The aircraft first entered service in 1972 during the administration of Richard Nixon.
SAM 27000 replaced the aging
SAM 26000 as the primary means of presidential travel, although
SAM 26000 remained as a back-up plane. SAM 27000 served seven presidents in its twenty-nine years of service:
Richard Nixon,
Gerald Ford,
Jimmy Carter,
Ronald Reagan,
George H. W. Bush,
Bill Clinton, and
George W. Bush. In 1990, it was replaced as the primary presidential plane by two
Boeing VC-25A jumbo jets —
SAM 28000 and
29000.
Nixon and Ford Nixon was the first president to use this
Air Force One, dubbing it and its sister plane,
SAM 26000, the "Spirit of '76", having that phrase painted on the nose of the two aircraft, although later removed by President Carter. Although
SAM 27000 replaced
SAM 26000 as Nixon's primary mode of aerial transportation, he chose to ride SAM 26000 when his family flew with him. Nixon garnered much attention for his frequent flying aboard
Air Force One, usually flying to his homes in California and Florida, but also made many trips abroad, such as his trip to China in 1972. Top presidential aides and cabinet secretaries used the plane as well, including
Secretary of State Henry Kissinger. When President Nixon resigned the presidency on August 9, 1974, he flew to his home in Orange County, California aboard
SAM 27000. While flying over
Missouri en route to their destination, Colonel
Ralph Albertazzie, the pilot, contacted Kansas City Center and had the aircraft's call sign changed from
Air Force One to SAM 27000 due to Gerald Ford being sworn in. Gerald Ford used
SAM 27000 somewhat frequently, especially for his trips abroad, such as his meeting with Soviet Premier
Leonid Brezhnev in Vladivostok in 1974. After experiencing two assassination attempts, Ford returned to the plane to hear his wife
Betty quip "Well, how did they treat you in San Francisco?" During the Ford years, there was a growing number of airline hijackings and the threat of terrorism expanded, so both
SAM 27000 and
26000 were equipped with defense systems to detect heat-seeking missiles. It was President Ford who first decided that the name of the aircraft itself should be
Air Force One, along with the call sign.
Carter and Reagan Jimmy Carter made some changes to the aircraft that reflected his personal values. Carter preferred a simpler style of living, something he made apparent on
SAM 27000; he even insisted that he and his family carry their own luggage aboard. Carter made regular use of the plane both for domestic use and for use abroad. In 1980, after the
American Hockey Team defeated the Soviet Team, Carter sent
SAM 27000 to pick up the team and bring them back to Washington, D.C. for a congratulatory ceremony. Carter's last trip aboard
27000 was actually taken as a former president, when Ronald Reagan sent Carter to Germany on behalf of the American people, to welcome home the 52 American hostages that were
held captive in Iran. works aboard
SAM 27000 in 1986 Ronald Reagan was
SAM 27000's most frequent flyer, flying longer and farther than all the other presidents who flew on it, traveling more than 675,000 miles aboard it. Reagan used
Air Force One to travel to all parts of the world to pursue his ambitious diplomatic goals, taking three trips to Asia, six to Europe, and twelve trips to foreign places in the Western Hemisphere. Reagan flew to three of his four summit meetings with Soviet Leader
Mikhail Gorbachev aboard
SAM 27000: Geneva, Reykjavík, and Moscow (the other being held in Washington, D.C.). The Reagans' last flight aboard the plane was on January 20, 1989, when the then-former President and First Lady flew back to California.
Missions after replacement and
Laura Bush arrive in
Waco, Texas after the completion of the last Presidential voyage of
SAM 27000, August 2001
George H. W. Bush was the last president to use
SAM 27000 as the primary means of presidential travel, as in 1990 the plane was replaced by two Boeing 747-200B jumbo jets, designated VC-25, although
SAM 27000 was kept as a backup plane for Bush during the remainder of his presidency, as well as those of Bill Clinton and George W. Bush. Former President Richard Nixon died on April 22, 1994, in
New York City.
SAM 27000 brought his body to the
Marine Corps Air Station El Toro in
Orange County, California, four days later. His body was then taken to the Richard Nixon Library and Birthplace (now
Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum) to lie in state before a
funeral service and burial. Its last Presidential voyage was August 29, 2001, when it delivered George W. Bush and
Laura Bush to
TSTC Waco Airport en route to their
Prairie Chapel Ranch.
Reagan Library SAM 27000 was decommissioned and flown to
San Bernardino International Airport (formerly
Norton Air Force Base) in September 2001, where it was presented to the Reagan Foundation. In what was known as Operation Homeward Bound,
Boeing, the plane's manufacturer, disassembled the plane and transported it to the library in pieces. After the construction of the foundation of the pavilion itself, the plane was reassembled and restored to museum quality, The pavilion was dedicated on October 24, 2005, by Nancy Reagan, President George W. Bush, and First Lady
Laura Bush. ==See also==