Difference between revisions of "Texas Aero Manufacturing Co."

From Inventing aviation
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(CSV import)
 
(moved text to free text space)
Line 1: Line 1:
 +
[[George W. Williams]] had built light monoplane, 1908, founder.  Brother [[Eldon Kent Williams]] may have been a co-founder and appears to have worked informally with George.  E. K. was editor of the ''Temple Daily Telegram'', Temple, Texas, the city's first daily newspaper, which he had co-founder in 1907.
 +
 +
From 1910, George had experimented with his brother E.K., in designing a monoplane.  By 1913, dubbed the "Temple Monoplane," it was in the air, likely flown by E. K. since George did not learn to fly until WWI.  The story is that E. K. used the aircraft to deliver newspapers to rural areas and that the Williamses got postal delivery routes.  These activities may have been after WWI.  There is no known commercial output from Texas Aero Manufacturing Co.  In 1920, it was reorganized as '''George Williams Airplane and Manufacturing Co.''' and produced several "Texas Temple" parasol monoplanes.
 +
 +
Sources: G329; 2dG504; SD281; WTDT; tdtnews.com; 1000aircraftphotos.com
 +
 
{{Organization
 
{{Organization
 
|Organization names=Texas Aero Manufacturing Co.
 
|Organization names=Texas Aero Manufacturing Co.
Line 6: Line 12:
 
|Started aero=1911
 
|Started aero=1911
 
|Ended aero=1920
 
|Ended aero=1920
|Sources=George W. Williams, who had built light monoplane, 1908, founder.  Brother E. K. (Eldon Kent) Williams may have been a co-founder and appears to have worked informally with George.  E. K. was editor of the Temple Daily Telegram, Temple, Texas, the city's first daily newspaper, which he had co-founder in 1907. 
 
|Notes 1=From 1910, George had experimented with his brother E.K., in designing a monoplane.  By 1913, dubbed the "Temple Monoplane," it was in the air, liekly flown by E. K. since George did not learn to fly until WWI.  The story is that E. K. used the aircraft to deliver newspapers to rural areas and that the Williamses got postal delivery routes.  We haven't been able to date these activities but suspect they were after WWI.  There is no known commercial output from Texas Aero Manufacturing Co.  In 1920, it was reorganized as George Williams Airplane and Manufacturing Co. and produced several "Texas Temple" parasol monoplanes. 
 
|Notes 3=G329; 2dG504; SD281; WTDT; tdtnews.com; 1000aircraftphotos.com
 
 
}}
 
}}

Revision as of 22:44, 30 November 2016

George W. Williams had built light monoplane, 1908, founder. Brother Eldon Kent Williams may have been a co-founder and appears to have worked informally with George. E. K. was editor of the Temple Daily Telegram, Temple, Texas, the city's first daily newspaper, which he had co-founder in 1907.

From 1910, George had experimented with his brother E.K., in designing a monoplane. By 1913, dubbed the "Temple Monoplane," it was in the air, likely flown by E. K. since George did not learn to fly until WWI. The story is that E. K. used the aircraft to deliver newspapers to rural areas and that the Williamses got postal delivery routes. These activities may have been after WWI. There is no known commercial output from Texas Aero Manufacturing Co. In 1920, it was reorganized as George Williams Airplane and Manufacturing Co. and produced several "Texas Temple" parasol monoplanes.

Sources: G329; 2dG504; SD281; WTDT; tdtnews.com; 1000aircraftphotos.com


Organization names Texas Aero Manufacturing Co.
Entity type 1
Country US
City Temple, TX
Affiliated with
Scope
Started aero 1911
Ended aero 1920
Keywords
Key people
Wikidata id