Monday, Aug. 21, 1939
Orders
Proceeding apace toward a 5,550-plane Army Air Corps, the War Department last week placed its biggest peacetime orders ($85,000,000) for about 1,000 aircraft, an unannounced number of engines.
>> To Glenn L. Martin Co., $15,815,000, to North American Aviation Inc. $11,771,000, for two-engined, medium bombers.*
>> To Boeing Aircraft Co., $8,090,000, to Consolidated Aircraft Corp., $8,485,000, for improved four-engine "flying fortresses."
>> To Lockheed Aircraft Corp. $4,845,000 for two-engined, 420-m.p.h. interceptor pursuits (for defense against high-flying bombers).
>> To North American Aviation, to Boeing's Stearman division, to Aviation Manufacturing Corp.'s Vultee division: $7,707,000 for training planes.
>> For Pratt & Whitney, Allison (liquid-cooled), Wright and Lycoming engines: $21,865,000.
*One of the Army's 200 Douglas bombers of this class crashed last week when an engine failed on the take-off at Langley Field, Va. Killed: an entire crew of nine.
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