Northwest Historical Timeline
1930
July 1: Northwest moves its operations base to St. Paul's
Holman Field (today's St. Paul Downtown Airport). The first ground
radio installation is purchased.
Service expands to Rockford and Elgin, Ill.; Janesville, Wis.;
Sioux City, Iowa, and Omaha, Neb.
1931
February 2: Northwest resumes "international"
service to Winnipeg. In a compromise to satisfy both U.S. and
Canadian governments, Northwest flies to the border town of Pembina,
N.D., where mail and passengers transfer to Western Canada Airways
for the last 67-mile leg to Winnipeg.
June 2: Service expands to Bismarck, Valley City and
Jamestown, N.D. Duluth, Minn, service is added using seaplanes
and an amphibian base in Lake Superior.
The fleet expands. Two Sikorsky S-38 amphibians are purchased
to serve Duluth; the seven-passenger Travelair 6000 is added.
Arthur R. Rogers of Minneapolis is elected president of Northwest
Airlines.
1933
December 3: Northwest achieves the "northern transcontinental"
route to Seattle and Tacoma, Wash.
Service expands to Dickinson, N.D.; Billings, Glendive, Miles
City, Helena, Butte and Missoula, Mont.; and to Spokane, Wash.
The Lockheed Orion, a wooden-frame, six- passenger, retractable-gear
monoplane capable of 180 mph cruise, joins the fleet.
1934
February 1: President Roosevelt cancels all air mail contracts.
In the reshuffle, Northwest loses the Chicago-Fargo route.
April 16: Northwest is reincorporated under Minnesota
law as Northwest Airlines, Inc. Col. Lewis I. Brittin, founder
and general manager of Northwest Airways, resigns. Shreve M.
Archer is elected president.
December 31: Northwest buys back the Chicago-Fargo mail
contract.
Northwest adds the twin engine Lockheed Electra to the fleet.
1935
October 10: Northwest resumes "true" international
service to Winnipeg, eliminating transfer at Pembina.
Lewis M. Leffingwell is elected president of Northwest Airlines.
1936
June: Frank Hulse and Ike Jones buy a controlling interest
in Southern Airways of Georgia, a fixed-base operator and flight
school that becomes the corporate predecessor of Southern Airways,
Inc.
1937
July 15: Croil Hunter is named president, the first Northwest
Airlines operating officer to hold this title.
The twin-engine Lockheed Zephyr enters service with Northwest.
1938
Northwest assists the Mayo Clinic in developing the first practical aviation oxygen mask, making
possible high-altitude flying over the Rocky Mountains.
Service expands to Portland, Ore., and Yakima, Wash.
1939
Northwest puts its first Douglas DC3 into service. The twin-engine
workhorse carries 21 passengers at 140 mph cruise speed. Northwest
hires its first stewardess to work on the new DC3.
Frustrated by inconvenient rail service between his home town
and Chicago, Walter Olen, president of the Four Wheel Drive Automobile
Company of Clintonville, Wis., trades a company truck for a four-seat
Waco biplane. FWD's company air shuttle service is the predecessor
of North Central Airlines.
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