(Redirected from Douglas Aircraft Corporation)
The 'Douglas Aircraft Company' was founded by
Donald Wills Douglas, Sr. in July
1921 in
Santa Monica, California, following dissolution of the Davis-Douglas Company. An early claim to fame was the
first circumnavigation of the world by air in Douglas planes in
1924.
It is most famous for the "DC" (Douglas Commercial) series of commercial aircraft, including what is often regarded as the most significant transport aircraft ever made: the
DC-3, which was also produced as a military transport known as the
C-47 Skytrain or simply "Dakota". Many Douglas aircraft had unusually long service lives, and many remain in service today. Douglas created a wide variety of aircraft for the
United States armed forces, the
Navy in particular.
The company initially built torpedo bombers for the U.S. Navy, but developed a number of variants on these aircraft including observation aircraft and a commercial airmail variant. Within five years the company was turning out over 100 aircraft annually. Among the early employees at Douglas were
Edward Heinemann,
"Dutch" Kindelberger, and
Jack Northrop (who went on to found
Northrop).
The company retained its military market and expanded into amphibians in the late 1920s, also moving its facilities to
Clover Field at
Santa Monica. The complex in Santa Monica was so large that the mail girls used
roller skates to deliver the intra-company mail. By the end of World War II, Douglas had facilities at
Santa Monica, CA,
El Segundo, CA,
Long Beach, CA,
Torrance, CA,
Tulsa, OK,
Midwest City, OK, and
Chicago, IL.
In
1934 Douglas produced a commercial two-engined transport, the
DC-2, following it with the famous
DC-3 in
1936. The wide range of aircraft produced by Douglas included airliners, light and medium bombers, fighters, transports, observation aircraft, and experimental aircraft. During World War II, Douglas joined the BVD (
Boeing-
Vega-Douglas) consortium to produce the
B-17 Flying Fortress. After the war, Douglas built another Boeing design under license, the
B-47 Stratojet.
World War II was a major earner for Douglas. The company produced almost 30,000 aircraft from
1942 to
1945 and the workforce swelled to 160,000. The company produced a number of aircraft including the
C-47 (based on the
DC-3), the
DB-7 (known as the A-20, Havoc or Boston), the
Dauntless and the
A-26 Invader. The company suffered at the end of hostilities, facing an end of government orders and a surplus of aircraft. It heavily cut its workforce, sacking almost 100,000 people. As part of their wartime work Douglas had established a
United States Army Air Forces think-tank, a group that would later become the
RAND Corporation.
Douglas continued to develop new aircraft, including the successful four-engined
DC-6 (
1946) and their last prop-driven commercial aircraft, the
DC-7 (
1953). The company had moved into jet propulsion, producing their first for the military - the conventional
F3D Skyknight in
1948 and then the more 'jet age'
F4D Skyray in
1951. Douglas also made commercial jets, producing the
DC-8 in
1958 to compete with the new
Boeing 707.
Douglas was a pioneer in related fields, such as ejection seats, air-to-air, surface-to-air, and air-to-surface missiles, launch vehicles, bombs and bomb racks. Douglas was eager to enter the new
missile business in the 1950s. Douglas moved from producing air-to-air rockets and missiles to entire missile systems under the
1956 Nike program and becoming the main contractor of the
Skybolt ALBM program and the
Thor ballistic missile program. Douglas also earned contracts from NASA, notably for part of the enormous
Saturn V rocket.
In
1967, the company was struggling to expand production to meet demand for
DC-8 and
DC-9 airliners and the
A-4 Skyhawk attack plane. Quality and cash flow problems, combined with shortages due to the
Vietnam War, led Douglas to agree to a merger with
McDonnell Aircraft Corporation to form
McDonnell Douglas. Douglas Aircraft Company continued as a wholly owned subsidiary of McDonnell Douglas, but its space and missiles division became part of a new subsidiary called McDonnell Douglas Astronautics Company.
McDonnell Douglas later merged with
Boeing in
1997. Boeing combined the Douglas Aircraft Company with the Boeing Commercial Airplanes division, ending more than seventy-five years of Douglas Aircraft Company history. The last Long Beach-built commercial aircraft, the
Boeing 717 (a third generation version of the Douglas DC-9), ceased production in May 2006. Production of the
C-17 Globemaster III is scheduled to continue until 2008, which will end nearly seventy years of aircraft production in Long Beach.
Aircraft

Passengers deplaning a SAS DC-6
★
DT-1 (1921)
★
DWC (1923)
★
O-2 (1924)
★
C-1 (1925)
★
M-1 (1925)
★
T2D (1927)
★
BT-1/BT-2 (1930)
★
Dolphin (1930)
★
O-31 (1930)
★
B-7/O-35 (1931)
★
XT3D (1931)
★
DC-1 (1933)
★
DC-2 (1934)
★
O-43 (1934)
★
B-18 Bolo (1935)
★
DC-3 (1935)
★
TBD Devastator (1935)
★
O-46 (1936)
★
Douglas DB-7 Boston / A-20 Havoc (1938)
★
SBD Dauntless (1938)
★
DC-4E (1938)
★
B-23 Dragon (1939)
★
DC-4 (1939)
★
DC-5 (1939)
★
Douglas XB-19 (1941)
★
A-26 Invader (1941?)
★
BTD Destroyer (1943)
★
XA-42/XB-42 (1944)
★
A-1 Skyraider (1945)
★
C-74 Globemaster (1945)
★
XB-43 (1946)
★
DC-6 (1946)
★
D-558-1 Skystreak (1947)
★
D-558-2 Skyrocket (1948)
★
F3D Skyknight (1948)
★
C-124 Globemaster II (1949)
★
A2D Skyshark (1950)
★
F4D Skyray (1951)
★
A-3 Skywarrior (1952)
★
X-3 Stiletto (1952)
★
A-4 Skyhawk (1954)
★
B-66 Destroyer (1954)
★
DC-7 (1953)
★
F5D Skylancer (1956)
★
C-133 Cargomaster (1956)
★
F6D Missileer (1958)
★
DC-8 (1958)
★
DC-9 (1965)
★
DC-10 (1971)
Missiles and Space Launch
★
Roc I
★
AAM-N-2 Sparrow I (1948)
★
AIR-2 Genie (1956)
★
Nike Ajax (1959)
★
Zeus
★
Nike Hercules
★
Honest John
★
Thor
★
Delta
★
Saturn S-IVB stage
Further reading
★ ''The Entrepreneurs: Explorations Within the American Business Tradition'',
Robert Sobel (Weybright & Talley 1974), chapter 8, Donald Douglas: The Fortunes of War ISBN 0-679-40064-8.
External links
★
Complete production list starting with the Cloudster
★
Douglas Aircraft history 1939-45
★
Douglas Aircraft history 1946-56
★
Douglas Aircraft history 1957-67