Let’s remember when Boeing left Seattle for Chicago, on this day in 2001 (September 4)

Chris Burlingame
Journal of Precipitation
2 min readSep 4, 2019
By dnak — https://www.flickr.com/photos/38891581@N00/4437017061/, CC BY 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=33784204

The Boeing Company, despite being able to successfully shake down the legislature for tax credits without promising any real job guarantees, is not really a Seattle company any longer. That has been the case for exactly 18 years now.

As HistoryLink’s David Wilma writes:

On September 4, 2001, the Boeing Company moves its world headquarters from Seattle to Chicago. The decision to leave Seattle, announced on March 21, 2001, affects about 1,000 jobs. Chicago is chosen because it is “a location central to our operating units, customers and the financial community — but separate from our existing operations,” according to Chief Executive Officer Phil Condit. Seattle had been Boeing’s home since its founding in 1916.

When the plan to relocate was announced in March, Boeing embarked on a search for a new location that would suit the firm, which in the preceding years had acquired other aerospace giants such as McDonnell Douglas. New York and Dallas were considered. On May 10, 2001, the company picked Chicago and rented a 36-story building on Riverside Drive in the downtown area. CEO Condit stated that the decision was not related to the recent power crisis or to an earthquake that struck the Northwest on February 28, 2001.

Only the headquarters moved. Commercial airplanes, Boeing Capital Corp., Air Traffic Management, Connexion by Boeing, Military Aircraft and Missile Systems, Space & Communications, and Phantom Works all remained in the Seattle area. At the time of the move, the company employed 78,400 people in the Seattle area and 198,900 people worldwide.

Also, A-Rod can still fuck off.

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Chris Burlingame
Journal of Precipitation

Seattleite, (mostly) retired arts/culture blogger. Come for the Seinfeld references, stay for the Producers references.