Boeing 727-400
Bruce Campbell’s first home is constructed from a Boeing 727, which Boeing made from 1960 to 1984. The smaller plane was used mainly for shorter flights, since its smaller body required less runway length, and was thus optimal for use in smaller airports.
The Boeing 727 was the only airline that Boeing Commercial Airplanes produced that was constructed with three engines. It could seat anywhere from 149 to 189 passengers. While it was once used by many major airlines, Delta Air Lines was the last to do so. They retired their last Boeing 727 in April of 2003, while Northwest Airlines retired their last Boeing 727 in June of the same year. The only airline to still use the Boeing 727, with three planes still in operation, is Iran Aseman Airlines.
A Bleak Past
Before it became Campbell’s unique home, the Boeing 727 was obviously used as a passenger jet. However, it turns out that it had some very famous passengers, including a dead body!
Campbell’s home once housed the body of deceased Greek tycoon Aristotle Onassis after he died on March 15, 1975 in France due to respiratory failure. His wife, Jackie Kennedy Onassis, a former first lady of the United States of America, accompanied the body.