Company type | Aircraft manufacturer |
---|---|
Founded | 1917 |
Defunct | 1945 |
Headquarters | St. Louis, Missouri |
Products | Aircraft |
Number of employees | 600 (1918) |
St. Louis Aircraft Corporation was an American aircraft manufacturer founded in September 1917.[1]
In 1915, the St. Louis Car Company had been approached by Thomas W. Benoist to build 1000 flying boats. A prototype was built, but the concept did not go into production.[2]
In 1917 The United States government needed to form a production interest for World War I aircraft production needs. The St. Louis Aircraft Corporation was founded by A.J. Seigel of the Huttig Sash and Door company, and Edwin B Meissner of the St. Louis Car Company.[3] Their two companies had skilled labor and facilities needed to construct wood-framed aircraft. The company became one of six across the country to produce the Curtiss JN-4D Jenny with first deliveries in 1918. The first order (720552) was for 200 aircraft,[4] the company delivered 30 aircraft a month, and 57 JN-4D's in October 1918.[5][6]
The company went dormant until 1928 when it started production of the Cardinal and later the Cardinal Senior.[7] The company ordered 100 100 hp Kinner K-T radial engines to power the light monoplane, but production ceased in 1931 in the peak of the depression.[8]
The company continued to build parts while aircraft production was not viable. It specialized in supplying components for the Engineering section at Wright Field.[9] In the buildup to World War II, the company developed its own biplane trainer the St. Louis PT-35, which lost to the Boeing Stearman. It also produced a low winged trainer to compete in an Army contract, the St. Louis PT-LM-4. It lost out to the Fairchild PT-19 model.
The company was put into service again for World War II production. The company subcontracted aircraft parts for the effort and built 44 Fairchild PT-19 and 306 PT-23 licensed aircraft designs.[10] It also was one of 8 companies that competed for a combat troop glider. Its XCG-5 did not go into production.[11]
In 1945, the St. Louis Aircraft Corporation was shut down after wartime contracts ended.[12]