NM16 Lockheed 10-C Electra
(c/n 1005)
Compania Nacional Cubana
de Aviacion Curtiss S.A. was formed as a subsidiary of the
North American Aviation conglomerate in
1929. When the Curtiss-Keys-North American
enterprise got into financial
difficulties in 1932, Juan Trippe, president of Pan American
swooped in and purchased the
fledgling airline. At that time the word "Curtiss" was drop-
ped from the title.
Naturally enough the early equipment comprised a single Curtiss Robin
and a Curtiss
Thrush. Ford Trimotors were acquired in 1932. These were
replaced in 1934
with five ex
PanAm Lockheed Electras (hence they were model 10-Cs). The print
seen
above was sent to me by Cubana in
1950. NM16
was formerly NC14258. It had just
been
repainted
when this photo was taken. Underneath the fuselage cheat line the old
C.N.C.A.
titles can be
made
out. The photo below, from the Stanislav Dudek
collection, predates the
one above
and shows the L-10 at Havana with just the C.N.C.A. titling on the
fuselage.
Since all
the aircraft in Cuba were US owned at
the time, the pre war Cuban
nationality letters
were NM. This aircraft was originally
assigned NM11 and bore this registration for a short
while
before being re-registered NM16. It became CU-T-11 when
the nationality markings
were
changed in 1945..