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From a modest aviation workshop founded by the Loughead brothers in the early 20th century to a global aerospace powerhouse shaping the frontiers of flight, The House That Lockheed Built charts a century of innovation, ambition, and technical mastery. This definitive account follows Lockheed's journey through landmark aircraft such as the Vega, the P-38 Lightning, the SR-71 Blackbird, and the stealth F-117 Nighthawk, alongside the company's groundbreaking work in space exploration and cutting-edge military systems.
Drawing on meticulously researched, verifiable facts, this sweeping narrative captures both the triumphs and trials that defined Lockheed's rise-from pioneering long-distance flights in the golden age of aviation to high-stakes Cold War reconnaissance, corporate mergers, and the leap into hypersonic research. It celebrates the engineers, pilots, and visionaries who made the impossible fly, while also confronting the political and ethical storms that periodically rocked the company's foundations.
At once a tribute to Lockheed Martin's engineering genius and a clear-eyed exploration of its impact on aviation, space, and national security, this book reveals how one company's culture of innovation has repeatedly redefined the limits of what can be achieved in the air and beyond.