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Aircraft

COMMERCIAL AIRCRAFT OPERATING COMPANIES IN THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA - Continued

Name of Compan

Address

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76 Starkey Battery Co.

72 Santa Maria Avia- Santa Maria,

74 Service Aviation
Training & Trans-
portation Co., Inc.

75 Miss Neta Snook

Calif.
Minneapolis,
Minn.
Wabash, Ind.

828 Wilson Ave., Ames, Iowa. Muskogee, Okla.

3 J.-1's.

Orioles; J.N.'s;
J.-1's; 504-K's.
11 Canadian J.N.'s.

Field (leased), at Santa Maria, Cal., 1⁄2 mile square; 1 hangar.

15.00

Field (owned), Minneapolis; hangars,

15.00

1.00

3,000

12,000

shops, etc.

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2 under construction. Field (owned) west of Muskogee.

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77 Southern Aeroplane Co.

11 S. Church St., 3 F.-40 & F.-46. Charlotte, N. C.

Terminal at Charlotte, N. C., and Fairmont, W. Va. (one owned, one leased); hangar and supplies at Charlotte.

15.00

1.00

1,249

1,100

20,000

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Use municipal field, all supplies available.

15.00

2.00

500

15,000

3 J.N.-4-D's.

Field (rented) n.e. of city; hangar for 6 planes, service station.

15.00

75

1 N-9 seaplane,†
1 J.N.-4-D.

Fields (owned) at Lake Tahoe and Honolulu; hangars and runway (under construction) at Honolulu.

10.00

.75

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4 J.-1's.

Field (owned) with 8-plane hangar, supplies. etc.; 1 min. from city.

10.00

1.00

551

11,000

1 Oriole.

Field (rented), Salt Lake City.

12.50

.75

275

150

8,000

Salt Lake City, Utah.

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Comox Harbor, B C.

1 JN.-4-D converted Use harbor floating-hangar and shop. to seaplane.

10.00

.75

75

283

600

11,000

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Curtiss Ten-passenger Liberty-motored "Eagle"-"The Aerial Pullman."

COMMERCIAL AIRCRAFT OPERATING COMPANIES IN THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA - Continued

Charge Charge Pas.-mile

Name of Company

Address

Aircraft

Air Port Facilities

Short

Flight

Inter-city Carried

Passen- Freight gers

Miles

Carried Flown

Flight

85 Waterloo Aero

Waterloo, Ind.

1 Canadian J.N.

Field (rented), 1-plane hangar, shop.

$10.00

$.75

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Transportation Co.

86 Western Aeroplane Casper, Wyo. & Motor Corp.

1 J.N.-4; 2 Orioles; 2 J.-1's.

Field (leased); hangar for 5 planes, complete shops, etc.

10.00

1.00

500

800

4,000

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2 Canadian J.N.-4's. Field (leased) with hangars, supplies,
shop, etc., at Ocean Blvd.; seaplane land-
ing dock.

Field (owned), at 3rd St., So. Yakima,
Wash.; 1 hangar, shop, etc.

15.00

1.00

2,520

12,000

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$12.50 (av.)

$ .65 (av.)

115,163

41,390 3,136,550 lbs.

50 and 50-B-2, three-place flying boats, Aeromarine engine; F.-5-L Navy Cruiser, fourteen-place flying boats, Liberty engine; built by Aeromarine Plane
and Motor Company, Keyport, N. J.

B.B.-L., three-place land plane, Hall-Scott engine; B.-1, two or three-place flying boat; C, twin float seaplane; built by Boeing Airplane Company,
Seattle, Wash.

J.N.'s of the various types, two-place land planes; Oriole, three-place land plane; Seagull, three-place flying boat; F. and M.F., two and three-place
flying boats; Eagle, ten-place land plane; H.S. and H.-16, six to sixteen-place flying boats; OX, K and C engines; Liberty engines in larger types;
built by Curtiss Aeroplane and Motor Corporation, Garden City, L. I., New York.

K.T., two-place land plane; O.W., three-place land plane, Liberty engine; built by Dayton Wright Company, Dayton, O.

J.1 and J.-2, two and three-place land planes built by Standard Aircraft Corporation, Elizabeth, N. J.. and rebuilt by Curtiss Aeroplane and Motor Corporation or others. tindicates Wright engine built by Wright Aeronautical Corporation, Paterson, N. J.

indicates Liberty engine built by Packard Motor Car Company, Detroit, Mich.

indicates engine built by Hall-Scott Motor Car Company, Berkeley, Calif.

F.40 and F.46, French Farman; J.L. monoplane, German Junker; 504-K, British-Avro; Lark monoplane; ** French Breguet; *** Daugherty tractor; • Laird landplane; °° British Bristol.

(The above is based upon statements made to the Manufacturers Aircraft Association, Inc., in response to questionnaires sent to all known operators of aircraft. No opportunity has been available to determine the accuracy of the information and no responsibility is taken for the data except for the care with which the figures and facts are reported and the manner in which the summary is presented.)

The operating companies report a total of 222 forced landings and 88 accidents.

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CHAPTER III

MAIL AIRCRAFT FLY 8,000 MILES DAILY; LINES LINK UNITED STATES WITH CANADA AND CUBA; TIME BETWEEN ATLANTIC AND PACIFIC REDUCED BY 42 HOURS; MANY EXTENSIONS PLANNED

T

HE United States Air Mail, which started with the New York-Washington route May 15th, 1918, now operates daily between New York and San Francisco, St. Louis, Minneapolis and St. Paul, and New York and Washington, a total of 3,460 miles.

Private aircraft companies are transporting the mails by contract between Seattle and Victoria, B. C., and between Key West and Havana, Cuba, a combined distance of 174 miles.

Thirty-five or more cargo-laden Air Mail planes are actually in the air each day, flying a grand total, in round trips, of approximately 8,000 miles.

The Post Office Department has recommended to Congress the extension of Government-operated routes between Boston and Detroit, by way of Buffalo; between Chicago and Los Angeles, by way of Kansas City; between St. Paul, Minneapolis and Seattle, and between St. Louis and New Orleans by way of Memphis, these routes aggregating 4,770 miles, one way.

Contracts have been let for mail transport services from Pittsburgh to St. Louis by way of Columbus, Cincinnati and Indianapolis; from New York to Atlanta, by way of Washington, Raleigh and Columbia; from New York to Chicago by way of Harrisburg, Pittsburgh and Fort Wayne; and from Cleveland to Detroit. These contract routes, with a total mileage of 2,260, were expected to be in operation by the Spring of 1921.

If the plans under contemplation go through, the United States should witness, late in 1921, the operation of a gigantic Air Mail system with terminals in most of the larger cities, and with aircraft flying more than 20,000 miles every day.

The first eight months of the Air Mail Service, between May 15 and December 30, 1918, 119,006 pounds or 4,760,240 letters were carried. The next twelve months, or during the calendar year of 1919, 471,762 pounds, or 18,870,480 letters were transported by mail

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