American Helicopter Museum
The American Helicopter Museum & Education Center is located at 1220 American Boulevard, West Chester, Pennsylvania, United States. The transport museum focuses on rotary-wing aviation history, science and technology. The collection contains over 40 civilian and military autogyros, convertiplanes, and helicopters, including some early-generation models. The museum also has an extensive research library, the Renzo Pierpaoli Memorial Library, which contains documents, artifacts, films, and memoirs that museum members can use.
The museum strives to restore and display historic aircraft and chronicle the origin and development of rotary-wing aircraft. The museum's exhibits chronicle the efforts of pioneers like Harold Frederick Pitcairn, Mr. W. Wallace Kellett of Kellett Autogiro, Arthur M. Young and Frank Piasecki, and today it continues to record the new and ever-expanding role of the U.S. helicopter industry. The exhibits span the history of rotary-wing aircraft from the earliest rotorcraft to the latest developments in tiltrotors. AHMEC is one of only two museums in the world currently displaying a V-22 Osprey.
History
The American Helicopter Museum & Education Center opened to the public in October 1996. The museum was founded by Peter Wright, a veteran of the Flying Tigers, a founder of Keystone Helicopter Corporation, and sales manager of Helicopter Air Transport. In 2003, the Robinson Helicopter Company donated $1 million to the museum. The museum's UH-1H was transported to the Lumley Aviation Center at the Pennsylvania College of Technology in December 2009 for restoration.Programs
The Museum hosts thousands of visitors, school groups, families, and senior citizens each year. Tourists of all ages from the U.S. and abroad come here to witness the history and future of the helicopter.- Stubby, the educational traveling helicopter.
- Girls in Science & Technology
Industry partners develop and teach the curriculum and guidelines, and stratify them for appropriate age groups. The project focuses and channels the interests of girls in grades 4 to 12 in engineering, computer programming, aerospace technologies, math, and flight. The program's initial focus is on four categories related to Aerospace: The Physics of Flight, Rotorcraft Design, Decreasing Size and Computerization of Controls, and Robotic Flight.Summer Camp
A variety of 5-day workshops are offered, designed to make science and art fun and interesting.
Aircraft on display
Notable Interior Displays- Bell 47D-1 / H-13D Sioux
- AeroVelo Atlas Human -powered helicopter
- Boeing HH-47 CSAR-X
- Hughes MD 530F / MH-6J Little Bird
- Hughes 369 Cayuse
- Piasecki PV-14 / HUP-2 Retriever
- Kaman K-20 / HH-2D Seasprite
- Sikorsky S-61 / HH-3 Sea King
- Sikorsky S-62 / HH-52 Sea Guardian
- Bell AH-1F Cobra
- Bell TH-IL Huey
- V-22 Osprey - prototype on display as an example of a military tiltrotor.