The Concorde Made Its Final Flight Over 20 Years Ago And Supersonic Air Travel Has Yet To Return. Here's A Look Back At Its Incredible History.

A British Airways Concorde takes off from JFK International Airport in New York for the final time on October 24, 2003.
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- Co-developed by Britain and France, Concorde was the first and only supersonic commercial airliner.
- British Airways operated its final commercial Concorde flight in 2003, ending its 27-year career.
- The supersonic jet remains an icon of modern aviation and a technological marvel.
For a fleeting 30 years during the 20th century, supersonic commercial air travel was a reality. But on October 24, 2003, that era came to an abrupt end.
That day, British Airways operated its last commercial Concorde service from JFK International Airport to London Heathrow. Air France pulled its Concordes from service a few months earlier. Thus, it would be the Concorde's last ever commercial flight in a career that started in January 1976.
The Anglo-French Concorde was co-developed by BAC, a forerunner of BAE Systems, and Aerospatiale, now a part of Airbus.
The supersonic jet has a storied history.
The Concorde was never the commercial success for which its creators had hoped. Environmental and operational limitations of the Concorde hampered its commercial appeal among airline customers. Only 20 of the planes were ever built, and just 14 of them were production aircraft. The Concorde saw service with only two airlines — Air France and British Airways — on just two routes.
However, its lack of commercial success doesn't diminish its role as an icon of modern aviation and as a technological marvel, one which plane makers and aerospace startups still talk about replicating.
Over 20 years after its last flight for British Airways, the world is still without a viable form of supersonic passenger service.
Here's a look back at the awesome history of the Aerospatiale-BAC Concorde supersonic airliner.
This article was originally published by Benjamin Zhang in October 2018. It was updated by David Slotnick in March 2020 and Talia Lakritz in May 2024.
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"Mach 1" is the speed of sound, or about 670 miles per hour at 30,000 feet, according to the US Air Force.
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France and Great Britain each agreed to spend between £75 million and £85 million for the development of the plane, the Associated Press reported.
Together, Aérospatiale — a predecessor of Airbus Industries — and the British Aircraft Corporation agreed to produce a four-engine, delta-wing supersonic airliner.
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The American Boeing 2707 never made it past the drawing board, while the Soviets' Tupolev TU-144 made it into service but was quickly retired because of performance and safety problems.
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The above photo shows the Concorde being constructed at a British Aircraft Corporation factory in Bristol, UK, in 1967.
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The engine was developed by Rolls-Royce/Bristol Siddeley and Snecma.
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Each engine produced 38,000 pounds of thrust.
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Delta wings get their name from the Greek letter delta, which is shaped like a triangle.
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In normal flight, the nose and visor were raised.
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Flight engineers helped maintain the aircraft's center of gravity, cooling systems, fuel transfers, and other crucial tasks.
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Members of the French Army band and Royal Air Force band played for the occasion.
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The maiden flight lasted 27 minutes, the BBC reported. Its first supersonic flight followed on October 1, 1969.
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The sleek supersonic jet captivated the public immediately.
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One of the byproducts of supersonic flight is the sonic boom, which can be unpleasant or distressing to those on the ground. As a result, the Concorde was limited to routes over water, with minimal time spent soaring over land.
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As a result, Concorde flights were further curbed.
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This left British Airways and Air France as the plane's only operators.
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Of the 14 production Concordes, seven entered service with Air France and seven entered service with British Airways.
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The Air France flight flew to Rio de Janeiro by way of Senegal, while the British Airways plane flew to Bahrain in the Persian Gulf.
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Cruising at more than twice the speed of sound and an altitude of up to 60,000 feet, the Concorde could cross the Atlantic in just three hours — a major improvement over the seven hours it took for a conventional jumbo jet to make the crossing.
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A display on the jetliner's left bulkhead showed when the plane reached the speed of Mach 2, or twice the speed of sound.
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Soon, the Concorde became the preferred airborne choice of the rich and famous.
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Frank Sinatra took a Concorde flight to London in 1984 on his way to a charity concert in Monaco.
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Ferguson earned her private pilot's license in 1987, and was the first woman in the royal family to do so, UPI reported.
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Blair flew to New York to attend a special session of the UN General Assembly.
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The two rubbed shoulders on a 2001 press flight.
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Queen Elizabeth traveled on Concorde planes for trips to Kuwait, Barbados, Saudi Arabia, and the United States from the late 1970s until the Concorde was retired in 2003, according to the Royal Collection Trust.
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Concorde also had its own special sets of branded china.
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The plane caught fire after a blown tire ruptured the Concorde's fuel tanks, and 113 people died in the crash.
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The planes were retrofitted with stronger fuel tanks.
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By spring of 2003, Air France and British Airways announced their intention to permanently retire the Concorde fleet.
British Airways executives blamed cuts to Wall Street's travel budgets post-9/11 and skyrocketing maintenance costs for its decision to ground the plane, The Guardian reported.
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Onlookers waved goodbye to the Concorde as it climbed out of JFK Airport.
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Over the skies of London, the flight out of New York joined up with two other Concordes. Together, the three supersonic jets celebrated the occasion by landing in succession at Heathrow Airport.
In 27 years of service, British Airways' fleet of Concordes made 50,000 flights and carried more than 2.5 million passengers, according to British Airways.
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There are three places to see a Concorde on display in the United States: the Intrepid Sea, Air, and Space Museum in New York City, the National Air and Space Museum in Washington, DC, and The Museum of Flight in Seattle.
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Despite being a financial flop, the Concorde's status as a technological marvel remains unblemished.
We no longer cross the Atlantic at twice the speed of sound. And we may never again.