All American Engineering Company.
Biographical notes:
All American Aviation, Inc., was incorporated in Delaware on March 5, 1937. It was renamed All American Airways, Inc., on September 20, 1948, in response to its evolution into a conventional airline. On January 2, 1953, it spun off its engineering and research units and became Allegheny Airlines, Inc. It was renamed USAir, Inc., on October 28, 1979.
All American Aviation was originally incorporated by Dr. Lytle S. Adams, who had been experimenting with aerial pick-up devices since the 1920s and was the sole owner of Tri-State Aviation Corporation of Morgantown, W. Va. The company remained inactive until September 1938, when Ricard C. du Pont bought $85,000 in stock and became president. Lytle became vice president and Charles W. Wendt, secretary-treasurer. The other directors were Arthur P. Davis and A. Felix du Pont, Jr.
All American Aviation began service with an experimental airmail pick-up contract in 1939. The service was made permanent in 1940, serving 86 cities on five routes, primarily in Pennsylvania and West Virginia. The company developed an improved pick-up system that owed little to Adams, who withdrew from the firm after a bitter dispute.
The company thrived during World War II by developing military applications for its technology, particularly a "man harness" for snatching people aloft like airmail sacks. The system was tried for air rescue missions and for dropping and retrieving intelligence officers behind enemy lines. The company also became involved in the military glider program. Richard du Pont left to head the Army's glider program in 1943 and was killed in a glider accident a few months later.
Support for the airmail pick-up system declined after World War II, in the face of high costs, lower airmail volume and better rural delivery by road. However, the company continued to push its system by proposing to combine it with passenger service, something the CAB had consistently opposed. In 1948 the company was designated the principal feeder airline for the mid-Atlantic region. In the 1970s the firm evolved into USAir, a major trunk airline.
The firm's engineering and research unit was spun off on January 27, 1953, to the All American Engineering Company, incorporated on October 31, 1952. It was renamed All American Industries on June 11, 1970, and merged into International Controls Corp. on May 7, 1982.
From the description of Records, 1937-1975. (Hagley Museum & Library). WorldCat record id: 122396919
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Subjects:
- Aeronautical engineers
- Aeronautics
- Aeronautics
- Aeronautics
- Aeronautics and state
- Aeronautics, Military
- Airdrop
- Airlines
- Air mail pick-up service
- Air mail service
- Airplanes
- Gliders (Aeronautics)
- Local service airlines
- Transport planes
Occupations:
Places:
- Delaware (as recorded)
- Pennsylvania (as recorded)
- West Virginia (as recorded)