LUXURY IN THE PAST
Air Travel Luxurious in the 1938-40. If You Thought Air Travel Was Luxurious In The 1970s, Check Out
What It Was Like Aboard The 1938-40's WW2-Era Boeing Clipper
The Boeing Company
Clipper passengers took their meals at real tables, not their seats.
For most travelers in the 21st century, flying is a dreary experience, full of inconvenience, indignity, and discomfort.
That wasn't the case in the late 1930s, when those with the money to afford Trans-oceanic flight got to take the Boeing Model 314, better known as the Clipper.
Even Franklin Roosevelt used the plane, celebrating his 61st birthday on board.
Between 1938 and 1941, Boeing built 12 of the jumbo planes for Pan American World Airways.
The 314 offered a range of 3,500 miles — enough to cross either the Atlantic or Pacific —and room for 74 passengers onboard.
Of course, modern aviation offers an amazing first class experience (and it ' s a whole lot safer), but nothing in the air today matches the romanticism of crossing the ocean in the famed Clipper.
Thanks to the Pan Am Historical Foundation for sharing its photos. The foundation is currently working on a documentary about Pan American World Airways and the adventure of the flying boat age. Find out more here.
The Model 314 ' s nickname Clipper came from an especially fast type
of sailing ship, used in the 19th century.
Pan Am Historical Foundation
The ship analogy was appropriate, as the Clipper landed on the water, not runways.
The Boeing Company
Here's a diagram of the different areas of the plane.
The Boeing Company
[Source: Boeing]
On Pan Am flights, passengers had access to dressing rooms and a dining salon that
could be converted into a lounge or bridal suite.
The Boeing Company
The galley served up meals catered from four-star hotels.
The Boeing Company
If you want to sit at a table to eat with other people these days, you have to fly in a private jet.
The Boeing Company
There was room for a crew of 10 to serve as many as 74 passengers.
The Boeing Company
On overnight flights, the 74 seats could be turned into 40 bunks for comfortable sleeping.
The Boeing Company
The bunk beds came with curtains for privacy.
Pan Am Historical Foundation
On the 24-hour flights across the Atlantic, crew members could conk out on these less luxurious cots.
Pan Am Historical Foundation
Unlike some modern jets that come with joysticks, the Clipper had controls that resembled car steering wheels.
Pan Am Historical Foundation
Navigating across the ocean used to require more manpower in the air.
Pan Am Historical Foundation
The lavatory wasn't too fancy, but it did have a urinal — something you never see in today 's commercial jets, where space is at a premium.
Pan Am Historical Foundation
The ladies lounge had stools where female passengers could sit and do their makeup.
Pan Am Historical Foundation
The Clipper made its maiden Trans-Atlantic voyage on June 28, 1939.
The Boeing Company
But once the US entered World War II, the Clipper was pressed into
service to transport materials and personnel. In 1943, President Franklin
Roosevelt celebrated his 61st birthday on board.
Pan Am Historical Foundation [Source: Boeing]
From: Kishore Goyal
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Flying Businessman (1953)
Educational documentary from the early 1950's explaining how businesspeople can benefit from general aviation. Features many scenes of airports and planes of the 1950's .
Click here to watch this video
http://www.nidokidos.org/threads/221142
Posted by: Murli dhar Gupta <mdguptabpl@gmail.com>
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