Spartan Aircraft
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Spartan Aircraft Limited was a British aircraft manufacturer from 1930 to 1935. It was formed by reinvestment in Simmonds Aircraft which had suffered financially.
![]() The last surviving Spartan aircraft, an Arrow, still airworthy as of 2016 | |
Company type | Limited company |
---|---|
Industry | Aircraft manufacturing |
Predecessor | Simmonds Aircraft |
Founded | Woolston, Hampshire, UK 1930 |
Founder | Oliver Simmonds |
Fate | Merged with Saunders Roe, 1935 |
Products | Civil aircraft |
History
In 1928 Oliver Simmonds designed and built a prototype aircraft, the Simmonds Spartan, in a factory at Woolston, Hampshire.[1] The design was a success with over 50 aircraft built.[2] Following financial difficulties and investment from Whitehall Securities Corporation Ltd[3] Simmonds Aircraft Limited changed name in 1930 to Spartan Aircraft Limited.
The first aircraft from the renamed company was the Spartan Arrow a two-seat biplane of which 15 were built.[4] The next design was a three-seat open-cockpit biplane the Spartan Three Seater. The company ceased to build aircraft in 1935.
In January 1931 Flight magazine revealed that Whitehall Securities had acquired a substantial holding in Saunders Roe Ltd. and arising out of this investment Spartan was effectively merged into Saunders Roe. Spartan Aircraft's final product was the Spartan Cruiser a three-engined light airliner developed from the Saro-Percival Mailplane.
Aircraft
- Simmonds Spartan
- Spartan Arrow – first flight 1930, 15 built
- Spartan Three Seater – first flight 1931, 25 built
- Spartan Cruiser – passenger, first flight 1932 17 built
- Spartan Clipper – 1 built 1932
See also
Notes
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.