Category:United States Aerial Mail Service
English: U.S. Aerial Mail Service, 1918–1926. On August 12, 1918, the Post Office Department took charge of the U.S. airmail service. Department officials bought and ordered aircraft, hired pilots to fly them, and began mapping out airmail routes across the country. The U.S. Airmail Service played the leading role in the development of commercial aviation. The money the fledgling industry received for carrying mail gave the airlines the capital and incentive to maintain and expand their routes and upgrade their services. If the first commercial airlines had relied only on paying passengers, none would have survived its first year. In the early years, some carriers made 95 percent of their revenues from carrying the mail on contract airmail routes, known as CAMs. (The Smithsonian)
Subcategories
This category has the following 2 subcategories, out of 2 total.
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- William Hopson (4 F)
Media in category "United States Aerial Mail Service"
The following 9 files are in this category, out of 9 total.
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Jno. A. Jordan, Chief of Coust', U.S. Aerial Mail Service LCCN2016822403.jpg 4,401 × 6,064; 3.33 MB
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Jno. A. Jordan, Chief of Coust', U.S. Aerial Mail Service LCCN2016822403.tif 4,401 × 6,064; 25.46 MB
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Master list of the Air Mail Service pilots.pdf 1,275 × 1,650, 11 pages; 211 KB
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New England aviators 1914-1918; their portraits and their records (1919) (14576737380).jpg 1,534 × 2,301; 1.11 MB
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U.S. Mail airplane), 8-2-22 LOC npcc.06802 (cropped).jpg 4,659 × 3,702; 2.59 MB
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U.S. Mail airplane), 8-2-22 LOC npcc.06802.jpg 5,401 × 4,292; 3.03 MB
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US Aerial Mail advertisement in Aerial Age (1918) Volume 8.png 2,128 × 954; 250 KB
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US Aerial Mail advertisement in Aerial Age (1919) Volume 9.png 1,002 × 498; 358 KB