

Aircraft Type: U-2C, Lockheed "Dragon Lady"
Mission: Long range, high altitude strategic reconnaissance
Number built: 53
Powerplant: One Pratt & Whitney J75-P-13 turbojet, 17,000 lbs. thrust
Weight: Empty 11,700 lbs., Loaded 16,000 lbs., Maximum takeoff weight 17,270 lbs.
Dimensions: Wingspan 80', Length 49'7", Height 13'
Performance: Maximum
speed 373 m.p.h. at 10,000 feet
Ceiling 30,000 feet, Range 1,400 miles with 4,000 pounds of ordnance
Significance of Type: This aircraft was designed and used for high-altitude communications intelligence and electronic intelligence and was capable of day or night all-weather surveillance. The U-2 has been configured with an array of cameras, electronic intelligence equipment and radar-homing and warning systems, depending upon it's mission. The U-2 aircraft played an instrumental role in detecting Soviet intermediate-range ballistic missiles during the Cuban missile crisis of 1962.
The U-2 "Dragon Lady" gained notoriety when one- flown by Francis Gary Powers, a former SAC F-84 pilot- was shot down during and intelligence gathering mission over the Soviet Union on May 1, 1960. The U-2 is still considered today to be one of the most technologically advanced aircraft ever built. It's development in 1954 was shrouded in great secrecy since it's primary role was strategic reconnaissance. Designed to fly for long periods at very high altitudes, it is essentially a powered glider with a sail-plane-like wing and lightweight structure.
About our U-2C: Nicknamed "The Saint" during it's service with the Air Force thunderstorm research program, this U-2C (S/N 56-6701 also served with the Central Intelligence Agency and various Reconnaissance Wings. The aircraft has been converted from a U-2A to a U-2B, and finally to a U-2C model in 1968. It was dropped from the inventory and flown to the Strategic Air & Space Museum in 1982.