..
has made many important contributions to the history of aircraft and was solely, or jointly, responsible for the development and production of the
. Before WW1 there were no regular air services and
.
Whilst it was the military market that really was the source of aviation development, in the years leading up to 1914 it was, in the UK, rather sporadic. In
development on behalf of the Government was stopped as being too costly. In
Britain had only 6 military aeroplanes, 2 of which were obsolete. The French War Department owned 208.
there were about 200 active constructors, although many of them only made one or two planes. But even the production of the larger firms was not very substantial,
, one of the largest produced just over 200 planes between 1910 and 1914.
. There were
in 1912.
). Finally, there were several French subsidiary companies who built aero-engines.
By the
start of WW1 the
Naval Wing of the R.F.C. had
93 and the
Military Wing had 179.
Unsurprisingly the run up to and onset of WW1 led to a
massive increase in the number of companies engaged in aircraft production.
Between 1912 and 1916 aircraft production was moved on to a mass production basis. But it was only by
1917 that production problems and procedures were sorted out such that there was a
steady flow of aircraft, engines and spares.
By
October 1918 there were
1,529 companies involved in the
manufacture of aircraft. As well as aviation companies making aeroplanes there were other
engineering companies also involved in making aircraft and engines (usually under licence). Companies such as shipbuilders
Harland and Wolff in Belfast, engineering manufacturer,
G & J Weir in Glasgow. The
motor industry obviously had a capability to manufacture aeroplanes and, in particular, engines.
Austin Motor Company,
Daimler Company,
D. Napier & Son,
Sunbeam Motor Car Company and
ABC Motors were all part of the [WW1]
wartime aviation industry. In addition there were also a large number of
sub-contractors, making such things as propellers, electrical equipment, instrumentation and canvas.
However, once the War was over, the vast majority returned to their pre-war activities. The aircraft being produced in 1918 were essentially enhanced versions of the 1914 aircraft. The
development of the aviation industry between 1914 and 1918 was
more one of production and logistics than scientific or technical.
1918-1924
On
2 January 1918 the
Air Ministry was founded and on
1 April 1918 the
Royal Air Force was established,
independent of the Army and Royal Navy. Both organisations were to fashion the nature of the aviation industry in the UK.
The first task for the government at the end of the war was to
dispose of their stocks of aircraft and to deal with those on order. The
Ministry of Munitions set up a
Disposal Board and sold the entire surplus stock to a private company,
Aircraft Disposals Company, with
Frederick Handley Page as one of the key personnel.
As soon as the war was finished and the government demand for aircraft ceased
some of the remaining aircraft companies tried to diversify into other activities but with
limited success or
simply closed down. For instance,
Airco looked at car manufacture and was bought by the
Daimler Company parent company
Birmingham Small Arms whilst
Martinsyde and
Sopwith briefly tried motor cycles. By
1920 the British aerospace industry consisted of
28 aeroplane constructors and a
dozen aero engine designers. However, much of their work was of a trivial nature and engine orders were so low that
Rolls Royce nearly left the aviation sector.
The aviation industry was left with the
core of pre-war producers and a
few companies whose interest in aviation had been aroused. This latter category included companies such as the Norwich engineering firm
Boulton & Paul,
Westland Aircraft, the wartime offshoot of engine manufacturers
Petters Ltd and Gloucestershire, later,
Gloster Aircraft Company formed from Cheltenham-based luxury liner outfitters H. H. Martyn.
Nonetheless there was still determination to stay particularly from the
enthusiastic pioneers such de Havilland and Sopwith. As soon as
Airco and
Sopwith Aviation Company were declared bankrupt,(due to the Treasury demanding payment for excess profits) within months
Tommy Sopwith and
Geoffrey de Havilland both established
new companies, H.G. Hawker Engineering later
Hawker Aircraft and
De Havilland Aircraft Company.
Civil Aviation 1918-1924
The Government established a
Civil Aerial Transport Committee (that included
H.G. Wells and
Tommy Sopwith) that reported in
December 1918. Their key recommendation was that steps should be taken to
foster civil aviation in order, in part, to maintain a manufacturing base that could supply the country's military needs. However, Government policy for civil aviation was, initially, according to the then
Secretary of State for Air,
Winston Churchill (19-1-10 to 21-4-1), on
11 March 1920 in the House of Commons to let it "
fly by itself……any attempt to support it artificially by floods of State money will not ever produce a really sound commercial aviation service which the public will use, and will impose a burden of an almost indefinite amount upon the Exchequer".
Air transport companies were established in
1919–20, several of which were
subsidiaries of aircraft manufacturers, such as
Handley-Page,
Airco and
Blackburn Aircraft. A number of the companies failed or found themselves in difficulty, due to
high operating cost,
low demand that was also
seasonal,
high fares and
heavily subsidised French competition and so it was decided in
April 1922 to
offer support and by October
subsidies were given to individual airlines operating set routes.
Matters were improved when aircraft specifically designed for commercial operation were introduced. The
DH.34 and
Handley Page W.8 lowered the operating costs for airlines, making them more economically viable.
[32]
Eventually, however, the state did involve itself in civil aviation and on the advice of the
Hambling Committee, creating
Imperial Airways in 1924 from the four main air transport companies. However, the
Air Ministry did not actively engage with the development of commercial aircraft, despite the recommendation of the 1918 Civil Aerial Transport Committee and was later
criticised by the
1938 Cadman Report for this.
Military Aviation 1918-1924
The
Air Ministry worked in the early years on the basis that there would be no war in Europe in the
immediate future and that the main requirement for aircraft would be policing the colonies. Such activity would not require sophisticated aeroplanes to be developed.
Nonetheless, the
Government needed to ensure that the aircraft industry did not shrink to a size dangerous for national defence and that there would be sufficient aircraft and aero engine companies to sustain the United Kingdom's military requirements for the variety of types of aircraft and engines.
Consequently, there came into being an
arrangement with Society of British Aircraft Constructors that contracts could be shared around a limited number of companies, this became known as
The Ring.
The Air Ministry would draw up a specification which would be given to ‘approved firms’ who would then
submit tenders for prototypes. The
Air Ministry would select several prototypes and finally a
choice for production would be made.
The work was spread out over about
18 aviation companies. The winning company for a tender would not necessarily be given the complete construction work, which on occasions would be spread out to other companies to ensure that they, the other companies, were able to stay in business.
1925–1939
Civil aviation 1924-1939
There was a particular success in this period in the
growth of privately owned light aircraft. In
1924 the
Air Ministry initiated a policy of financial assistance to light aeroplane clubs. Despite Air Ministry support what really made the difference was the
launch of the De Havilland Gipsy Moth in 1924. An immensely popular aircraft ideally suited to flying clubs and popularised by famous aviators such as
Amy Johnson,
Jean Batten, and
Sir Francis Chichester.
However, for
airliners in this period the
UK lagged behind European countries. In 1931 Belgium operator
Sabena was the only other European airline company using British aircraft. The aeroplanes of
German manufacturer
Junkers and
Dutch company
Fokker were
dominant and
after 1930 American passenger aircraft took a leading part. In 1938 Neville Chamberlain flew a
British Airways Ltd Lockheed 10 Electra for his meeting with Adolf Hitler.
The reasons for this were not difficult to find.
Imperial Airways largely ignored European routes preferring to focus on imperial markets in Africa and India. Imperial Airways's
Handley Page aircraft were comfortable and safe but
slow. There was no competition on these routes, so there was
little incentive to spend money on developing new, faster and more efficient aircraft.
Flying boats 1925–1939
However, the
lack of suitable landing airfields in many Empire counties in the inter War period did lead to
Imperial Airways commissioning
Short Brothers in
1935 to build
28 flying boat aircraft for passengers and freight (particularly airmail). The Second World War effectively stopped the further development of the flying boat as after the War there were plenty of suitable land aircraft, notably the
Douglas DC-3, and airfields for flying boats to be redundant.
Research and Development 1925–1939
The aviation industry was to benefit significantly from aeronautical research carried out in the
late 1920s and the
1930s. The academic centres were
University of Cambridge, where they had established a
chair in aeronautical engineering in 1919, and, indeed,
most of the leading British aeronautical engineers were Cambridge graduates, and
Imperial College, London. For instance,
Sir Frank Whittle the inventor and developer of the jet engine and
W.E.W. Petter the designer of the
Westland Lysander and, after World War Two, the
English Electric Canberra, and
Folland Gnat, both studied
mechanical sciences at Cambridge University.
John Siddeley, 1st Baron Kenilworth, the
aero engine producer, gave Cambridge University £10,000 for aeronautical research and the arm dealer
Basil Zaharoff endowed a chair of aviation at Imperial College.
Much work was also done at the
Royal Aircraft Establishment in
Farnborough, Hampshire, the research and development organisation under the auspices of the
Air Ministry. Research work was, for instance, carried out in wind tunnels, and other projects such as research on electrical heating systems for guns, reliable navigation lamps, better engine magnetos and ignition systems.
1939 to 1945
1943: First flight of
De Havilland Vampire
1945: First flight of
Avro Lincoln .