Surviving Missiles
Below is a list of museums or sites which have a Bomarc missile on display:
- Air Force Armament Museum, Eglin Air Force Base, Florida
- Air Force Space & Missile Museum, Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Florida
- Alberta Aviation Museum, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
- Canada Aviation Museum, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
- Hill Aerospace Museum, Hill Air Force Base, Utah
- Historical Electronics Museum, Baltimore, Maryland (display of AN/DPN-53, the first airborne pulse-doppler radar, used in the Bomarc)
- Illinois Soldiers & Sailors Home, Quincy, Illinois
- Keesler Air Force Base, Biloxi, Mississippi
- Museum of Aviation, Robins Air Force Base, Warner Robins, Georgia
- National Atomic Museum, Kirtland Air Force Base, Albuquerque, New Mexico
- National Museum of the United States Air Force, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio
- Octave Chanute Aerospace Museum (former Chanute AFB), Rantoul, Illinois
- Peterson Air and Space Museum, Peterson Air Force Base, Colorado
- Strategic Air and Space Museum, Ashland, Nebraska
- US Air Force History and Traditions Museum, Lackland Air Force Base, San Antonio, Texas
- Vandenberg Air Force Base (Space and Missile Heritage Center), California. Bomarc not for public access.
Read more about this topic: CIM-10 Bomarc
Famous quotes containing the words surviving and/or missiles:
“The misery of the middle-aged woman is a grey and hopeless thing, born of having nothing to live for, of disappointment and resentment at having been gypped by consumer society, and surviving merely to be the butt of its unthinking scorn.”
—Germaine Greer (b. 1939)
“At the rate science proceeds, rockets and missiles will one day seem like buffaloslow, endangered grazers in the black pasture of outer space.”
—Bernard Cooper (b. 1936)