed the first U.S. domestic communications satellite, Westar-A, 
      into orbit in April 1974. A Delta 3914 was used for the first commercial 
      launch vehicle program whereby MDC paid the development costs but users of 
      the launch vehicle repaid the investment. On November 26, 1990, the first 
      Delta II successfully launched the U.S. Air Force Navstar global 
      positioning system satellite. Since the first Delta launch in 1960, there 
      have been more than 245 Delta launches and it continues to be used.
      In 1975, 
      MDC teamed with aerospace company Northrop on the Naval Air Combat Fighter 
      carrier-based aircraft—which first developed into the F-17 and then into 
      the F-18 and A-18. The two variants soon combined into the F/A-18 Hornet, 
      a plane that became hugely expensive as well as heavy and complex. Hornets 
      were widely used by the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps as well as by several 
      foreign militaries.
      Possibly 
      MDC's most unique aircraft was the Harrier "jump jet," which could take 
      off and land vertically but which flew like a conventional plane. MDC, 
      British Aerospace, and Rolls-Royce developed the AV-8B Harrier II, which 
      was based on the 1957 British-designed Hawker-Siddeley Kestrel. Production 
      began in 1981 and more than 340 Harriers were produced. They were the 
      first U.S. Marine Corps tactical aircraft to arrive for Operation Desert 
      Storm.
      By the 
      mid-1980s, MDC alone enjoyed the product diversity that several companies 
      had shared in the 1950s, with the F/A-18, F-15, AV-8B, and airliners. 
      Other programs included the C-17 transport, T-45 Goshawk naval advanced 
      trainer, awarded in November 1981, the A-12 naval strike aircraft with 
      General Dynamics, the YF-23 with Northrop, the LHX with Bell, and the 
      Harpoon, which was used on B-52H bombers.
      The A-12 
      program, which began in January 1988, experienced serious delays and 
      technical difficulties and was cancelled on January 7, 1991, for default. 
      Both MDC and General Dynamics lost thousands of jobs and faced huge 
      potential liabilities from the default decision. Facing financial ruin, 
      they petitioned to have the reason for cancelation changed to "convenience 
      of the government," and eventually won a court reversal.
      High 
      costs and losses continued to plague commercial airliner production in the 
      1980s, and international collaboration became essential. MDC offered 
      buyers of the MD-11 tri-jet a choice of American or British engines, and 
      parts of the plane were built in Italy, Spain, Japan, Brazil, Britain, and 
      Canada.
      In 1984, 
      MDC bought Hughes Helicopters from the estate of Howard Hughes for about 
      $480 million. Its Apache attack helicopter had reached a production 
      milestone of 6,000 helicopters in December 1981. Under MDC, AH-64 Apache 
      development was slow. At least five contractors built components, and its 
      complex electronic gear took a long time to install and test, as did its 
      engines and flight instruments. The company lost $107 million in 1989 
      through cost overruns. In 1990, the company hired Thomas Gunn as president 
      of the helicopter division to put things in order. He cut staff by almost 
      20 percent and introduced a new assembly method that improved productivity 
      and morale. The program became profitable the same year. MDC also 
      inherited the no-tail rotor (NOTAR) contract from Hughes. NOTAR was a new 
      tail configuration that reduced the danger of tail rotors to ground crews 
      and was useful in operations where a tail rotor might collide with 
      obstructions. It received civil certification in September 1991. 
      
      The 
      aerospace industry had managed a broad recovery during the 1980s, 
      principally due to the Reagan defence build-up. But that expansion 
      levelled off, and the industry again began to contract. Further, the 
      commercial-aircraft sector suffered declining orders, and the space 
      program became a victim of budget cutting. The end of the Cold War in 1989 
      resulted in permanent industry downsizing and companies struggled to 
      survive. For MDC, airliner losses persisted and many military programs 
      experienced delays and cost overruns. Employment, which peaked at more 
      than 132,000 in 1990, began declining sharply. 
      By 1991, 
      MDC was experiencing a cash flow crisis. Air travel fell off, and U.S. 
      airline losses in 1990-1992 on the order of $10 billion rippled through 
      the industry. Orders were cancelled and deliveries delayed, and MDC was 
      forced to slow MD-11 production, with substantial layoffs.
      MDC, the 
      largest defence contractor at the beginning of the 1990s, needed major 
      restructuring. It sold its information systems subsidiary, but the 
      company's commercial sector, which represented about one-third of its 
      business, remained troubled. 
      
      Restructuring paid off, and by 1993, the company's finances turned around 
      and the outlook seemed brighter. Revenues in 1993 came to $14.5 billion. 
      Its C-17 transport began to reach squadrons and looked like it would show 
      a profit. The T-45 trainer, developed in cooperation with British 
      Aerospace, entered service. The company received new orders for Apache 
      helicopters, and overseas orders for fighters kept assembly lines busy. 
      The U.S. Air Force signed a $1 billion contract for Delta rocket launch 
      vehicles, while various research and development awards totalled nearly 
      $100 million. Douglas also continued its successful practice of recycling 
      used commercial planes with smaller, emerging airlines worldwide. Its 
      MD-90 twinjet also entered service in 1995. And with the launch of a new, 
      economical 100-seat MD-95 in 1995 (which was redesignated the 717 after 
      MDC's merger with Boeing), MDC seemed likely to remain in the industry.
      But to 
      many observers' surprise, on December 15, 1996, Boeing announced a bid for 
      outright acquisition of MDC for $13 billion in stock. The main incentive 
      for MDC was its troubled airliner operation, which seemed to be losing out 
      to Boeing and Europe's Airbus. In addition, it had an uncertain military 
      future after completion of its current programs. McDonnell Douglas agreed 
      to the merger, and the aerospace industry was reduced to three major 
      participants: Boeing, Lockheed, and Europe's Airbus.