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Stearman Kaydet Trainers, Model 75s, at Stearman's Wichita, KS Facility
Stearman Kaydet Flightline at Stearman Wichita
Early Stearman Bridgeport Plant at Wichita, KS
Stearman Kaydet Production, Wichita, KS
Stearman Aircraft from Above
Stearman Production Facility, Wichita, KS
Job Seekers Line Up Outside of the Personnel Building, Stearman Aircraft Plant, Wichita, KS
Neon Boeing Wichita Sign with Stearman Kaydet PT, Plant I Wichita
Stearman Kaydets at Wichita Factory
Varney Air Lines Stearman M-2 Speedmail, the Bull Stearman, at Wichita, KS
Interviewing Booths at Stearman Aircraft Plant, Wichita, KS
Stearman Kaydets Ready For Delivery from Wichita Plant
First Aid Room, Stearman Aircraft Plant, Wichita, KS
Stearman Factory
Job Seekers Wait in the Interviewing Lobby, Stearman Aircraft Plant, Wichita, KS
PT-13B Stearman Kaydet Final Assembly
PT-27, the Army Designation for the Stearman Kaydet, in Flight
Stearman Crates Transported by Rail
Stearman Kaydet Trainers
B-52D Stratofortress Flight over Boeing Plant Head-on
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Stearman Aircraft at Bridgeport Plant, Wichita, KS
Stearman Aircraft Inc. was founded in 1926 by Lloyd Stearman in Venice, CA where he built the first Stearman biplanes, the C-1, C-2 and the C-3. Stearman had been in California for one year when his Wichita friends raised $80,000 to move back to Kansas and establish his company there. In 1929, Stearman Aircraft became part of a large holding company, the United Aircraft and Transport Corp. (UATC), of which Boeing was the major stock holder. Stearman continued to build mail planes and other types of conventional biplanes. Sales of Stearman's C-3R Business Speedsters helped the company weather the Depression. In 1931 Lloyd Stearman left the company to follow other interests in the aviation field, but the company retained his name. In 1933, Stearman Aircraft designed and built the Model 70, the prototype of the Kaydet Trainers (1934-1944) sold by the thousands during WWII. In 1934 federal legislation mandated that UATC be divided into several different companies, and Stearman Aircraft became a wholly owned subsidiary of the Boeing Company.
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Unique identifier
BI23336
Boeing ID
bw74a
Type
Image
Size
5998px × 4798px 27MB
License type
RM
Keywords
1930s
aerial views
buildings
day
exteriors
factories
farmland
historic production status
nobody
photos
scanned from film negative
sunshine
text
viewed from above
vintage / retro
Restrictions