- Boulton Paul Aircraft
Boulton Paul Aircraft Ltd was a British aircraft manufacturer that was created in 1934, although its origins lay in 1914, and lasted until 1961. The company mainly built and modified aircraft under contract to other manufacturers but it had a few notable designs of its own, such as the ill-conceived
Boulton Paul Defiant .The company's origins date back to an ironmonger's shop founded in 1797 in
Norwich . By the early 1900s, Boulton & Paul Ltd was a successful general manufacturing firm. The aircraft building business was sold off from the main construction business in 1934 and then moved toWolverhampton .History
In 1915, Boulton & Paul began to construct aircraft under contract including 550 of the
Royal Aircraft Factory FE.2b . During the war the company built moreSopwith Camel s than any other manufacturer. Success as a builder of aircraft led to the company forming a design department but none of its resulting aircraft made a significant impact while the war lasted. TheP.3 Bobolink fighter was overshadowed by theSopwith Snipe and theArmistice beat the P.7 Bourgesfighter-bomber into production.Boulton Pauls chief aircraft designer was
John Dudley North , who moved to them from Austin's Aircraft DepartmentAfter World War I, Boulton & Paul made their mark with the introduction of powered and enclosed defensive
machine gun turret s forbomber s. Their Sidestrand twin-enginedbiplane bomber, which could fly at 140 mph, had an exposed nose turret which was clearly inadequate. The subsequent Overstrand bomber featured the world's first enclosed, power-operated turret, mounting a singleLewis gun and propelled by compressed air. The company licensed a French design of an electro-hydraulic four-gun turret which became a major feature of their future production. In addition to fitting turrets to bombers, Boulton Paul was to install them in fighters.Boulton Pauls aircraft were flown out of
Mousehold Heath in Norwich - an area which became the first Norwich AirportDuring this period Boulton & Paul continued to operate outside the aircraft industry as well. They manufactured equipment such as
machine tools and stationary engines. The latter were also available coupled to adynamo for poweringelectric lighting circuits, and were sold under the 'Electolite' brand name.In 1934, Boulton & Paul sold their "Aircraft Department" which became Boulton Paul Aircraft Ltd. Over the next couple of years a new factory site was built up in
Wolverhampton . This gave access to a large skilled workforce on top of the 600 or so employees that left Norwich for Wolverhampton. Even so Boulton Paul would later set up a training centre in Scotland to bring in extra workers. The first "turret" fighter to be built was theHawker Demon . This was followed by Boulton Paul's most famous aircraft, the Defiant, (left) which was a revolutionary but flawed concept -- a "fast" fighter with no fixed forward armament but a powerful four-gun dorsal turret. The same concept was used for the Defiant's naval equivalent, theBlackburn Roc , which while a design by Blackburn, the detail design was done in BP's drawing office and the aircraft was built wholly by Boulton Paul.Boulton Paul also built the
Fairey Barracuda and did conversions of theVickers Wellington . The only post-war design was the Balliol advanced trainer, of which 229 were built, including 30 as the "Sea Balliol" deck-landing trainer.In the jet age, Boulton Paul worked on the
English Electric Canberra andde Havilland Vampire . It designed and built a couple ofdelta-wing jet-engined aircraft for research work and continued to tender designs for official requirements. In 1961 the company merged withDowty Group to form Dowty Boulton Paul Ltd and thenDowty Aerospace .Following the acquisition of Dowty Aerospace by
TI Group in 1992, and the subsequent merger ofSmiths Industries and the TI group in 2000, to formSmiths Group , the site was sold again in May 2007 toGE Aviation Systems . The site has an on-site museum dedicated to Boulton Paul Aircraft and the traditional methods used to manufacture aircraft.Boulton Paul Aircraft
"First flight date shown"
*Boulton Paul Bobolink 1918
*Boulton Paul Bourges 1918
*Boulton Paul P-6 1918
*Boulton Paul Atlantic 1919
*Boulton Paul P.9 1919
*Boulton Paul Bolton 1922
*Boulton & Paul Bugle 1923
*Boulton Paul Bodmin 1924
*Boulton Paul Sidestrand 1926 - bomber
*Boulton Paul Bittern 1927
*Boulton Paul Partridge 1928
*Boulton Paul Phoenix 1929
*Boulton Paul P.32 1931
*Boulton Paul Overstrand 1933 - bomber
*Boulton Paul P.64 Mail-Carrier 1933
*Boulton Paul P.71A 1934
*Boulton Paul Defiant 1937 - turret fighter
*Boulton Paul P.92 1941
*Boulton Paul Balliol 1947 - trainer
*Boulton Paul P.111 1950 - delta wing research
*Boulton Paul P.120 1952 - delta wing researchMissiles
*
UB.109T - Company designation Boulton-Paul P.123 .Boulton Paul gun turrets
Boulton Paul were one of the main innovators of gun turret designs for British aircraft based on designs licenced from a French company. Along with
Nash & Thomson 's FN designs they supplied large numbers of installations for British aircraft.References
External links
* [http://www.britishaircraft.co.uk/companypage.php?ID=16 Boulton Paul at the British Aircraft Directory]
* [http://www.localhistory.scit.wlv.ac.uk/Museum/Transport/planes/boultonPaul.htm Boulton Paul Wolverhampton local history]
* [http://www.norfolkancestors.org/business/boultonandpaul.htm History of Boulton and Paul in Norwich]ee also
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.