  
      
      
      Airspeed
      
      
      The Airspeed company was 
      established to build aeroplanes in about 1930 in York, an English city by 
      A.H. Tiltman and N.S. Norway. Following production of the AS4 Ferry, a 
      three engined, ten passenger biplane, the company concentrated on 
      transport monoplanes. By 1933 the firm had moved to Portsmouth in 
      Hampshire and in the following year became associated with the Tyneside 
      ship builder Swan, Hunter & Wigham Richardson Limited.  
       
      Their most productive period was during World War Two. A graceful, twin 
      engined trainer-cum-light transport aircraft known as the AS10 Oxford had 
      a production run exceeding 8,500. Almost 3,800 AS51 and AS58 Horsa gliders 
      were built for the Royal Air Force and its allies. Many of these made 
      one-way journeys into occupied France as part of the D-Day landings, towed 
      from England by Commandos, Dakotas and other piston-engined aircraft.  
       
      In 1940 de Havilland bought the Airspeed company and, besides adapting 
      some surplus Oxford aircraft as AS65 Consuls for the commercial market, 
      they went on to produce a superbly streamlined twin-engined piston 
      airliner called the AS57 Ambassador. This aircraft offered seating for 47 
      passengers and with a nosewheel undercarriage looked far more modern than 
      the Commandos, Dakotas, Lancastrians and Vikings that were common on 
      Europe's shorter airline routes. With three low fins it shared something 
      of the character of the larger trans-continental Lockheed Constellation. 
      It first flew on July 10th 1947. British European Airways operated up to 
      twenty of them between 1952 and 1958, calling them "Elizabethans" in 
      honour of the newly crowned Queen, it also helped the growth of Dan-Air an 
      important airline in the development of package holidays. The popularity 
      of this splendid aircraft was soon eclipsed however by the arrival of 
      faster turboprops such as the Lockheed 188 Electra and the Vickers 
      Viscount. Airspeed Ambassador 2 aircraft unfortunately made the headlines 
      in a disastrous take off from Munich air disaster, West Germany on 6 
      February 1958 (also a tragedy for English football) and a spectacular 
      fatal crash landing at London Heathrow Airport, England on 3rd July 1968 
      by a BKS AS57 Ambassador in which several horses on board died and a 
      parked HS121 Trident was written-off just before the airliner hit terminal 
      buildings. One has been preserved by the Imperial War Museum at Duxford, 
      Cambridgeshire in eastern England.
       
            
             
             
  
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