The Tupolev 
      company is probably the most famous aeronautics firm, or design bureau, as 
      the Soviets referred to their aeronautics companies, in the former Soviet 
      Union. Tupolev is named after Andrey Tupolev, the man many historians 
      consider the patriarch of the modern Soviet air industry. Almost all the 
      major Soviet aviation designers of the mid-twentieth century, from fighter 
      designer Pavel Sukhoi to space rocket designer Sergey Korolev served their 
      apprenticeship under this legendary man.
      Tupolev was 
      born in 1888 and developed an early interest in aeronautics, building 
      gliders by the time he reached his early twenties. In 1918, he received 
      his diploma as an "engineer-mechanic" based on a thesis for a design of a 
      seaplane. Early in his career, Tupolev was an advocate for introducing 
      modern concepts into Russian aviation. On October 22, 1922, he founded a 
      commission to design and develop all-metal aircraft for the Red Air Force. 
      To this day, the Tupolev company regards this date as the founding date of 
      the organization. At the time, the commission was part of TsAGI (the 
      Central Aero-Hydrodynamics Institute), the premiere Soviet aeronautics 
      research institution based in the town of Zhukovsky, south of Moscow.
      Through the 
      1920s, Tupolev's team steadily gained respect and began to dominate the 
      burgeoning Soviet aviation industry. Despite poor health, Tupolev had a 
      larger-than-life personality that enabled him to define many important 
      directions in Soviet aviation. For example, he introduced new concepts of 
      testing prior to mass production. He was also opposed using foreign 
      technology in Soviet aircraft unless it offered a major advantage. 
      Tupolev's initial forays into aircraft design led to the creation of a 
      number of notable early Soviet airplanes such as the TB-1 (ANT-4) bomber, 
      one of the largest planes built in the 1920s. Two of his aircraft from the 
      period, the ANT-20 Maxim Gorky and the ANT-25, set world records for size 
      and long-distance flights respectively. These aircraft were important 
      elements in improving the Soviet Union's reputation in aeronautics. As the 
      Tupolev team's mandate grew bigger, it could no longer be subordinate to 
      TsAGI, and in July 1936, Tupolev's Moscow-based Plant No. 156 formally 
      separated from TsAGI.
      It was at 
      this time that Tupolev's spectacular rise to the top was interrupted. The 
      late 1930s was the time of Stalinist terror, when a whole nation 
      practically lived in fear of arrest. Aviation was among the hardest hit 
      areas in Soviet science and technology. In October 1937, the Soviet secret 
      police arrested Tupolev (and many other important aviation designers) on 
      the doubtful charge of selling secrets to the Nazis. Tupolev and many of 
      his associates were carted off to the infamous Lubyanka prison where they 
      were forced to sign false confessions. Not long after, with an impending 
      war on the horizon, Joseph Stalin realized that he could not do without 
      his aviation designers. In late 1938, the Soviet leader authorized the 
      creation of a special prison camp in the Bolshevo suburb of Moscow to 
      develop new bombers for the Soviet military. Almost all of the country's 
      major aviation designers were part of this prison organization. As 
      prisoners of the state, these talented engineers had no right to a name 
      and were not permitted to sign their design drawings. Each designer merely 
      had a rubber stamp with a number on it. Secret police guards constantly 
      followed the engineers around workshops during their daily work.
      Soon after 
      the beginning of World War II, in July 1941, Tupolev and several other 
      members of his team were "freed" for their work on a new twin-engine 
      tactical bomber named the 103 (later named the Tu-2). The Soviet Air Force 
      used the Tu-2 as the standard tactical bomber both during the war and for 
      many years after. Following release from prison, Tupolev's firm eventually 
      returned to Plant No. 156 in Moscow in the autumn of 1943 where he 
      reformed his old organization, now known as the "OKB-156" (Experimental 
      Design Bureau No. 156).
      The OKB-156's 
      first major task in the post-war years came about almost by accident. 
      After a 1944 raid on Japanese cities, four U.S. Army Air Force Boeing B-29 
      Superfortresses, crippled by anti-aircraft fire, landed near Vladivostok, 
      a city in the Soviet Far East. Although the crews were returned to the 
      United States, Stalin refused to hand the aircraft back. Instead, he 
      ordered Tupolev to build an exact replica of this technological marvel in 
      order to acquire a new strategic bomber for the Soviet Union. Tupolev 
      resisted the idea of copying since he believed that one of his own 
      designs, the Samolet 64, would be a better option. But forced by Stalin, 
      Tupolev had no other choice, and subsequently organized a massive program 
      to produce a working copy of the B-29, known by the Russians as the Tu-4 
      and by NATO as "Bull." Tupolev's version, while similar to the U.S. 
      bomber, wasn't identical. For example, Tupolev used different engines and 
      cannons. Pilots flew the Soviet version for the first time in May 1947. 
      The project to reproduce the B-29 not only gave the Soviet Union a 
      strategic bomber within two years of the end of the war but perhaps more 
      importantly, allowed the Soviet aviation sector to organize a modern 
      aeronautical industry capable of producing high performance aircraft.
      Tupolev 
      simultaneously converted the Tu-4 for civilian use as the 72-seater Tu-70, 
      a precedent that he later followed for several other military aircraft. In 
      the late 1940s and early 1950s, Tupolev developed the Soviet Union's first 
      long-range strategic bomber, the swept-wing Tu-16, known by NATO as 
      "Badger." The Soviet Air Force operated the bomber as late as the late 
      1980s. The Chinese also built some under license. The Tu-16 was followed 
      by the first very long-range strategic bomber, capable of intercontinental 
      ranges—the swept-wing turboshaft Tu-95. Known by NATO as the "Bear," 
      Tupolev produced many different versions of the Tu-95, including one that 
      was a missile carrier and another a reconnaissance plane. In the same 
      period, Tupolev created the first Soviet jet airliner, the Tu-104, which 
      caused a minor sensation in the West when it flew a high-level Soviet 
      delegation to London in September 1956. Tupolev continued a parallel path 
      of developing civilian airliners and military bombers using the same 
      blueprint. For example, he used the Tu-95 to create one of the most famous 
      Soviet passenger airplanes, the turboprop Tu-114, capable of carrying 220 
      passengers. When Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev visited the United States 
      in 1959, he arrived in a Tu-114. U.S. military officials were astonished 
      that a turboprop airliner could achieve speeds of 800 kilometres per hour 
      (497 miles per hour).
      In the 1960s 
      and 1970s, the Tupolev organization introduced a new generation of 
      strategic bombers, among them the Tu-22, the Tu-22M (both known by NATO as 
      "Backfire"), and the Tu-160. These were in addition to several civilian 
      passenger aircraft such as the 160-passenger Tu-154. One of the more 
      spectacular additions to the Tupolev production line was the Tu-144, a 
      supersonic airliner developed as a parallel to the Anglo-French Concorde. 
      Although it was a remarkable technical achievement, the program was 
      plagued by problems, including a crash at the Paris Air Show in 1973 that 
      killed the flight crew. The Soviet passenger carrier Aeroflot never used 
      the Tu-144 extensively due to high operational costs and a variety of 
      technical problems. Tupolev did not witness the ultimate failure of the 
      Tu-144. He died in his sleep in December 1972 at the age of 84.
      Tupolev's 
      only son, Aleksei Tupolev, succeeded his father when Andrey died in 1972. 
      In 1989, the design bureau took the name ANTK imeni A. N. Tupoleva 
      (Aviation Scientific-Technical Complex Named After A. N. Tupolev). It had 
      about 10,500 employees in the late 1990s. It traditionally contributed 
      about 80 percent of the short- and medium-range passenger airplanes in the 
      newly independent states of the former Soviet Union, but this number has 
      declined in recent years due to economic turmoil. Although its primary 
      products are civilian passenger aircraft, the Tupolev organization also 
      produces freight aircraft, unpiloted aerial vehicles, research and 
      development test aircraft for cryogenic engines, and incorporates 
      improvements to its older military bombers.
      Over the 
      course of its lifetime, the Tupolev design bureau has produced more than 
      half of all passenger aircraft operated by the former Soviet Union. These 
      have included 80 projects, 35 of which went into mass production.