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The DC-3 ERA
The Budds were being replaced by the
DC-3s
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By this time the war had been over for a few months and surplus
DC-3' were becoming available. With the new airplanes added to our
fleet, we had outgrown our facility in Long Beach and moved to Mines
Field, which later became Los Angeles International Airport. The
company sold one Budd to the Tucker Motor Company. They used it to
transport their car to various auto shows.
Another was sold to a company in Cuba, and
the last two eventually went to South America. |
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| A C-47 painted to resemble an
Indian Totem Pole for Mr. Maurice Angly, a Texan who chartered the
aircraft to transport grapefruit to Canada. The flight flew from
Galveston, Texas to Vancouver, British Columbia. |
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| "Elsie the Cow" was one of the airline's
first celebrities when the Borden Company chartered a plane
specially equipped for the bovine for a one-month tour. |
BILL THOMPSON: We hired a lot of people, but
those that weren't much good were soon gone, and the good one just
seemed to stay on all the way through.
The DC-3, the only airplane available, was
not a great cargo airplane. It couldn't haul a very heavy load, but
in the beginning we were lucky to have anything to haul anyway. We
had a lot of flower charters from California to the East Coast, and
soon we were also hauling fresh fruit and vegetables.
We improvised as we went along and made a
lot specialty flights that were profitable-- such as, Borden's
"Elsie the Cow" promotions. That led to the realization
that we could haul any kind of livestock. We transported Roy Roger's
Horse, Trigger, and several racehorses. A DC-3 was billed as the
World's Greastest Horse Ship. |
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Notice that the above DC-3 carries both the
National Skyway Freight and the Flying Tiger Lines Name. There was
early confusion about their name. |
| The company did not intend to cash in on
their "Flying Tigers" fame but they couldn't escape it.
The newspapers and radio reports gave a great deal of coverage to
the new cargo airline. They seldom mentioned the name of the
company, but referred to them as "Those Flying Tiger
Pilots." As a result when they answered the phone saying
"National Skyways Freight," there was often a pause, then
the confused potential customer would say, "I was trying to
reach the Flying Tigers. |
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DC-3 With shark
mouth |
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GOLDY: In the early days the company would
hire a copilot on a trip basis. They paid three dollars an hour, and
when the trip was over they were gone.
We flew DC-3s in the winter when the
heaters would only work during descent. Many a night we froze our
butt off. Tommy Haywood had found a hell of a deal on some military
surplus Janitrol heaters. They were cheap, but we couldn't get them
to work during climb or cruise. Maintenance went through them and
found that they were made for the P-51 Mustang. They had a safety
switch operated by ram air, and would not light until a relatively
high airspeed was reached. When they reset the switch for the DC-3
airspeed, the heaters worked okay. |
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Things were not quite what they are today, with
all the advances and fancy computer stuff, can you imagine trying
something like this today |
| LARRY LUCCIO: I was flying captain on the
Newark, Bradley, Boston run. We had an old C-47 with a military five
channel radio. The only frequency it had that we could use was
ground control. We flew this trip twice a day, so the control tower people
all got used to us. We used the ground control frequency for
everything--tower, approach and departure control. |
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Buck Buchanan looking at the Lion |
| BUCK BUCHANAN: I hired on in Long Beach as a
mechanic. Later, after we moved to Mines Field, my wife, Jerry, went
to work in the tool crib. After we moved to Burbank, I went into the
Engine Buildup Shop as a lead mechanic and Jerry became the
secretary.
BILL THOMPSON: I really enjoyed it, I was working maintenance
with Jack Studer and Buck Buchanan. A few months later John Dewey
and Jack Dupree came on. We used to work as teams and would
challenge each other to see who could get our jobs done first.
We got an airplane in every evening and had
to finish it that night. When the maintenance was done, we loaded
the flowers or what ever else the cargo was. Bob Prescott came out
and helped us load flowers on several occasions. We didn't care
about shifts-- we just stayed until the airplane was done. It
was really enjoyable. We looked forward to coming to work, and from
then on we just grew. |
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1940's
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