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Airco

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Aircraft Manufacturing Company
Industryaviation
Founded1912
Defunct1920
Fatebankruptcy
Successorde Havilland
HeadquartersThe Hyde, UK
Key peopleGeoffrey de Havilland

—————
THE AIRCRAFT
MANUFACTURING CO LTD

The Largest Aircraft Firm in the World
—————
AIRCO
—————
Chairman (and Founder 1911) G Holt Thomas
—————
. . . . The day-light air raids on the German Rhine towns have been carried out with AIRCO machines known as the D.H. (after Capt. de Havilland, the well-known head of the design department) . . . .
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The following companies are under the same direction
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AIRCRAFT TRAVEL & TRANSPORT LTD
Registered in October 1916 for the purpose of organizing Aerial Transport throughout the world.
Allied Companies:

Compagnie Générale Transaerienne (Paris)
Societa Transporti Aerei Internazionali (Milan)
De Norske Luftfartrederi Aktieselskap (Christiana)
Aerial Transportation Company of India
And in South Africa, Canada etc.
—————
AIRSHIPS LIMITED
Originated and built the first "Blimp" or S S Type. . . . . .
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GNOME & LE RHONE ENGINE CO
WALTHAMSTOW
Dealing entirely with aero engines
Vanden Plas (England) 1917 Ltd
Wycombe Aircraft Constructors Ltd
Camden Engineerig Co Ltd
Newall Engineering Ltd
May Harden & May
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SEAPLANE BASE
May Harden & May, Hythe, Southampton,
the Seaplane base of the Aircraft Manufacturing Co is entirely devoted to Seaplanes and Flying Boats
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The Management of the Aircraft Manufacturing Co Ltd will be glad to discuss with Colonial and Foreign Governments Firms or Individuals any proposition for the use of Aircraft in any Aerial Transport Arrangements
——————————————
Aircraft Manufacturing Co Ltd
London Office — 27 Buckingham Gate SW1
Works — Hendon NW
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from part of the display advertisement, page 3,
The TImes, Dec 03, 1918

Aircraft Manufacturing Company - Airco - was established at The Hyde in Hendon, north London, England during 1912 by George Holt Thomas. Geoffrey de Havilland joined two years later as the chief designer, on leaving his post with the Royal Aircraft Factory. His designs for Airco were marked with his initials "DH". The first great success was a pusher engine fighter DH.2 of 1916, that helped to defeat the "Fokker scourge" of 1915. More than 2,280 examples of the DH.6 trainer were built. The DH.4 and DH.9 were important light bombers of World War I - these types, and the DH.9A, a developed version that served for many years with the postwar Royal Air Force, formed the basis of early de Havilland designed airliners - including the company's DH.16 and DH.18 types which were operated by Aircraft Transport and Travel Limited, the first airline established in the United Kingdom, that was also owned by George Holt Thomas.

Following the cessation of hostilities the large number of war-surplus machines, sharp fluctuations in business confidence and the government's failure, unlike those of USA and France, to provide any form of support Airco and BSA announced on 1 March 1920 Airco had merged with Birmingham Small Arms Company. Within days BSA discovered Airco was in a far more serious financial state than George Holt Thomas had revealed. Thomas was immediately dropped from his new seat on the BSA board and all BSA's new acquisitions were placed in the hands of a liquidator. BSA failed to pay a dividend for the following four years. Using Airco's aircraft bought from the liquidator BSA established under Daimler Hire Limited, Frank Searle, Daimler Airway and Daimler Air Hire. The group's assets he required were bought by Geoffrey de Havilland to form de Havilland Aircraft Company in 1920.

List of Airco Aircraft

  • DH.1 (1915) — Two-seat biplane fighter with single pusher propeller
  • DH.2 (1915) — One-seat biplane fighter with single pusher propeller
  • DH.3 (1916) — Two-engine biplane bomber. Two prototypes only built; formed basis for later DH.10 design
  • DH.4 (1916) — Two-seat biplane day bomber with single tractor propeller
  • DH.5 (1916) — One-seat biplane fighter with single tractor propeller
  • DH.6 (1916) — Two-seat biplane training aircraft with single tractor propeller
  • DH.9 (1917) — Two-seat biplane day bomber with single tractor propeller.
  • DH.8 (1918) — Development of DH.9 with more powerful engine and greater wingspan
  • DH.10 Amiens (1918) — Two-engine biplane bomber. First prototype used pusher propeller; second prototype and production aircraft used tractor propellers. Manufactured by Daimler.
  • DH.11 Oxford (1919) Variant of DH.10 with radial engines. One prototype built; not produced
  • DH.16 (1919) — Variant of DH.9A with cabin for four passengers. Used as airliner
  • DH.18 (1920) — Single-engine biplane airliner. Cabin for eight passengers

Notes

  1. The Times, Monday, Mar 01, 1920; pg. 14; Issue 42347
  2. Dudley Docker: The Life and Times of a Trade Warrior R. P. T. Davenport-Hines 1984 Cambridge University Press

References

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