Press Release

Brimming with Confidence: Airline Pilot Caps and Cap Badges Now on View at San Francisco International Airport

10/16/2008

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:

CONTACT: Jane Sullivan   
Manager, Marketing and Communications 
(650) 821-5123
SF-08-54

 

Brimming with Confidence: Airline Pilot Caps and Cap Badges Now on View at San Francisco International Airport
 

SAN FRANCISCO -- Brimming with Confidence: Airline Pilot Caps and Cap Badges, now on view at San Francisco International Airport, explores the evolution of the pilot’s cap from the protective leather helmet used in early open cockpits to modern Captain’s caps that, while no longer serving a functional need, symbolize the authority and professionalism of today’s airline pilots. 

 

On display are thirty-two caps and sixty cap badges from the 1920s to the present. Special attention is paid to how cap badges reflect an airline’s corporate identity.   Examples on view - from an early United Airlines badge depicting the company’s logo and route map (late 1930s); to an Olympic Airways badge with the five-ringed symbol of the Olympic Games (1970s); to Qantas Airways’ current badge featuring a kangaroo, emu and Southern Cross Constellation from the Commonwealth Coat of Arms of Australia (2008) - demonstrate this ongoing role of the cap badge.

 

Brimming with Confidence is located pre-security on the Departures/Ticketing Level of Terminal 1 through February 2009. There is no charge to view the exhibition.

 

San Francisco Airport Museums

The San Francisco Airport Museums program was established by the Airport Commission in 1980 for the purposes of humanizing the Airport environment, providing visibility for the unique cultural life of San Francisco, and providing educational services for the traveling public. The Museum was granted initial accreditation from the American Association of Museums in 1999, reaccredited in 2005, and has the distinction of being the only accredited museum in an airport. Today, the San Francisco Airport Museums features approximately twenty galleries throughout the Airport terminals displaying a rotating schedule of art, history, science, and cultural exhibitions, as well as the San Francisco Airport Commission Aviation Library and Louis A. Turpen Aviation Museum, a permanent collection dedicated to the history of commercial aviation.

  

S-F-O

 

About San Francisco International Airport

SFO (www.flysfo.com) offers non-stop links with more than 30 international points on 26 international carriers. The Bay Area's Airport of Choice connects non-stop with more than 65 cities in the United States on 21 domestic airlines, including more than six times as many non-stop flights to the New York area than the other Bay Area airports combined.