- British Overseas Airways Corporation
Infobox Defunct company
company_name = British Overseas Airways Corporation
company_
slogan =
fate = Merged withBritish European Airways to formBritish Airways
foundation = 1939
defunct = 1974
location = UK
industry =Airline
key_people =
num_employees =
parent =
subsid =The British Overseas Airways Corporation (BOAC) was the British state airline from 1939 until 1946 and the long-haul British state airline from 1946. The company started life with a merger between
Imperial Airways Ltd. andBritish Airways Ltd. Following a 1971Act of Parliament , BOAC was merged in 1974 withBritish European Airways Corporation (BEA) to formBritish Airways .History
During the 1930s, 1940s and until November 1950 Imperial Airways and then BOAC operated
flying boat services fromSouthampton to colonial possessions inAfrica andAsia . Aircraft such as theShort Empire andShort S.8 Calcutta flying boat, transport passengers andmail .As well as training pilots in the UK, BOAC operated a tropical training school in
Soroti , North EastUganda .The breakup
The Civil Aviation Act of 1946 led to the demerger of two divisions of BOAC to form three separate corporations:
*BOAC - for Empire, North American and Far East routes
*British European Airways (BEA) - for European and domestic routes
*British South American Airways (BSAA) - for South American and Caribbean routesIn July 1949, British South America Airways was merged back into BOAC.
Introduction of jets
In May 1952, BOAC became the first airline to introduce a
passenger jet , thede Havilland Comet . All Comet 1 aircraft were grounded in April 1954 after four Comets crashed, the last two being BOAC aircraft. Investigators discovered serious structural cracks caused bymetal fatigue due to the repeatedpressurization and depressurization of the aircraft as they ascended and descended. While rectifying this problem,de Havilland engineers improved the Comet in many ways and improved its range, creating the Series 4. In 1958, BOAC used the new Comets to become the first airline to fly jet passenger services across the Atlantic.During the 1950s and 1960s, BOAC flew the Bristol Britannia and Comet but these aircraft were not competitive so in October 1956 they ordered 15
Boeing 707 s which entered service in 1960. Sir Giles Guthrie, who took charge of BOAC in 1964, preferred the Boeing aircraft for economic reasons, and indeed BOAC began turning a profit in the late 1960s. The preference for US-made aircraft caused a political row in Parliament, however, and the government ordered BOAC to purchase 17Vickers VC-10 aircraft from a 30-aircraft order which Guthrie had cancelled. [ [http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,836920,00.html Brickbats at BOAC] , "TIME", March 24, 1967.] However the VC-10 had somewhat higher operating costs than the 707, largely as a result of BOAC's own demands for the aircraft to have excellenthot and high performance.BOAC later became the largest Boeing customer outside North America. The next major order of Boeing aircraft was for 11 747-100s. BOAC received its first 747 on 22 April 1970 but due to
strike action by theBritish Air Line Pilots Association the aircraft did not enter commercial service for almost a year, on 14 April 1971.In 1962, BOAC and Cunard formed BOAC-Cunard Ltd to operate scheduled services to North America, the Caribbean and South America. The operation was dissolved in 1966.
Dissolution
On 1 September 1972, the British Airways Board was formed, a holding board that controlled BOAC and BEA. On 31 March 1974, both the BOAC and BEA were dissolved and their operations merged to form
British Airways .BOAC would have become one of the first operators of the
Concorde had it not merged to becomeBritish Airways . BA's Concordes carried registrations of G-BOAA through G-BOAG. The first Concorde delivered to British Airways was actually registered G-BOAC.Aircraft operated
*
Airspeed Consul (1949)
*Airspeed Oxford (1948)
* Armstrong Whitworth A.W.38 Whitley 5 (1942)
*Armstrong Whitworth Ensign (1939)
* Avro 683 Lancaster (1944)
* Avro 691 Lancastrian (1945)
* Avro 688 Tudor 1 (1946)
* Avro 685 York (1944)
*Bristol Britannia (1955)
* Boeing 314A (1941)
*Boeing 377 Stratocruiser (1949)
*Boeing 707 (1960)
*Boeing 747 (1969)
* Canadair C-4 Argonaut (1947)
* Consolidated Model 28 Catalina (1940)
* Consolidated Model 32 Liberator (1941)
* Curtis Wright CW-20 (1941)
* de Havilland DH.91 Albatross (1940)
* de Havilland DH.95 Flamingo (1940)
* de Havilland DH.98 Mosquito (1943)
* de Havilland DH.104 Dove (1946)
* de Havilland DH.106 Comet (1951)
*Douglas DC-3 (1940)
* Douglas DC-7C (1956)
* Focke-Wulf Fw 200B Condor (1940)
*Handley Page Halifax (1946)
*Handley Page Halton (1946)
*Handley Page Hermes (1949)
*Lockheed Constellation (1948)
*Lockheed Hudson (1941)
*Lockheed Lodestar (1941)
* Short S.23 Empire (1936)
* Short S.25 Sunderland (1942)
*Short S.26 (1939)
* Short S.30 Empire (1938)
*Short Sandringham (1947)
*Short Solent (1946)
*Vickers VC10 (1964)
*Vickers Warwick (1942)Incidents
*AM918, Liberator C I BOAC registration G-AGDR, shot down by a Spitfire in error over English Channel near Plymouth, England on 15 February 1943.
* Flight 777, 1 June 1943, shot down over theBay of Biscay by GermanJunkers Ju 88 s. All seventeen crew and passengers were killed, including actor Leslie Howard.cite book |last=Goss |first=Christopher H. |title=Bloody Biscay: The History of V Gruppe/Kampfgeschwader 40 |year=2001 |publisher=Crécy Publishing |location=Manchester |id=ISBN 0-947554-87-4 |pages=50-56 ] There has been widespread speculation that the downing was an attempt to kill BritishPrime Minister Winston Churchill . cite web
author=N/461 | publisher= | year=
url=http://www.n461.com/howard.html
title=Howard & Churchill
accessdaymonth=2 December | accessyear =2006 ]
* Flight 781, Mediterranean Sea, nearElba , 10 January 1954.
*South African Airways Flight 201 (operated by BOAC), Mediterranean, nearNaples , 8 April 1954.
*Bristol Britannia 312, Tail Number;G-AOVD , Crashed near WinktonEngland on the morning of 24 December 1958.
* Flight 911, (5 March 1966). A Boeing 707 crashed onMount Fuji after experiencing clear air turbulence. Several passengers cancelled their tickets at the last moment in order to see aninja demonstration. These passengers,Cubby Broccoli ,Harry Saltzman ,Ken Adam ,Lewis Gilbert andFreddie Young , were inJapan scouting locations for the fifthJames Bond film, "You Only Live Twice".
* Flight 712,England 9 April 1968. [ [http://www.airdisaster.com/special/special-boac712.shtml Special Report: British Overseas Airline Company Flight 712] . AirDisaster.com. Retrieved on2008-01-09 .]
* Flight 775 became the first British plane to be hijacked on 9 September 1970 as part of theDawson's Field hijackings .Popular culture
* Evolutions of the BOAC logo inherited from Imperial Airways, the
Speedbird , continue to be used as the logo for British Airways, and continues to be used as BA'scall sign .*
The Beatles song "Back in the USSR " (released in 1968 on "The White Album ") begins with the line "Flew in from Miami Beach via BOAC."*
Bobby Bloom 's song "Montego Bay" in its first line refers to a jetliner as a "BOAC", pronouncing it as anacronym rather than as aninitialism , which was more usual.References
External links
* [http://www.bamuseum.com/ British Airways Archive and Museum Collection]
* [http://www.danzfamily.com/archives/2005/02/boac_junior_jet.php BOAC Junior Jet Club Information]
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