“At 60 years and counting, Lockheed Martin is one of Huntsville’s outstanding legacy partners,” Huntsville Mayor Tommy Battle said in a statement.
Lockheed Martin's Huntsville campus in Cummings Research Park. It’s the nature of milestone anniversaries to both celebrate the past and look to the future. That’s what Lockheed Martin is doing as it marks its 60th year in Huntsville.
“I was here on this campus when there were only like 80 people in total on the Huntsville campus,” said Jeff Kepley, vice president of Missile Defense Programs and Huntsville executive site lead at Lockheed Martin. “And then 30 years later, to be sitting here with 1,800 in northern Alabama, it’s just kind of mind boggling but goes right along with the growth of the city. It goes right along with the missions that we serve here.
in Courtland – about 50 miles west of the company’s Huntsville campus on Bradford Drive in Cummings Research Park. According to a Lockheed Martin press release from that ribbon cutting, it’s the company’s commitment to establishing northern Alabama as the “home of hypersonic strike production.” “If you just look in the news in the last five years, what we’ve gone through with the growth of hypersonics, that mission has now opened up and has kind of dominated headlines,” he said. “But it’s also an area where Lockheed Martin is committed to put time and energy and satisfy the needs of the warfighter from a hypersonic perspective as well. So I would say hypersonics in conjunction with missile defense have kind of changed the overall mission front that we serve.
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