North American
Airlines Douglas DC-3
N55297
(c/n 4683)
This DC-3 is in what
I would call North American's 'latter day' markings.. For the original
livery see
the DC-4
N63396. In 1945 Stanley Weiss and Charles Sherman founded a
company known as
Fireball Air Express. It flew irregular scheduled passenger and
cargo flights between Long Beach,
CA
and New York City with DC-3s. Sherman left the company in 1947
and founded Airline Trans-
port Carriers (and later California Central Airlines) to fly
'Thriftliner" services between Burbank and
Oakland.
At that time Weiss changed Fireball's name to Standard Air
Lines. In 1950 Weiss merged
Standard with Ross Hart and Jack Lewin's Viking Air Lines He
then acquired Twentieth Century Air-
lines, Trans-National Airlines, Trans-American Airlines and Hemisphere
Air Transport. With these
six carriers he then formed the North American Airlines Agency which
acted as a central marketing
and reservations
umbrella By combining the airlines he was able to
circumvent the CAB's twelve-
per-month limitation of non-sked carriers' frequency and could, in
effect, offer daily service between
any two
cities. In fact, originally some fourteen DC-3s
were painted up in a generic 'Aircoach'
livery. When the DC-4s were acquired the titling was
changed to "The North American". Bill
Larkins'
photo of N55297 was taken at Oakland in May of 1955. The
aircraft was, in fact, at that
time actually registered to Standard Air Lnes so far as FAA records
show. Such was the convo-
luted corporate
web. . For more on this history see the next entry.