Airworthy examples The Mahoney Ryan B-1 "Brougham" was also used as the basis of a reproduction of the
Spirit of St. Louis. The reproduction was used in the 1938 Paramount film
Men with Wings starring
Ray Milland. According to information at the Henry Ford Museum, their copy (B-156) was actually owned by
James Stewart, who portrayed Lindbergh in the film. Stewart is credited as having donated the aircraft to the museum. Lindbergh was reputed to have flown one of the reproductions during the film's production, however, the connection to Lindbergh is now considered a myth. On the 40th anniversary of Lindbergh's flight, a new reproduction named
Spirit 2 was built by a movie stunt pilot,
Frank Tallman. It first flew on April 24, 1967, and appeared at the 1967
Paris Air Show where it made several flights over Paris. In 1972,
Spirit 2 was bought for $50,000 by the
San Diego Air & Space Museum (formerly San Diego Aerospace Museum) and placed on public display until it was destroyed by arson in 1978. The museum built a replacement named
Spirit 3 which first flew on April 28, 1979; it made seven flights before being placed on display. In August 2003, the
Spirit 3 was removed from display and was flown as a 75th Anniversary tribute to Lindbergh. The aircraft is now on display in the museum's rotunda. Another airworthy reproduction was built by David Cannavo and first flown in 1979, powered by a
Lycoming R-680 engine. In 1995, it was bought by
Kermit Weeks for his
Fantasy of Flight Museum in
Polk City, Florida. A reproduction of the
Spirit (Registration ES-XCL), which had been built and certified in Estonia in 1997, was written off on May 31, 2003. Shortly after takeoff at an air show in Coventry, England, structural failure occurred, resulting in a fatal crash, killing its owner-pilot, Captain Pierre Holländer. A recently completed
Spirit reproduction, intended for airworthiness is owned by the
Old Rhinebeck Aerodrome (ORA), fulfilling a lifelong dream of its primary founder,
Cole Palen (1925–1993). The reproduction project had been started by Cole before his own death and has mostly been subsequently built by former ORA pilot and current vintage aircraft maintenance manager Ken Cassens, receiving its wing covering, completed with doped fabric in 2015. A restored Wright J-5 Whirlwind radial was obtained by Palen in the 1970s for the project's start, with original, and still-functional 1920s-era flight instruments being incorporated — including the same basic type of
earth inductor compass used by Lindbergh — matching the ones in the original
Spirit at the NASM. This reproduction aircraft successfully flew in early December 2015 in upstate New York, piloted by aircraft restorer/builder Ken Cassens of
Stone Ridge, New York. The aircraft made its public debut flight on May 21, 2016, the 89th anniversary of Lindbergh's flight. '''JNE Aircraft's reproduction''' Over a period of 7 years and 3 months, John Norman of
Burlington,
Washington crafted to-date the most authentic
Spirit reproduction ever built. With the intention of creating a copy of the aircraft "as it sits now," with all the patches, updates or modifications recreated in pains-taking detail and the added bonus of being airworthy Norman completed the project in 2019. The maiden flight was performed July 28, 2019 and the public debut flight was September 8, piloted by John's friend and seasoned pilot, Ron Fowler. In 2015, with coordinated efforts by fellow
Spirit researcher Ty Sundstrom and the
National Air & Space Museum, Norman took detailed measurements to correct errors he had discovered in the existing "Morrow" drawings. During the same trip, in an attempted search for Lindbergh's missing logbook, Norman used a video boroscope to inspect never-before seen areas of the fuselage and discovered an original pair of pliers thought to have been used by Lindbergh to adjust the fuel valves during flight. In late 2021, a documentary feature film centered on the project and its builder began production. A tentative summer 2023 release is expected.
Static display examples A 90% static reproduction, built in 1956 for
The Spirit of St Louis film by studio employees, is now on display at the
Wings of the North Air Museum in Eden Prairie, MN. In 1999, the San Diego Air & Space Museum built a non-flying example that was fitted with an original Wright J-5 engine. It is on display at
San Diego International Airport. The
Octave Chanute Aerospace Museum at Rantoul, Illinois also has a static reproduction built by museum volunteers. ==Specifications (Ryan NYP)==