Talk:Capital Airlines (United States)

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Milt Marshall[edit]

Milt was my flight instructor. Great guy, earned the respect of everyone he met. Finding a detailed account of his death here makes me uneasy, more than just a bit. If the article were dedicated to his last flight, I could understand it. Then, the article would have been on point, even if on an odd point.

But in an article dedicated to Capital Airlines? A brief remark stating that Milt, the last caretaker of the Capital Airlines brand, passed away during a business flight is all you need. Beyond that remark, the article becomes more about Milt than about Capital. I am not suggesting censorship, of course. Open information sharing is important, and we should tolerate no matter the circumstance. But if we include so much detail about Milt's death, perhaps the article should not be named "Capital Airlines" after all. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 71.233.124.16 (talk) 15:58, 31 August 2013 (UTC)[reply]

Is your complaint with the page at Gary Basel's Capital Airlines Virtual Museum (http://baesel.net/cap1.htm) ? All he did was post the accident report. To get to it you have to leave the Capital Airlines Wikipedia page. Thus I cannot see what you mean about "Beyond that remark, the article becomes more about Milt than about Capital." I cannot even see that as a valid complaint about Gary Basel's Capital Airlines Virtual Museum. - Mark Lincoln 2602:304:68AF:ADA0:203:93FF:FEAD:8294 (talk) 18:11, 16 May 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Stories[edit]

What can adam one say? How this dry article misses a great deal about Capital airlines.

It was a rather unusual institution. One of the senior captains "Ham" Wilson could have stairs rolled up to the rear door of a Viscount as the passengers loaded through the air stairs at the front. Once the passengers were seated Ham would tuck a large book under his arm, put on dark glasses, and use his white cane to tap his way to the cockpit. On the book, in big gold letters, "How to Fly."

And what would happen when the outraged passenger finally got through to Carmichael?

Nothing much, except he would be reminded it was April 1st.

—Preceding unsigned comment added by Mark Lincoln (talkcontribs) 19:52, 17 July 2007

UAL HQ in 1961[edit]

I was in error to claim that UAL Headquarters was at DEN. UAL was headquartered at MDW.

My error was to depend on memory. The United Flight Training Center (DENTK) was located in Denver.


Mark Lincoln (talk) 18:03, 26 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Capital & the Britannia[edit]

In 1956 Capital ordered Britannias. The prototype 300 was painted in Capital Airlines livery when it crashed. A web search for Britannia G-ANCA will reveal many publicity photos of the aircraft in Capital markings. A color photograph of G-ANCA is on Gary Basele's Capital Airlines Virtual Museum at http://www.baesel.net/cap1.htm

Mark Lincoln (talk) 00:26, 28 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Section name change[edit]

I changed the name because the scope of the section exceeds Capital's "last decade" which started in July 1951 and ended in June 1961.

PCA received 6 DC-3s before the end if 1939 but the first scheduled DC-3 flight did not happen until 2 January 1940.

Mark Lincoln (talk) 01:50, 29 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]

What needs to have a citation provided. What is a source?[edit]

The request for a citation to document the change in livery and logo when PCA changed it's name is curious. In the section below it exact figures were given for the prices of "Nighthawk" coach fares. This begged for citation. Having done an extensive search for a source I was only able to come up with the source I cited.

In the case of the change of livery & logo when the name changed from Pennsylvania-Central Airlines, extant photos show Pennsylvania Central Airlines livery (with the words "The Capital Airlines" painted above the windows) on photos of PCA airplanes. There was a period when the basic PCA livery (with logos replaced) and the name "Capital Airlines" (not The Capital Airlines over the windows) (Baptie, pg 32). Later photos of Capital Airlines airplanes show an entirely different livery (the Eagle). There is no citation needed. The fact is prima facie. All photos of Capital airliners and all excitant brochures, timetables and advertising of Capital Airlines, prove that the livery and logo changed. No citation is necessary.

Ask, always, your questions carefully. But always question everything.

I have not been been able to find any source which explains why Capital Airlines reverted to Clifford Ball's "path of the Eagle" slogan for it's new logo and livery. That is a question which begs a citation. It is also a question which would provide no essential information to the history of PCA/Capital Airlines. Perhaps if we were writing a book it would be worthy of pursuit, but for this article's purpose it is unessential.

I am a champion of citing sources for facts claimed in Wikipedia pages. I do so to a degree which might raise the question of whether I indulge in "over citationing."

I believe that a Wikipedia page should be able to satisfy the interests of a person seeking basic understanding of the subject. I also believe that the article should provide sufficient citations and external links to give the seriously curious person, or researcher, the necessary information to easily pursue further research.

I was a student of aeronautical engineering until the end of the Apollo program and the winding down of the Vietnam War led to a glut of unemployed aeronautical engineers. That led me to fall back on my minor which was history. I never worked in either field, instead pursuing business in a rapidly developing field of technology. My major and minor both served me well in those efforts.

The Wikipedia is a curious endeavor. It seeks to achieve encyclopedia style articles upon a very wide number of subjects. The subjects being decided by, and executed by, it's "editors." Those editors might be almost anyone. Thus the rules of what is acceptable are strict, but when carefully read, allow for judgement and evaluation, of sources and assertions. This is necessary to weed out the casual hobbyists, fanatics, conspiracy theorists and outright tinfoil hat wearing nut cases. The rules should not exclude sources, which upon inspection, are valid sources of historical information.

In aviation history we encounter few of such "enthusiasts" and may evaluate sources on pragmatic grounds. There are still subjects such as TWA 800, AA587 and Amelia Earhart's disappearance, where passionate true believers remain a distinct problem.

We must also asses requests for citation. The need for support may be prima facie, or it may be caused by insufficient background, knowledge or understanding by the editor who believed support was necessary.

Anyone who follows my edits - even on this page - will understand that I even question my own edits. When fact checking shows I was wrong, I have reversed myself.

In writing history we must endeavor to produce the best approximation of the truth that the extant record provides.

Sometimes I have personal knowledge which is contrary to the "extant" record. For example I am in contact with former Capital employees and my father started his career as an airline pilot flying for Capital Airlines (stationed only at ORF, flying DC-3s and Viscounts), after the merger he went on to fly Viscounts, DC-6s, DC-7s, Boeing 727s & 747s (out of EWR, LGA, MIA and ORD) for United. He ending his career as a 727 captain). Thus, in real time, I was/are privy to much undocumented information. I personally have known persons mentioned in airlines histories, accident reports and heard stories about them. Such knowledge cannot be cited as a "source."

For example there are extant records of the legendary Trow Sebree. Sebree flew for Clifford Ball, Pennsylvania, PCA, Capital & United. At one time he was a district manager for PCA (see Air Line to Train Veterans, NY Times 23 July 1946), a source I could cite on Wikipedia.

Or consider that a first cover signed by him that went for $179.99 on e-bay (http://www.ebay.com/itm/TROW-SEBREE-AIR-MAIL-PILOT-SIGNED-1929-MAIL-CARD-PITTSBURGH-CLEVELAND-AIRMAIL-/271442314389), which cannot be use as a source. Trow Sebree survived to attend Capital Airlines Association picnics at the end of the last century (http://baesel.net/cap1.htm).

I cannot cite Gary Basel's Capital Airlines Virtual Museumas a source on Wikipedia for several reasons (even though he was a Capital/United employee). Some prior editor did include it as an external link. I could use some of his exhibits for citation.

Look at the picture of Trow at http://baesel.net/cap1.htm. Read the unacceptable sources of commentary at http://baesel.net/caalumni.htm . Evaluate the unusable information revealed. What, even if it is unusable as a source, does it reveal about Capital Airlines? Please visit Gary's Virtual Museum to get a feel about what Charles Baptie (PCA/Capital's photographer) called the "Capital Spirit" and "Capital Family." I have met, knew of, been in the presence of, or heard tales about some persons in the photo on page 39 of Baptie's book (Trow Sebree is pilot no. 7 in the advertising photo). I remember when, in operations at ORF, my little brother blurted out something my father had told my mother about Doug Mason (no. 47). It might have hurt the career of a very junior copilot but Mason let it slide.

I have tried to provide reliable sources and information in my expansion and documentation of this article. In editing Wikipedia we must always be careful in our use of sources. We also must be careful to question what must be questioned and not to wast effort in questioning the obvious.

I cannot use my flights in Capital Airlines DC-4, Lockheed 049, DC-6Bs or Viscounts, or my personal knowledge from a myrid of relevant experiences and personal contacts because I am not an author published by a third party.

I could cite an anonymous article published in a disreputable magazine. Go figure.

We must always try to do our best within the rules and with sound judgement applied.

Mark Lincoln (talk) 06:07, 29 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]

A Capital Airlines 1955 promo film on the Viscount on YouTube here: [1] — Preceding unsigned comment added by 95.149.173.74 (talk) 16:51, 24 May 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Capital Airlines & UFO reports.[edit]

The data given in the original edit was greatly in error.

Captain Hull's sighting occurred in 1956, not 1952. Capital had no Viscounts in 1952. Hull's sighting was over Alabama, not Washington National Airport (DCA). The Capital pilot who did report a sighting in the Washington UFO Incident was S.C. Pierman and he was holding short of a runway in a DC-4, not flying. The date of that report was 19 July 1952.

I believe the two incidents were conflated in Donald Keyhoe's book Flying Saucers Top Secret. The person who did the original UFO sighting edit didn't bother to read the report he cited. If he had the errors would not have been made.

I go to this length because in my experience people interested in UFOs are often fanatics who take umbrage at any opinions which diverge from their own. Thus I want my edit to be well documented.

btw: after reading Flying Saucers Top Secret in the early 60s I was talking with my father, who was a Capital Viscount pilot. I tried to use Hull as an argument that UFOs were real. Dad knew Hull, who was a very respected pilot. Dad said that if a UFO pulled up beside his airplane and the occupants waved he would not report it.

ps. Hull was once flying in a DC-3 as check pilot/instructor. One of the pilots being checked managed to pull an aileron off in a bungled maneuver. Hull took over and made a safe landing.

Mark Lincoln (talk) 19:09, 29 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]

The Civil Aeronautics Board and US Airlines (particularly Clifford Ball/PCA/CAL)[edit]

It is impossible to understand US airlines history from 1938 to 1985 without understanding the role of the Civil Aeronautics Board.

The CAB dominated the existence of US airlines between 1938 and 1985 when the industry was finally deregulated (see Airline Deregulation Act of 1978). The CAB had the power to decide if an airlines met a public need and thus needed to exist. It awarded routes, allowed or denied route expansion or reduction, enforced conditions of service over those routes, managed competition, set fares, awarded subsidies, permitted (or more often denied) airline mergers, and prior to 1958 the CAB supervised airline safety. From 1967 on the CAB was no longer responsible for investigating airline accidents.

The CAB had the power to force airlines to serve even unprofitable cities along their designated routes.

The beginning of regulation of US airlines started with the Airmail Act of 1925 (Kelly Act).[1] This authorized the Post Office to award airmail contracts to airlines (prior to the Kelly Act the Post Office ran the airmail service).

The first awards were called Contract Air Mail routes. Clifford Ball Airlines was awarded CAM-11 (21 April 1927). It provided for service between Pittsburgh PA and Cleveland OH. Service to Youngstown OH and McKeesport PA was also included.[2] CAM-11 was eventually expanded to include Akron OH & Washington DC (1931), Norfolk VA.(1938) and Baltimore MD (1943).

The first flights of CAM-11E10 & CAM-11E10F (Washington DC) were flown by J.H. "Slim" Charmichael who was President of Capital in the 1950s when fatal decisions were made.[3] The first flights of CAM-11E14 & CAM-11S13 (Pittsburgh - Baltimore) were flown by W. Clyde Paddock who was the Captain of Capital Airlines Flight 75 which disintegrated over Chase Maryland in 1959.[4]

After 1936 new awards were designated Air Mail (AM) routes.[5] One crucial AM award to PCA was AM-34 (8 Oct. 1937) which was from Washington D.C. to Buffalo NY, but serviced Baltimore MD, Williamsport PA and Harrisburg PA as well. (Do not confuse it with CAM-34 which was TWA, NYC to Los Angeles CA). In 1945 AM-34 was expanded to include service to Corning NY, Elmira NY and Rochester NY. Then in 1949 Capital had AM-34 expanded to include Reading PA and Philadelphia PA.

There was also AM-46. Awarded to PCA on 15 Oct. 1940. The route awarded was Buffalo NY to Pittsburgh PA, via Erie PA.[6]

AM-34 and AM-46 were the basis of the service nicknamed "around the horn" by Capital Pilots.Cite error: The <ref> tag has too many names (see the help page).

Another service was based on AM-51 (PCA November 1940) which was known as "Tobacco Road." At first from Norfolk VA to Knoxville TN via Rocky Mount NC, Raleigh NC and Greensboro NC. Later the same year Hickory NC was added. 1941 saw Ashville NC included. In 1945 AM-51 was expanded to Elizabeth City NC, and in 1947 AM-51 expanded to Washington DC, Winston-Salem NC, Chattangooga TN, Memphis TN, Richmond VA, Charlotte NC, and Huntsville AL.

Are you understanding why Capital had a system composed of many very short segments, and thus found it hard to make money? Airplanes make money flying, not taking off, landing or sitting on the ground loading and unloading. One Capital segment was between Norfolk and Newport News which was the other side of Hampton Roads. The flight was so short that often the landing gear was not retracted.

AM-51 was eventually extended to include Norfolk to Atlanta (1955), Cleveland to Miami (1958, and various locations in Florida in 1959.[7] These awards gave Capital some long distance (money making) routes. Especially access to Florida (big money in the winter). (Capital's first routing to MIA was via a CAB approved Capital/National Interchange Agreement which allowed each airlines to better utilize their equipment during their "off" season). It was Capital's Florida routes that UAL coveted.

Do not entertain any "conspiracy theory" involving a CAB plot to "get" Capital. The CAB awarded routes, oversaw service to cities, set fares, gave subsidies and improved competition. Always with intent to keep the public happy, airlines healthy and cities well served. For example, Capital was given a route award to Minneapolis-St. Paul to increase competition with Northwest which dominated service to those cities.Cite error: The <ref> tag has too many names (see the help page).

When UAL merged with Capital it assumed servicing the routes Capital had. In June 1961 Capital was still operating 3 DC-3s "around the horn" (AM-34).

Trying to get a route award, expand a route, or terminate service to a city required petitioning the CAB, holding hearings on the matter, and an eventual ruling. That is why UAL ended up flying DC-3s in 1961-1962.

Mark Lincoln (talk) 20:06, 30 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]

References

  1. ^ http://postalmuseum.si.edu/airmail/airmail/public/airmail_public_postal_long.html
  2. ^ http://www.aerodacious.com/ccCAM011.HTM
  3. ^ |title=J.H. Carmichael Ran Airlines |publisher=New York Times |date=2 December 1983 |accessdate=30 November 2015 |url=http://www.nytimes.com/1983/12/02/obituaries/jh-carmichael-ran-airline.html
  4. ^ "Civil Aeronautics Board Aircraft Accident Report Capital Airlines, Inc. Viscount Near Chase, Maryland". October 23, 1959. {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help); Unknown parameter |url http://specialcollection.dotlibrary.dot.gov/Document?db= ignored (help)
  5. ^ http://www.aerodacious.com/CAM.HTM
  6. ^ http://www.aerodacious.com/ccAM046.HTM
  7. ^ http://www.aerodacious.com/ccAM051.HTM

The Merger & New Capital Airlines Sections[edit]

I created a section for the merger. The merger started in summer 1960, was consummated in the summer of 1961 and had consequences that took years to resolve. It needs to be treated with a separate section.

I also think that Milt Marshall's "Capital Airlines" is distinctly different from THE Capital Airlines. It has nothing to do with the history of CAL besides one man and a name.

I question whether it should even be a part of the Capital Airlines Wikipedia article. It is covered on Gary Baesel's Capital Airlines Virtual Museum. http://www.baesel.net/cap1.htm. Basel's site is not an effort of history. It is in part about and for the people of CAL, and Marshall was one of those people.

Would anyone suggest that we should have a Phish festivals section just because the first one was named for Clifford Ball?

Mark Lincoln (talk) 21:43, 30 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Capital DC-3 1 May 1947[edit]

The copilot of the flight was Milton "Milt" Balog. He went on to fly Viscounts as a captain for Capital and United. My father flew out of ORF with him often. Milt was killed while flying UAL Flight 297. Two Whistling Swans got him. http://specialcollection.dotlibrary.dot.gov/Document?db=DOT-AIRPLANEACCIDENTS&query=(select+753)

Yes, it WAS a C-47A[edit]

"Flight training (at Capital) began with flying old #210, a cargo version that was used primarily for transporting engines and other outsized materials to stations on the Capital system."Cite error: The <ref> tag has too many names (see the help page).

As far as the CAA was concerned any C-47/C-53 conversion not performed by Douglas remained listed as it's original designation (that went or the DC-4 as well)

The Capital DC-3 fleet was composed of:

DOUGLAS DC-3 / C-47 Family

N12919 / /

N16012 Super 43193 542 09/50 04/52

N16016 Super 43192 541 08/50 04/52

N16019 Super 43191 540 07/50 04/52

N18620 C-53 4886 211B 08/49 09/60

N19915 C-53-DO 7347 212C 08/49 07/61 C/L ELMIRA

N19917 C-53-DO 7320 213C 08/49 07/61 C/L ASHEVILLE

N21781 DC3-313 2169 214C 04/48 07/61 ex PCA; C/L DETROIT

N21782 DC3-313 2170 215B 04/48 07/61 ex PCA; C/L TRAVERSE CITY

N21783 DC3-313 2171 216B 04/48 07/61 ex PCA; C/L BAY CITY

N21784 DC3-313 2172 217B 04/48 07/61 ex PCA; C/L ROCKY MOUNT

N21785 DC3-313 2173 218C 04/48 03/54 ex PCA; C/L VIRGINIA BEACH

N21788 DC3- 219B / / C/L Nxxxxxxxxx

N21790 DC3-313 2189 220B 04/48 07/61 ex PCA; C/L LANSING

N25689 DC3-313C 4099 221B 04/48 08/59 ex PCA; C/L MEMPHIS

N25691 DC3-313A 2256 222 04/48 12/12/49 WO Potomac River, Washington D.C.

N25694 DC3-313A 2272 223B 04/48 10/59 ex PCA; C/L GRAND RAPIDS

N25695 DC3-313B 4081 224C 04/48 10/59 ex PCA; C/L HUNTSVILLE

N25696 DC3-313B 4082 225C 04/48 /56 ex PCA

N28324 DC3-277C 2254 243C 05/50 08/02/59 C/L SAULT STE. MARIE; WO Minneapolis, MN

N28360 C-49E 2271 235C 05/50 07/61

N33677 DC3-313D 4132 226B 04/48 /56 ex PCA

N33678 DC3-313D 4133 227C 04/48 08/59 ex PCA; C/L MORGANTOWN

N44993 DC3-454 6260 228C 04/48 08/26/59 ex PCA; WO Charleston, WV

N45338 C-53D-DO 11778 229C 04/48 07/61 ex PCA

N45366 C-53D-DO 11757 230C 04/48 02/59 ex PCA; C/L TOLEDO

N45373 DC3-455 6324 231B 04/48 07/61 ex PCA

N45379 C-53D-DO 11776 232C 04/48 07/61 ex PCA; C/L RALEIGH/DURHAM (HICKORY)

N49553 C-53 4820 233C 04/48 05/54 ex PCA; C/L CORNING

N60705 C-47-DL 4638 112 04/48 / ex PCA

N88835 110 / / C/L PITTSBURGH

Mark Lincoln (talk) 21:56, 1 December 2015 (UTC)[reply]

References

The financial crisis of 1947[edit]

Slim Charmichale's response, to lead not follow, was a harbinger of his bold gamble in the mid-1950s. To understand what happened to Capital in the 50s one must have some understanding of Charmichael's approach to management and the fact it had worked to save PCA.

Note also, that a logo/livery change occurred in each crisis.

Mark Lincoln (talk) 21:51, 4 December 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Not damaged beyond economical repair[edit]

Viscount N7404 c/n 90 was not damaged "beyond economical repair." It was very badly damaged but was shipped back to Hurn Airport, Bournemouth, Hampshire, England and rebuilt as c/n 301, CF-THJ a V.757 for TCA – Trans-Canada Air Lines.

http://www.vickersviscount.net/Pages_Listings/Listings_Owner.aspx

Mark Lincoln (talk) 11:59, 27 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Move discussion in progress[edit]

There is a move discussion in progress on Talk:Beijing Capital Airlines which affects this page. Please participate on that page and not in this talk page section. Thank you. —RMCD bot 03:01, 26 August 2019 (UTC)[reply]