It is a beginning. Over forty-five years have elapsed since the X-15 was conceived; 40 since it first flew. And 31 since the program ended. Although it is usually heralded as the most productive flight research program ever undertaken, no serious history has been assembled to capture its design, development, operations, and lessons. This monograph is the first step towards that history. Not that a great deal not previously been written about the X-15, because it has. But most of it has been limited to specific aspects of the program; pilot's stories, experiments, lessons learned, etc. But with the exception of Robert S. Houston's history published by the Wright Air Development Center in 1958 and later included in the Air Force History Office's Hypersonic Revolution, no one has attempted to tell the entire story. And the WADC history is taken entirely from the Air Force perspective, with small mention of the other contributors. Monographs in Aerospace History; No. 18, NASA/SP-2000-4518
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Dennis R. Jenkins was an engineer and project manager on the space shuttle program for 33 years. Arriving just prior to STS-1, he worked in engineering and operations at the Kennedy Space Center and Vandenberg Launch Site. Jenkins was an investigator on the Columbia Accident Investigation Board, senior technical staff to the Return-to-Flight Task Group, and the project manager that planned the delivery of the remaining orbiters to their various display sites at the end of the flight campaign. He sat as the Verville Fellow at the Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum and is currently the project director for the Endeavourdisplay, as well as facility construction manager at the Samuel Oschin Air and Space Center in Los Angeles. He splits his time between Los Angeles, California, and Cape Canaveral, Florida.
"This is arguably the most outstanding space publication of the century so far and it is very hard to see it being eclipsed. In more than a million words it is a fitting tribute to an iconic winged vehicle and is the most outstanding publication on this remarkable flying machine yet published." (Spaceflight magazine 2017-07-07)
"Jenkins’ latest--and finest--work is by far the best thing done on the Space Shuttle to date, and it will be difficult to match and, in my opinion, impossible to top in the future. This is one of those extremely rare cases where the importance of the task of matched by the author’s ability to tell the true story from the insider’s point of view." (Walter J. Boyne Aviation History 2017-06-15)
Winner of the 2017 National Aviation Hall of Fame Combs Gates Award! (2017 Combs Gates Award Winner! 2017-09-20)
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