Transcontinental Air Transport

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Transcontinental Air Transport (T-A-T) was an airline founded in 1928 by Clement Melville Keys that merged in 1930 with Western Air Express to form what became TWA. Keys enlisted the help of Charles Lindbergh to design a transcontinental network to get government airmail contracts. Lindbergh established numerous airports across the country in this effort.

Lindbergh with TAT executives

History[edit]

Paperweight honoring the opening of transcontinental rail-air passenger service.

On July 7, 1929, transcontinental trips began. It initially offered a 48-hour coast to coast trip (trains by night, and planes by day in nine flights), with the first leg on the Pennsylvania Railroad overnight from New York City to Columbus, Ohio. There, passengers boarded a Ford Trimotor aircraft at what is now John Glenn Columbus International Airport, and flew to Waynoka, Oklahoma. Then, passengers caught the Santa Fe Railway for an overnight trip to Clovis, New Mexico, where they would take a second Ford Trimotor flight to Los Angeles. One-way fare from New York to Los Angeles was $352 ($5,999 in 2022).[1][2]

Cynics were to deride its TAT abbreviation as "Take A Train."

TAT Ford 5-AT-B "City of Columbus" flown by Lindbergh

The Ford Trimotor service was one of the first to offer meals en route, provided by the Fred Harvey Company.[3] It was also one of the first to be geared toward passenger service (while most airlines at the time were focused on transporting air mail).

In its first eighteen months of operation, the company lost $2.7 million ($47.3 million in 2022).[4] In 1929 it merged with Maddux Air Lines and in 1930, during what was to become the Air Mail scandal, it merged with Western Air Express to form Transcontinental & Western Air (T&WA). Western became an independent company once again in 1934. However, Transcontinental opted to retain the T&WA name, and eventually evolved into Trans World Airlines or TWA.

First air crash[edit]

On September 3, 1929, a westbound TAT flight crashed on Mt. Taylor in New Mexico, with loss of all aboard. The Associated Press said it was the first plane crash on a regular commercial land route. The September crash was the first of three serious accidents for TAT over the next five months.[5]

Museum[edit]

The Western New Mexico Aviation Heritage Museum in Grants, New Mexico, has a restored light and arrow which was used to direct pilots along the way.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Karash, Julius; Montgomery, Rick (2001). TWA: Kansas City's Hometown Airline. Kansas City: Kansas City Star Books. pp. 6–7. ISBN 9780967951997.
  2. ^ Bunyan, Fred (January 1959). "Columbus Prepared for Progress". Flying Magazine - Google Books. Retrieved 5 February 2019.
  3. ^ "TAT Timetable, July 1929". Airline Timetable Images. Retrieved 9 April 2020.
  4. ^ "Transcontinental Air Transport". Oklahoma Historical Society. Retrieved January 29, 2019.
  5. ^ "TAT Crash, 1929, New Mexico Office of the State Historian". Retrieved 2014-11-02.

External links[edit]

Articles[edit]

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