One of the earliest Concordes, built 1976, welcomed us to the Aeroscopia Museum. By the time it was retired in 2003, this lovely had flown close to 14,500 hours, and completed two round-the-world flights, in 1989 and 1993, flying at supersonic speeds for almost half the time. Two of the 20 Concordes ever built are at the Aeroscopia Museum near the Airbus factory in Toulouse. Along with them on permanent exhibition is a range of other aircraft, like the Caravelle (one of the first successful commercial jetliners, built in the mid-1950s) and the Super Guppy (a wide-bodied cargo aircraft operational for over 30 years). At the newly opened Aeroscopia Museum, visitors get to see not just stories of legendary aircraft, but also the history of aviation itself. A part of this is presented neatly in a timeline fresco that depicts significant flying moments over a century.