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Short Brothers

Short Brothers plc, usually referred to as Shorts or Short, is an aerospace company based in Belfast, Northern Ireland. Shorts was founded in 1908 in London, and was the first company in the world to make production aeroplanes.[1] It was particularly notable for its flying boat designs manufactured into the 1950s.

Short Brothers plc
TypeSubsidiary
IndustryAerospace
FoundedBattersea, 1908
Headquarters,
Key people
David Keith-Lucas
Revenue£810 million (2006)
£69 million (2006)
£48 million
Number of employees
5,330
ParentSpirit Aerosystems

In 1943, Shorts was nationalised and later denationalised, and in 1948 moved from its main base at Rochester, Kent to Belfast. In the 1960s, Shorts mainly produced turboprop airliners, major components for aerospace primary manufacturers, and missiles for the British Armed Forces.

Shorts was primarily government-owned until being bought by Bombardier in 1989, and is today the largest manufacturing concern in Northern Ireland.[2] In November 2020, Bombardier sold its Belfast operations to Spirit AeroSystems.[3]

The company's products include aircraft components, engine nacelles and aircraft flight control systems for its parent company Bombardier Aerospace, and for Boeing, Rolls-Royce Deutschland, General Electric and Pratt & Whitney.[4]

History edit

Early years edit

 
left-to-right: Oswald (1883-1969), Horace (1872-1917), and Eustace Short (1875-1932) at Mussell Manor 1909.
 
Mussell Manor, the Royal Aero Club clubhouse

The Short Brothers business started in 1897 when Eustace Short (1875 – 1932) bought a second-hand coal gas filled balloon, and, with his brother Oswald, started a company to develop and manufacture balloons.[5] In 1900, the two brothers visited the 1900 Paris Exposition ('World's Fair'), where they saw the balloons of Édouard Surcouf (of Société Astra), who had developed a method of constructing truly spherical balloons.

In 1902, the brothers started offering balloons for sale. They manufactured the balloons at Hove, Sussex, in premises above the acoustic laboratory run by a third brother, Horace (2 July 1872 – 6 April 1917). In 1903, when Horace left to work on steam turbine development with Charles Parsons, Eustace and Oswald moved their workshop to rented accommodation in London, then again to railway arches in Battersea, conveniently situated next to Battersea gas-works.

In 1905, they won a contract for three balloons for the British Indian Army. The quality of their work impressed Colonel James Templer, superintendent of the Royal Balloon Factory, who introduced the brothers to Charles Rolls. Rolls commissioned them to build him a large balloon to compete in the 1906 Gordon Bennett Cup balloon race. More orders soon followed from other members of the Aero Club of Great Britain (later Royal Aero Club).[6]

In 1908, on hearing reports from Aero Club members who had seen the Wright brothers' demonstrations of their aircraft at Le Mans in France, Oswald Short reportedly said to Eustace, "This is the finish of ballooning: we must begin building aeroplanes at once, and we can't do that without Horace!"[7] Oswald succeeded in persuading Horace to leave his job with Parsons, and in November 1908 they registered their partnership under the name Short Brothers. Two orders for aircraft were soon received, one from Charles Rolls, who ordered a glider, and the other from Francis McClean, a member of the Aero Club who later bought several more aircraft from Short Brothers, and also acted as an unpaid test-pilot. At the end of 1908 Horace started work on the two designs, and in early 1909 construction was started of McClean's aircraft, the Short No.1 biplane. In March 1909 it was exhibited, without its fabric covering, at the first British Aero Show held at Olympia. Meanwhile, the brothers had obtained the British rights to build copies of the Wright design.[8]

 
Commander C. R. Samson making the first take-off from a moving ship, May 1912

In February 1909,[9] Shorts started construction of a new workshop on unobstructed marshland at Leysdown, near Shellbeach on the Isle of Sheppey. This had been acquired by the Aero Club for use as a flying ground, together with Mussell Manor (now known as "Muswell Manor"), which became its clubhouse. Construction of an initial batch of six aircraft was started immediately. Short Brothers thus became the first aircraft manufacturing company in the world to undertake volume production of an aircraft design. Here the Dunne D.5, the first tailless aircraft, was also built under contract. In 1910 the Royal Aero Club and Short Brothers moved to a larger and less marshy ground at Eastchurch, about 2.5 miles (4 km) away. At this time the Royal Aero Club had offered the Admiralty the use of the flying field and Frank McClean had agreed to act as an instructor, so beginning a close association between Short Brothers and the Naval Air Service, whose first pilots were trained using Short S.27 pusher biplanes.

In 1911, Shorts built one of the world's first successful twin-engine aircraft, the Triple Twin. Construction started on a long series of naval aircraft floatplanes, starting with the Short S.26.

In 1913, Gordon Bell became Shorts' first professional test pilot: he was succeeded by Ronald Kemp in 1914. Kemp could not handle the volume of flight testing and development alone and, by 1916, other pilots were employed on a freelance basis. One of these was John Lankester Parker. In 1918 Parker succeeded Kemp as Shorts' Chief Test Pilot, a post he was to occupy for the next 27 years.[10]

In 2013 a statue of the brothers was unveiled in memory of their contribution to early aviation, by local artist Barbara Street to stand on the site of the Aero Club clubhouse at Muswell manor.

 
Short Brothers Statue at the site of their aero club (Musswell Manor, Isle of Sheppey)

First World War edit

 
Short 184 floatplane

By the outbreak of World War I Shorts were already building a variety of aircraft. Production really started to expand during the war, for example for the Short Admiralty Type 184 (or simply "Short S.184"). On 15 August 1915, during the Battle of Gallipoli, a Short S.184 was the first aircraft to attack a ship with a live torpedo. Flying from HMS Ben-my-Chree, piloted by Flight Commander Charles Edmonds, it hit a Turkish supply ship in the Dardanelles.[11] In terms of number built, the S.184 was Shorts' most successful pre-Second World War aircraft: over 900 were produced, many under licence by other manufacturers. A landplane version of the S.184 was also sold to the Royal Flying Corps as the Short Bomber.[12]

During the First World War, Shorts were among the manufacturers of two flying boats, the F.3 and F.5, designed by John Porte at the Seaplane Experimental Station, Felixstowe. When the war ended, some 50 of these were being built at Rochester.[13]

Expansion at Rochester edit

Due to the company's success, and the increasing number of seaplanes being produced, larger premises with ready access to the sea were needed. At that time, seaplanes were taken by road to Queenborough, then loaded onto lighters to be taken to the RNAS seaplane station on Isle of Grain to be launched and tested.[14] In 1913, an 8.4 acre (3.4 hectare) plot of land by the river Medway about 20 miles (32 km) away at Borstal,[14] near Rochester, Kent, was purchased from Charles Willis (a local councillor), and the planning and construction work started.[15] By early 1915, the first facility of what was to become known as the Seaplane Works was completed: No.1 Erecting Shop. As this and the No.2 and No.3 shops became available, the workforce moved from the Eastchurch factory. No.3 shop was completed in 1917. A long concrete slipway was constructed from the centre-line of No.3 Erecting Shop to enable aircraft of up to 20 tons weight to be launched even at low tide.[15]

Airships at Cardington edit

In 1916, Short Brothers was awarded a contract to build two large dirigible airships for the Admiralty. As part of the contract, a loan was provided to enable the company to purchase a site near Cardington, Bedfordshire, on which to build airship construction facilities. As a result, the company concentrated on the construction of heavier-than-air aeroplanes in the Isle of Sheppey/Rochester area, and balloons and dirigibles at Cardington. A housing estate built by the company near Cardington to house its employees still bears the name Shortstown.[16]

In 1919, the name of the company was changed to Short Brothers (Rochester and Bedford) Ltd., but nationalisation the same year ended the Short brothers' involvement with the company, which became the Royal Airship Works.

1920s and 1930s edit

During the immediate post-war years the economic climate was difficult for the aircraft industry in the United Kingdom. Shorts survived without reducing the company's workforce by diversifying into areas such as building lightweight bus and tram bodies.[17]

During the 1920s and 1930s, flying boats were favoured for long-range civil aviation, because their operation did not rely on the existence of suitable airfields, which were not widespread at the time. Shorts took to the flying boat market, and in 1924 constructed a 350 ft (110 m) testing tank for testing hull and float designs. Shorts designed the floats used for the Supermarine S.4 and Gloster III seaplanes entered by the United Kingdom for the 1925 Schneider Trophy race. Alan Cobham's de Havilland DH.50 (G-EBFO) was also fitted with Shorts floats at Rochester. On 30 June 1926, Cobham then started a flight to Australia from the Medway. Two de Havilland Giant Moths were fitted with Shorts floats at Rochester, and the first was flown in June 1928; both were delivered to Western Canada Airlines Ltd.

In 1924, Shorts produced the first of a series of three designs known as the Singapore. In 1927, the Singapore I was used by Sir Alan Cobham, when he, his wife, and crew made a survey of Africa which covered about 23,000 miles.

 
Short Sunderland, widely operated by the British during World War II

Shorts then started design work on the Short Calcutta, based on the Singapore layout but larger and more powerful, which began service with Imperial Airways in August 1928. By April 1929 two more had been added to the fleet, and they operated passenger-preferred coastal routes from Genoa to Alexandria by way of Athens, Corfu, Naples, and Rome. Several Calcuttas were used on shorter routes, and were instrumental in permitting long-range airline services between outposts of the British Empire. Shorts followed the production of four Calcuttas with the larger Kent, following with a series of still larger aircraft designs such as the Short Empire, the first of which was launched on 2 July 1936. The Empire was commissioned off the drawing board by Imperial Airways (later BOAC), to operate the UK's Empire Airmail scheme.

A year later Shorts won a British government defence contract for the Sunderland military patrol flying boat. Sharing a similar design, but incorporating some aerodynamic and hydrodynamic advances, and a more rounded top of the fuselage that incorporated several gunner's positions. Dreaded by U-boats, it was claimed by the British propaganda people that the Germans called it "The Flying Porcupine" (Fliegendes Stachelschwein in German), although no evidence supports their contention.

In 1933, Shorts opened a new factory at Rochester Airport, which was becoming increasingly important for the landplanes the company was producing. The Eastchurch premises was closed in 1934, and in the same year Shorts purchased the engine manufacturer Pobjoy, which had moved to Rochester Airport to be near Shorts and had collaborated on its latest designs.

On 5 July 1937, a Short Empire was used by Imperial Airways for the first westbound transatlantic service from Foynes, Ireland to Newfoundland.[18]

First moves to Belfast edit

In 1936, the Air Ministry established a new aircraft factory at Belfast, and created a new company Short & Harland Ltd, owned 50% each by Harland and Wolff and Shorts. The first products of the new factory were 50 Bristol Bombays followed by 150 Handley-Page Hereford bombers.[19]

Shorts work on seaplanes eventually culminated in the Short Sandringham and Short Seaford, both based on the Empire/Sunderland boats. These flying boats had enough range to operate as a transatlantic airliner, but largely served the post-war Empire (Commonwealth) market, in competition with 4-engined land planes such as modified Avro Lancasters, Avro Lancastrian and Avro York.

Tasman Empire Airways Limited (TEAL) operated the Coral Route from New Zealand to Fiji, the Cook Islands and Tahiti in the South Pacific, with Short Solent flying boats up to 1960.

Second World War edit

 
Short Brothers HQ in Belfast, constructed in 1941

During the Battle of Britain, the Rochester factory was heavily bombed by the Luftwaffe, and several Stirlings and other aircraft were destroyed, and during Easter week of 1941, Belfast and the aircraft factory were subjected to the worst single air-raid the UK had seen outside London. To prevent raids from limiting production, satellite factories near Belfast were operated at Aldergrove and Maghaberry, producing 232 Stirlings between them.[20] A temporary Short's factory was established at White Cross Bay, Windermere,[21] that produced 35 Sunderland Mark IIIs. Austin Motors at Longbridge, Birmingham also produced over 600 Stirlings, and Blackburn Aircraft produced 240 Sunderlands at its shadow factory in Dumbarton, Scotland.[22]

During the Second World War, the Short Sunderland was an effective anti-submarine patrol bomber operated by RAF Coastal Command in the Battle of the Atlantic, the Mediterranean, in Asia and the south Pacific because of its availability, endurance and weapon load. It also carried out air-sea rescue operations. In the absence of sufficient Sunderlands, Australia impressed Qantas-Imperial Short Empire flying boats into military service, and used these successfully especially on reconnaissance missions in the Timor Sea area.

A much enlarged transatlantic development of the Empire, the S.26 G-Class was developed, but only three completed before the war resulted in further production being cancelled.

Short's work on the Sunderland also won it the contract for the Short Stirling four-engine bomber-transport for the RAF. This was essentially a land-based Sunderland, however its use of a now outdated thick-section, low aspect ratio wing to facilitate it going into service quickly limited climb and ceiling, and design decisions, such as the use of cells for individual bombs limited its long term usefulness as a heavy bomber when it proved incapable of carrying the newer larger bombs that didn't fit in the cells. As it was intended as a stopgap pending the delivery of the Handley Page Halifax and Avro Manchester bombers, it followed the RAF tradition of also being a transport aircraft, with a cabin useful for troops and cargo, in which role it was used once the Halifax and Avro Lancaster were available in large enough numbers. Attempts by Shorts to sell improved versions to the RAF were ignored, not least over concerns regarding Oswald's leadership and alcoholism.

In 1944, the Short Shetland, a high-speed, long-range, four-engined flying-boat, was built (with Saunders-Roe providing the wings and detail design work), but the project was abandoned shortly after the end of the war, however conversions and developments of the Sunderland entered service as transports, starting during the war with the Hythe, which was a demilitarized Sunderland with the turrets faired over, then the post-war Sandringham, which refined the shape to eliminate the turret mountings, and finally by the definitive Solent, with an enlarged tail and more powerful engines and other refinements derived from the stillborn wartime Seaford, which was to have been the penultimate Sunderland development.

In 1943, the Government nationalised Short's under Defence Regulation 78. Oswald Short, who had resigned as Chairman in January of that year, remained as Honorary Life President.[23]

Postwar edit

 
Short Sperrin Gyron test bed (lower port engine) at Farnborough SBAC Airshow, September 1955
 
US military version of the Shorts 330, the company's most successful modern aircraft after the Shorts 360.
 
A Short 360, Short Skyvan and Short 330 at the 1982 Farnborough Airshow.
 
The cancelled Short FJX regional jet

By 1947, all of Shorts other wartime factories had been closed, and operations concentrated in Belfast. In 1948, the company offices followed, and Shorts became a Belfast company in its entirety. In the meantime, in 1947, Short Brothers (Rochester and Bedford) Ltd. had merged with Short and Harland Limited to become Short Brothers and Harland Limited, with Oswald Short remaining as Life President.[24]

In the 1950s, Shorts was involved in much pioneering research, including designing and building the VTOL Short SC1, the Short SB5 and the Short SB.4 Sherpa. Shorts built the Short Sperrin, a backup jet engine bomber design in case the V bomber projects failed, and the Short Seamew, a cheap-to-produce anti-submarine reconnaissance and attack aircraft intended for the Royal Navy Volunteer Reserve squadrons, but the Sperrin was not needed and the RNVR squadrons disbanded. In the 1950s, Shorts also received sub-contracts to build 150 English Electric Canberras, and on 30 October 1952, the first of those made its maiden flight. Of these types, Shorts delivered 60 Canberra B.2s, 49 Canberra B.6s and 23 Canberra P.R.9s, the remaining 18 being cancelled by the Government in 1957.[25] Further work was involved in the conversion of time-expired Canberra B.2s into unmanned radio-controlled missile target aircraft. Two prototypes and 10 production Canberra U.10s were produced, followed by six improved Canberra U.14s. These aircraft were controlled from the ground by VHF radio, and were equipped to provide feedback on their own performance, as well as that of the missiles aimed at them.[26] As early as 1953, Shorts became involved with pioneering the development of electronic analogue computers, to assist with the design of increasingly complex aircraft.[27]

In 1954, the Bristol Aeroplane Company became a 15.25% shareholder in Shorts, and the company used the injection of funds to set up a production line for the Bristol Britannia turbo-prop airliner, known in the press as The Whispering Giant. Although it was originally intended that 35 Britannias should be built by Shorts, a shortage of work at Bristol led to this number being reduced. Eventually, 15 Britannias were completed by Shorts; five sets of Britannia components were sent to Filton and used on the continued production there of Britannias.[28]

In the 1960s, Shorts found a niche for a new short-haul freighter aircraft and responded with the Short SC.7 Skyvan. The Skyvan is most remembered for its box-like, slab-sided appearance and rectangular twin tail units, but the aircraft was well loved for its performance and loading. It served almost the same performance niche as the de Havilland Twin Otter, and the Skyvan proved more popular in the freighter market due to the large rear cargo door that allowed it to handle bulky loads with ease. Skyvans can still be found around the world today.

The heavy lift freighter Short SC.5 Belfast flew for the first time in 1964. Only 10 were built for the Royal Air Force. In the 1970s, Shorts entered the feederliner market with the Shorts 330, a stretched modification of the Skyvan, called the C-23 Sherpa in USAF service, and another stretch resulted in the more streamlined Shorts 360, in which a more conventional central fin superseded the older H-profiled twin fins.

In 1988, the proposed development was announced of a regional jet seating 44 passengers and to be called the FJX. The aircraft would have been a competitor to the Bombardier CRJ100 that was also in development at the time,[29] but the FJX was cancelled after Short Brothers' sale to Bombardier.[30]

Loyalist paramilitaries edit

In 1987 loyalists working at Shorts erected loyalists flags and bunting to intimidate the Catholic workers. The loyalists workers went on strike after management removed the loyalist flags from the shop floor.[31]

In April 1989, three Northern Irish men, Noel Little, Samuel Quinn and James King, were arrested in Paris and later convicted of "arms trafficking and associating with criminals involved in terrorist activities."[32] They were accused of having stolen missile parts and documents related to Shorts' products. Also arrested were arms dealer Douglas Bernhardt and a South African diplomat.[32]

In 1993 a Catholic sub-contractor at Shorts was shot dead and five others injured in a loyalist attack on a mini-bus full of Catholic workmen in an attack to discourage Catholics from taking jobs at Shorts.[33]

Belfast City Airport edit

In 1937, Shorts established an airfield in central Belfast, beside the factory. This became Sydenham Airport and, from 1938 to 1939, was Belfast's main civilian airport. During the Second World War, the airfield was requisitioned by the Royal Navy. Shorts continued to use the airfield until production of complete aircraft ceased, despite Nutts Corner, a former RAF base, becoming Belfast's main airport (Nutts Corner was itself superseded in 1963 by Aldergrove). In 1983, following interest from airlines and customers, the airfield was opened for commercial flights as Belfast Harbour Airport (later Belfast City Airport (BCA), now George Best Belfast City Airport). Following major capital investment, Bombardier sold BCA for £35 million in 2003.

Bombardier edit

In 1977, the company changed its name back to Short Brothers, and in 1984 it became a public limited company in preparation for privatisation. The government announced the sale of Shorts to Bombardier on 7 June 1989 for £30 million. As part of the sale, the government agreed (at the insistence of then-Chancellor John Major)[34][35] to write off £390 million of the company's "accumulated losses and inject another £390 million to recapitalise the group and cover current and future losses, capital investment and training."[36] Bombardier beat a bid from General Electric Company and Fokker. Messerschmitt-Bölkow-Blohm had withdrawn before final offers were submitted.[37] The sale was finalised on 4 October 1989.[38]

In 1993, with the company under the chairmanship of Sir Roy McNulty, Bombardier Shorts and Thomson-CSF formed a joint venture, Shorts Missile Systems, for the design and development of very short-range, air defence missiles for the UK Ministry of Defence and armed forces worldwide using expertise dating back to the 1950s. In 2000, Thomson-CSF bought Bombardier's 50% share to become the sole owner of Shorts Missile Systems, renaming it Thales Air Defence in 2001.

Spirit AeroSystems edit

On 31 October 2019, Bombardier announced the sale of its aerostructures activities to Spirit AeroSystems.[39] The sale closed in November 2020 following regulatory approval and a renegotiated price due to the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic.[3]

Aircraft edit

Year of first flight in parentheses. Some of the early aircraft are designated using the Short sequence or constructors number which should not be confused with the similar type designations started at S.1 in 1924. Since becoming part of Bombardier Aerospace in 1989, focus is aerospace components rather than individual aircraft models, missiles or drones.

1900–1909 edit

1910–1919 edit

1920–1929 edit

1930–1939 edit

1940–1949 edit

1950–1959 edit

1960–1989 edit

 
Royal Air Force Short 312 Tucano in special colours as the RAF's 2008 display aircraft.

Airships edit

Missiles edit

Shorts' missile division, which evolved into Shorts Missile Systems (1993–2000, then sold), produced surface-to-air missiles.

Year of first use by a military in parentheses.

  • Seacat – shipboard short-range surface-to-air missile (1962)
  • Tigercat – land-based, trailer-mounted version of Seacat (1967)
  • Blowpipesoldier portable (1975)
  • Javelin – soldier portable (post-Blowpipe, pre-Starburst)
  • Starburst – soldier portable (1989)
  • Starstreak – soldier portable (1997)

Rotorcraft edit

  • Cierva C.14

UAVs and drones edit

Test and trial programs from the 1960s and 1970s.

Chief test pilots edit

  • Francis McClean (honorary) until 1912[44]
  • Gordon Bell 1912–1914[45]
  • Sydney Pickles 1913 (Acting CTP during Bell's absence following a crash at Brooklands)[46]
  • Ronald C. Kemp 1914–1918[47]
  • John Lankester Parker 1918–1945
  • Geoffrey Dyson 1945–1946
  • Harold Piper 1946–1948
  • Tom Brooke-Smith 1948–1960
  • Denis Tayler 1960–1969
  • Donald Burn Wright 1969–1976
  • Lindsay Cummings
  • Allan Deacon
  • Graham Andrews
  • Jack Eaton 1984–present

Armoured vehicles edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Barnes 1966 p. 8
  2. ^ Shorts as a "Centre of Excellence" within Bombardier, 2007
  3. ^ a b McAleer, Ryan (29 November 2020). "Short Brothers' new US owner reports £136m operating loss for third quarter". The Irish News. Belfast. Retrieved 29 November 2020.
  4. ^ Manufacturing profiles 15 March 2006 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ Barnes 1967, p. 3
  6. ^ Barnes 1967, pp. 1–6
  7. ^ Barnes 1967, p. 6
  8. ^ Barnes, pp. 6–8
  9. ^ Driver, Hugh (1990). The Birth of Military Aviation. Woodbridge, Suffolk: Boydell Press for the Royal Historical Society. p. 65. ISBN 0-86193-234-X.
  10. ^ Barnes 1967, pp. 8–12, 120
  11. ^ The supply ship had already been hit by a torpedo from the submarine HMS E14 4 days earlier, and had run aground. See Short Type 184 for further details
  12. ^ Barnes 1967, p. 113
  13. ^ Barnes and James 1989, p. 16
  14. ^ a b Hanson, Richard. Borstal: Short Brothers.[1] 2 August 2005 at the Wayback Machine . Archived from the original on 18 November 2008. Retrieved 6 May 2009. Access date: 15 January 2007.
  15. ^ a b Cassidy, Brian. Flying Empires: Short "C" class Empire flying boats. Queens Parade Press, 2004. [2] Access date: 15 January 2007.
  16. ^ Barnes & James 1989, p. 15
  17. ^ Barnes and James 1989, p. 19.
  18. ^ Service from Foynes, Republic of Ireland 13 April 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  19. ^ Barnes and James 1989, p. 28.
  20. ^ Barnes and James 1989, p. 388
  21. ^ Barnes and James 1989, p. 368
  22. ^ Barnes and James 1989, p. 541
  23. ^ Barnes and James 1989, p. 30
  24. ^ Barnes and James 1989, p. 32
  25. ^ Barnes and James 1989, p. 508
  26. ^ Barnes and James 1989, p. 509
  27. ^ Shorts Quarterly Review, Vol. 2 No. 3, Autumn 1953, p.1.
  28. ^ Barnes and James 1989, p. 510
  29. ^ "The 50-seat jetliner". Flight International. 4 March 1989.
  30. ^ O’Keeffe, Niall. "Boom and bust, the regional jet phenomenon". Flight International. Retrieved 10 April 2012.
  31. ^ "NI 1987 State papers: 'Wildcat' strikes over flags at Shorts revealed". BBC News. 21 August 2015. Retrieved 20 March 2021.
  32. ^ a b McKittrick, David (29 October 1991). "Arms from Africa fuel paramilitary terror=". The Independent. London.
  33. ^ "Catholic shot dead in ambush: Attack on workmen in mini-bus seen as loyalist warning to workers at Shorts aerospace factory". The Independent. 22 October 2011. Retrieved 20 March 2021.
  34. ^ John Major (1999). John Major: The Autobiography. Phoenix Books. p. 110.
  35. ^ Anthony Seldon (1997). Major: A Political Life. HarperCollins. p. 82.
  36. ^ Harrison, Michael (8 June 1989). "Shorts sold to Bombardier". The Independent.
  37. ^ "Bombardier of Canada Wins Competition to Buy Short Brothers". Aviation Week & Space Technology. 12 June 1989. p. 63.
  38. ^ "Shorts is private". Flight International. 14 October 1989.
  39. ^ Campbell, John (31 October 2019). "Bombardier NI operations sold to US firm". BBC News.
  40. ^ a b c "Thirty Short Years" Flight 20 April 1939 p G
  41. ^ Buttler, page 321.
  42. ^ "photo caption" (PDF), Flight International, p. 787, 27 November 1975
  43. ^ Ransom, Stephen; Fairclough, Robert (1987). English Electric Aircraft and Their Predecessors. London: Putnam. p. 352. ISBN 0-85177-806-2.
  44. ^ EarlyAviators.com
  45. ^ EarlyAviators.com
  46. ^ EarlyAviators.com
  47. ^ EarlyAviators.com

References edit

  • Barnes, C.H. (1989 revisions by James, Derek N.) Shorts Aircraft since 1900. Putnam. 1967, 1989 (revised). ISBN 0-85177-819-4
  • Buttler, Tony (2017). British Secret Projects: Jet Fighters since 1950 (2nd ed.). Manchester: Crecy Publishing. ISBN 978-1-910-80905-1.
  • Jackson, A.J. British Civil Aircraft since 1919, Volume 3. Putnam. 1973. ISBN 0-370-10010-7
  • Warner, Guy (July–August 2002). "From Bombay to Bombardier: Aircraft Production at Sydenham, Part One". Air Enthusiast. No. 100. pp. 13–24. ISSN 0143-5450.

External links edit

  • Building Britain's WW1 flying boat fleet
  • Grave of Horace Short; findagrave
  • Grave of Albert Eustace Short; findagrave

short, brothers, this, article, about, aerospace, company, shipbuilders, sunderland, usually, referred, shorts, short, aerospace, company, based, belfast, northern, ireland, shorts, founded, 1908, london, first, company, world, make, production, aeroplanes, pa. This article is about the aerospace company For the shipbuilders see Short Brothers of Sunderland Short Brothers plc usually referred to as Shorts or Short is an aerospace company based in Belfast Northern Ireland Shorts was founded in 1908 in London and was the first company in the world to make production aeroplanes 1 It was particularly notable for its flying boat designs manufactured into the 1950s Short Brothers plcTypeSubsidiaryIndustryAerospaceFoundedBattersea 1908HeadquartersBelfast Northern IrelandKey peopleDavid Keith LucasRevenue 810 million 2006 Operating income 69 million 2006 Net income 48 millionNumber of employees5 330ParentSpirit AerosystemsIn 1943 Shorts was nationalised and later denationalised and in 1948 moved from its main base at Rochester Kent to Belfast In the 1960s Shorts mainly produced turboprop airliners major components for aerospace primary manufacturers and missiles for the British Armed Forces Shorts was primarily government owned until being bought by Bombardier in 1989 and is today the largest manufacturing concern in Northern Ireland 2 In November 2020 Bombardier sold its Belfast operations to Spirit AeroSystems 3 The company s products include aircraft components engine nacelles and aircraft flight control systems for its parent company Bombardier Aerospace and for Boeing Rolls Royce Deutschland General Electric and Pratt amp Whitney 4 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early years 1 2 First World War 1 2 1 Expansion at Rochester 1 2 2 Airships at Cardington 1 3 1920s and 1930s 1 4 First moves to Belfast 1 5 Second World War 1 6 Postwar 1 7 Loyalist paramilitaries 1 8 Belfast City Airport 1 9 Bombardier 1 10 Spirit AeroSystems 2 Aircraft 2 1 1900 1909 2 2 1910 1919 2 3 1920 1929 2 4 1930 1939 2 5 1940 1949 2 6 1950 1959 2 7 1960 1989 2 8 Airships 2 9 Missiles 2 10 Rotorcraft 2 11 UAVs and drones 3 Chief test pilots 4 Armoured vehicles 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksHistory editEarly years edit nbsp left to right Oswald 1883 1969 Horace 1872 1917 and Eustace Short 1875 1932 at Mussell Manor 1909 nbsp Mussell Manor the Royal Aero Club clubhouseThe Short Brothers business started in 1897 when Eustace Short 1875 1932 bought a second hand coal gas filled balloon and with his brother Oswald started a company to develop and manufacture balloons 5 In 1900 the two brothers visited the 1900 Paris Exposition World s Fair where they saw the balloons of Edouard Surcouf of Societe Astra who had developed a method of constructing truly spherical balloons In 1902 the brothers started offering balloons for sale They manufactured the balloons at Hove Sussex in premises above the acoustic laboratory run by a third brother Horace 2 July 1872 6 April 1917 In 1903 when Horace left to work on steam turbine development with Charles Parsons Eustace and Oswald moved their workshop to rented accommodation in London then again to railway arches in Battersea conveniently situated next to Battersea gas works In 1905 they won a contract for three balloons for the British Indian Army The quality of their work impressed Colonel James Templer superintendent of the Royal Balloon Factory who introduced the brothers to Charles Rolls Rolls commissioned them to build him a large balloon to compete in the 1906 Gordon Bennett Cup balloon race More orders soon followed from other members of the Aero Club of Great Britain later Royal Aero Club 6 In 1908 on hearing reports from Aero Club members who had seen the Wright brothers demonstrations of their aircraft at Le Mans in France Oswald Short reportedly said to Eustace This is the finish of ballooning we must begin building aeroplanes at once and we can t do that without Horace 7 Oswald succeeded in persuading Horace to leave his job with Parsons and in November 1908 they registered their partnership under the name Short Brothers Two orders for aircraft were soon received one from Charles Rolls who ordered a glider and the other from Francis McClean a member of the Aero Club who later bought several more aircraft from Short Brothers and also acted as an unpaid test pilot At the end of 1908 Horace started work on the two designs and in early 1909 construction was started of McClean s aircraft the Short No 1 biplane In March 1909 it was exhibited without its fabric covering at the first British Aero Show held at Olympia Meanwhile the brothers had obtained the British rights to build copies of the Wright design 8 nbsp Commander C R Samson making the first take off from a moving ship May 1912In February 1909 9 Shorts started construction of a new workshop on unobstructed marshland at Leysdown near Shellbeach on the Isle of Sheppey This had been acquired by the Aero Club for use as a flying ground together with Mussell Manor now known as Muswell Manor which became its clubhouse Construction of an initial batch of six aircraft was started immediately Short Brothers thus became the first aircraft manufacturing company in the world to undertake volume production of an aircraft design Here the Dunne D 5 the first tailless aircraft was also built under contract In 1910 the Royal Aero Club and Short Brothers moved to a larger and less marshy ground at Eastchurch about 2 5 miles 4 km away At this time the Royal Aero Club had offered the Admiralty the use of the flying field and Frank McClean had agreed to act as an instructor so beginning a close association between Short Brothers and the Naval Air Service whose first pilots were trained using Short S 27 pusher biplanes In 1911 Shorts built one of the world s first successful twin engine aircraft the Triple Twin Construction started on a long series of naval aircraft floatplanes starting with the Short S 26 In 1913 Gordon Bell became Shorts first professional test pilot he was succeeded by Ronald Kemp in 1914 Kemp could not handle the volume of flight testing and development alone and by 1916 other pilots were employed on a freelance basis One of these was John Lankester Parker In 1918 Parker succeeded Kemp as Shorts Chief Test Pilot a post he was to occupy for the next 27 years 10 In 2013 a statue of the brothers was unveiled in memory of their contribution to early aviation by local artist Barbara Street to stand on the site of the Aero Club clubhouse at Muswell manor nbsp Short Brothers Statue at the site of their aero club Musswell Manor Isle of Sheppey First World War edit nbsp Short 184 floatplaneBy the outbreak of World War I Shorts were already building a variety of aircraft Production really started to expand during the war for example for the Short Admiralty Type 184 or simply Short S 184 On 15 August 1915 during the Battle of Gallipoli a Short S 184 was the first aircraft to attack a ship with a live torpedo Flying from HMS Ben my Chree piloted by Flight Commander Charles Edmonds it hit a Turkish supply ship in the Dardanelles 11 In terms of number built the S 184 was Shorts most successful pre Second World War aircraft over 900 were produced many under licence by other manufacturers A landplane version of the S 184 was also sold to the Royal Flying Corps as the Short Bomber 12 During the First World War Shorts were among the manufacturers of two flying boats the F 3 and F 5 designed by John Porte at the Seaplane Experimental Station Felixstowe When the war ended some 50 of these were being built at Rochester 13 Expansion at Rochester edit Due to the company s success and the increasing number of seaplanes being produced larger premises with ready access to the sea were needed At that time seaplanes were taken by road to Queenborough then loaded onto lighters to be taken to the RNAS seaplane station on Isle of Grain to be launched and tested 14 In 1913 an 8 4 acre 3 4 hectare plot of land by the river Medway about 20 miles 32 km away at Borstal 14 near Rochester Kent was purchased from Charles Willis a local councillor and the planning and construction work started 15 By early 1915 the first facility of what was to become known as the Seaplane Works was completed No 1 Erecting Shop As this and the No 2 and No 3 shops became available the workforce moved from the Eastchurch factory No 3 shop was completed in 1917 A long concrete slipway was constructed from the centre line of No 3 Erecting Shop to enable aircraft of up to 20 tons weight to be launched even at low tide 15 Airships at Cardington edit In 1916 Short Brothers was awarded a contract to build two large dirigible airships for the Admiralty As part of the contract a loan was provided to enable the company to purchase a site near Cardington Bedfordshire on which to build airship construction facilities As a result the company concentrated on the construction of heavier than air aeroplanes in the Isle of Sheppey Rochester area and balloons and dirigibles at Cardington A housing estate built by the company near Cardington to house its employees still bears the name Shortstown 16 In 1919 the name of the company was changed to Short Brothers Rochester and Bedford Ltd but nationalisation the same year ended the Short brothers involvement with the company which became the Royal Airship Works 1920s and 1930s edit During the immediate post war years the economic climate was difficult for the aircraft industry in the United Kingdom Shorts survived without reducing the company s workforce by diversifying into areas such as building lightweight bus and tram bodies 17 During the 1920s and 1930s flying boats were favoured for long range civil aviation because their operation did not rely on the existence of suitable airfields which were not widespread at the time Shorts took to the flying boat market and in 1924 constructed a 350 ft 110 m testing tank for testing hull and float designs Shorts designed the floats used for the Supermarine S 4 and Gloster III seaplanes entered by the United Kingdom for the 1925 Schneider Trophy race Alan Cobham s de Havilland DH 50 G EBFO was also fitted with Shorts floats at Rochester On 30 June 1926 Cobham then started a flight to Australia from the Medway Two de Havilland Giant Moths were fitted with Shorts floats at Rochester and the first was flown in June 1928 both were delivered to Western Canada Airlines Ltd In 1924 Shorts produced the first of a series of three designs known as the Singapore In 1927 the Singapore I was used by Sir Alan Cobham when he his wife and crew made a survey of Africa which covered about 23 000 miles nbsp Short Sunderland widely operated by the British during World War IIShorts then started design work on the Short Calcutta based on the Singapore layout but larger and more powerful which began service with Imperial Airways in August 1928 By April 1929 two more had been added to the fleet and they operated passenger preferred coastal routes from Genoa to Alexandria by way of Athens Corfu Naples and Rome Several Calcuttas were used on shorter routes and were instrumental in permitting long range airline services between outposts of the British Empire Shorts followed the production of four Calcuttas with the larger Kent following with a series of still larger aircraft designs such as the Short Empire the first of which was launched on 2 July 1936 The Empire was commissioned off the drawing board by Imperial Airways later BOAC to operate the UK s Empire Airmail scheme A year later Shorts won a British government defence contract for the Sunderland military patrol flying boat Sharing a similar design but incorporating some aerodynamic and hydrodynamic advances and a more rounded top of the fuselage that incorporated several gunner s positions Dreaded by U boats it was claimed by the British propaganda people that the Germans called it The Flying Porcupine Fliegendes Stachelschwein in German although no evidence supports their contention In 1933 Shorts opened a new factory at Rochester Airport which was becoming increasingly important for the landplanes the company was producing The Eastchurch premises was closed in 1934 and in the same year Shorts purchased the engine manufacturer Pobjoy which had moved to Rochester Airport to be near Shorts and had collaborated on its latest designs On 5 July 1937 a Short Empire was used by Imperial Airways for the first westbound transatlantic service from Foynes Ireland to Newfoundland 18 First moves to Belfast edit In 1936 the Air Ministry established a new aircraft factory at Belfast and created a new company Short amp Harland Ltd owned 50 each by Harland and Wolff and Shorts The first products of the new factory were 50 Bristol Bombays followed by 150 Handley Page Hereford bombers 19 Shorts work on seaplanes eventually culminated in the Short Sandringham and Short Seaford both based on the Empire Sunderland boats These flying boats had enough range to operate as a transatlantic airliner but largely served the post war Empire Commonwealth market in competition with 4 engined land planes such as modified Avro Lancasters Avro Lancastrian and Avro York Tasman Empire Airways Limited TEAL operated the Coral Route from New Zealand to Fiji the Cook Islands and Tahiti in the South Pacific with Short Solent flying boats up to 1960 Second World War edit nbsp Short Brothers HQ in Belfast constructed in 1941During the Battle of Britain the Rochester factory was heavily bombed by the Luftwaffe and several Stirlings and other aircraft were destroyed and during Easter week of 1941 Belfast and the aircraft factory were subjected to the worst single air raid the UK had seen outside London To prevent raids from limiting production satellite factories near Belfast were operated at Aldergrove and Maghaberry producing 232 Stirlings between them 20 A temporary Short s factory was established at White Cross Bay Windermere 21 that produced 35 Sunderland Mark IIIs Austin Motors at Longbridge Birmingham also produced over 600 Stirlings and Blackburn Aircraft produced 240 Sunderlands at its shadow factory in Dumbarton Scotland 22 During the Second World War the Short Sunderland was an effective anti submarine patrol bomber operated by RAF Coastal Command in the Battle of the Atlantic the Mediterranean in Asia and the south Pacific because of its availability endurance and weapon load It also carried out air sea rescue operations In the absence of sufficient Sunderlands Australia impressed Qantas Imperial Short Empire flying boats into military service and used these successfully especially on reconnaissance missions in the Timor Sea area A much enlarged transatlantic development of the Empire the S 26 G Class was developed but only three completed before the war resulted in further production being cancelled Short s work on the Sunderland also won it the contract for the Short Stirling four engine bomber transport for the RAF This was essentially a land based Sunderland however its use of a now outdated thick section low aspect ratio wing to facilitate it going into service quickly limited climb and ceiling and design decisions such as the use of cells for individual bombs limited its long term usefulness as a heavy bomber when it proved incapable of carrying the newer larger bombs that didn t fit in the cells As it was intended as a stopgap pending the delivery of the Handley Page Halifax and Avro Manchester bombers it followed the RAF tradition of also being a transport aircraft with a cabin useful for troops and cargo in which role it was used once the Halifax and Avro Lancaster were available in large enough numbers Attempts by Shorts to sell improved versions to the RAF were ignored not least over concerns regarding Oswald s leadership and alcoholism In 1944 the Short Shetland a high speed long range four engined flying boat was built with Saunders Roe providing the wings and detail design work but the project was abandoned shortly after the end of the war however conversions and developments of the Sunderland entered service as transports starting during the war with the Hythe which was a demilitarized Sunderland with the turrets faired over then the post war Sandringham which refined the shape to eliminate the turret mountings and finally by the definitive Solent with an enlarged tail and more powerful engines and other refinements derived from the stillborn wartime Seaford which was to have been the penultimate Sunderland development In 1943 the Government nationalised Short s under Defence Regulation 78 Oswald Short who had resigned as Chairman in January of that year remained as Honorary Life President 23 Postwar edit nbsp Short Sperrin Gyron test bed lower port engine at Farnborough SBAC Airshow September 1955 nbsp US military version of the Shorts 330 the company s most successful modern aircraft after the Shorts 360 nbsp A Short 360 Short Skyvan and Short 330 at the 1982 Farnborough Airshow nbsp The cancelled Short FJX regional jetBy 1947 all of Shorts other wartime factories had been closed and operations concentrated in Belfast In 1948 the company offices followed and Shorts became a Belfast company in its entirety In the meantime in 1947 Short Brothers Rochester and Bedford Ltd had merged with Short and Harland Limited to become Short Brothers and Harland Limited with Oswald Short remaining as Life President 24 In the 1950s Shorts was involved in much pioneering research including designing and building the VTOL Short SC1 the Short SB5 and the Short SB 4 Sherpa Shorts built the Short Sperrin a backup jet engine bomber design in case the V bomber projects failed and the Short Seamew a cheap to produce anti submarine reconnaissance and attack aircraft intended for the Royal Navy Volunteer Reserve squadrons but the Sperrin was not needed and the RNVR squadrons disbanded In the 1950s Shorts also received sub contracts to build 150 English Electric Canberras and on 30 October 1952 the first of those made its maiden flight Of these types Shorts delivered 60 Canberra B 2s 49 Canberra B 6s and 23 Canberra P R 9s the remaining 18 being cancelled by the Government in 1957 25 Further work was involved in the conversion of time expired Canberra B 2s into unmanned radio controlled missile target aircraft Two prototypes and 10 production Canberra U 10s were produced followed by six improved Canberra U 14s These aircraft were controlled from the ground by VHF radio and were equipped to provide feedback on their own performance as well as that of the missiles aimed at them 26 As early as 1953 Shorts became involved with pioneering the development of electronic analogue computers to assist with the design of increasingly complex aircraft 27 In 1954 the Bristol Aeroplane Company became a 15 25 shareholder in Shorts and the company used the injection of funds to set up a production line for the Bristol Britannia turbo prop airliner known in the press as The Whispering Giant Although it was originally intended that 35 Britannias should be built by Shorts a shortage of work at Bristol led to this number being reduced Eventually 15 Britannias were completed by Shorts five sets of Britannia components were sent to Filton and used on the continued production there of Britannias 28 In the 1960s Shorts found a niche for a new short haul freighter aircraft and responded with the Short SC 7 Skyvan The Skyvan is most remembered for its box like slab sided appearance and rectangular twin tail units but the aircraft was well loved for its performance and loading It served almost the same performance niche as the de Havilland Twin Otter and the Skyvan proved more popular in the freighter market due to the large rear cargo door that allowed it to handle bulky loads with ease Skyvans can still be found around the world today The heavy lift freighter Short SC 5 Belfast flew for the first time in 1964 Only 10 were built for the Royal Air Force In the 1970s Shorts entered the feederliner market with the Shorts 330 a stretched modification of the Skyvan called the C 23 Sherpa in USAF service and another stretch resulted in the more streamlined Shorts 360 in which a more conventional central fin superseded the older H profiled twin fins In 1988 the proposed development was announced of a regional jet seating 44 passengers and to be called the FJX The aircraft would have been a competitor to the Bombardier CRJ100 that was also in development at the time 29 but the FJX was cancelled after Short Brothers sale to Bombardier 30 Loyalist paramilitaries edit In 1987 loyalists working at Shorts erected loyalists flags and bunting to intimidate the Catholic workers The loyalists workers went on strike after management removed the loyalist flags from the shop floor 31 In April 1989 three Northern Irish men Noel Little Samuel Quinn and James King were arrested in Paris and later convicted of arms trafficking and associating with criminals involved in terrorist activities 32 They were accused of having stolen missile parts and documents related to Shorts products Also arrested were arms dealer Douglas Bernhardt and a South African diplomat 32 In 1993 a Catholic sub contractor at Shorts was shot dead and five others injured in a loyalist attack on a mini bus full of Catholic workmen in an attack to discourage Catholics from taking jobs at Shorts 33 Belfast City Airport edit In 1937 Shorts established an airfield in central Belfast beside the factory This became Sydenham Airport and from 1938 to 1939 was Belfast s main civilian airport During the Second World War the airfield was requisitioned by the Royal Navy Shorts continued to use the airfield until production of complete aircraft ceased despite Nutts Corner a former RAF base becoming Belfast s main airport Nutts Corner was itself superseded in 1963 by Aldergrove In 1983 following interest from airlines and customers the airfield was opened for commercial flights as Belfast Harbour Airport later Belfast City Airport BCA now George Best Belfast City Airport Following major capital investment Bombardier sold BCA for 35 million in 2003 Bombardier edit In 1977 the company changed its name back to Short Brothers and in 1984 it became a public limited company in preparation for privatisation The government announced the sale of Shorts to Bombardier on 7 June 1989 for 30 million As part of the sale the government agreed at the insistence of then Chancellor John Major 34 35 to write off 390 million of the company s accumulated losses and inject another 390 million to recapitalise the group and cover current and future losses capital investment and training 36 Bombardier beat a bid from General Electric Company and Fokker Messerschmitt Bolkow Blohm had withdrawn before final offers were submitted 37 The sale was finalised on 4 October 1989 38 In 1993 with the company under the chairmanship of Sir Roy McNulty Bombardier Shorts and Thomson CSF formed a joint venture Shorts Missile Systems for the design and development of very short range air defence missiles for the UK Ministry of Defence and armed forces worldwide using expertise dating back to the 1950s In 2000 Thomson CSF bought Bombardier s 50 share to become the sole owner of Shorts Missile Systems renaming it Thales Air Defence in 2001 Spirit AeroSystems edit On 31 October 2019 Bombardier announced the sale of its aerostructures activities to Spirit AeroSystems 39 The sale closed in November 2020 following regulatory approval and a renegotiated price due to the effect of the COVID 19 pandemic 3 Aircraft editYear of first flight in parentheses Some of the early aircraft are designated using the Short sequence or constructors number which should not be confused with the similar type designations started at S 1 in 1924 Since becoming part of Bombardier Aerospace in 1989 focus is aerospace components rather than individual aircraft models missiles or drones 1900 1909 edit Short Biplane No 1 Short Biplane No 2 1909 Short Biplane No 31910 1919 edit Avro 504K licence production at Belfast by Harland and Wolff De Havilland DH 6 licence production at Belfast by Harland and Wolff De Havilland DH 9 licence production at Rochester Dunne D 5 1910 Short S 27 1910 Short Tandem Twin 1911 2 rotary engines for F McClean 40 Short S 34 Long range S 27 Short S 36 1912 Short S 38 1912 Short S 39 Triple Twin 1911 40 Short S 41 1912 Short S 42 monoplane Short S 45 1912 Short S 46 1912 Twin engined tractor pusher monoplane nicknamed the Double Dirty Short S 47 Triple Tractor 1912 2 50 hp rotary driving tractor propellers 40 Short Folder 1913 ff generic name applied to a number of different types Short Admiralty Type 3 Final rebuild of the Tandem Twin similar to a Type S 38 one only Short Admiralty Type 42 Short Admiralty Type 74 Short Admiralty Type 81 1913 folding wing tractor floatplane Short S 80 The Nile pusher floatplane Short S 81 1913 experimental pusher gun carrier Short Admiralty Type 135 1914 1 off folding wing floatplane Short Admiralty Type 136 1914 1 off folding wing floatplane Short Admiralty Type 166 1914 Short Admiralty Type 184 1915 Short Bomber 1915 Short Type 827 1914 Short Type 830 1914 Short 310 1916 Short Type 320 1916 Short F 3 Felixstowe 1917 Short F 5 Felixstowe 1918 Short N 1B Shirl 1918 Short N 2A 1917 Short N 2B 1917 R31 airship 1918 Short Sporting Type 1919 1920 1929 edit Short Silver Streak 1920 Short N 3 Cromarty 1921 Gnosspelius Gull 1923 Short S 1 Cockle 1924 Short S 2 1924 Short S 3 Springbok 1923 Short S 3a Springbok 1925 Short S 3b Chamois 1927 Short S 4 Satellite 1924 Short S 5 Singapore I 1925 Short S 6 Sturgeon 1927 Biplane Short S 7 Mussel 1926 Short S 8 Calcutta 1928 Short S 10 Gurnard 1929 Short Crusader 1927 1930 1939 edit Short S 8 8 Rangoon 1930 Short S 11 Valetta 1930 Short S 12 Singapore II 1930 Short S 17 Kent 1931 Short S 14 Sarafand 1932 originally known as the Short R6 28 Short Kawanishi S 15 KF1 Short S 16 Scion Scion II 1933 Short S 18 Knuckleduster 1933 Short L 17 Scylla 1934 Short S 19 Singapore III 1934 Short S 20 Mercury 1937 Short Mayo Composite Short S 21 Maia 1937 Short Mayo Composite Short S 22 Scion Senior 1935 Short S 23 Empire Flying Boat 1936 Short S 25 Sunderland 1937 Short S 25 Sandringham a post war derivation of the Sunderland Short S 26 G Class 1939 Short S 27 Civet project not built 1936 Short S 30 Empire Flying Boat 1938 Short S 31 Half scale Stirling 1938 Short S 32 Short S 29 Stirling 1939 Bristol Bombay 1939 licence production Handley Page Hereford licence production1940 1949 edit Short S 33 Empire Flying Boat 1940 Short S 35 Shetland 1 1944 Short S 45 Seaford 1944 Short S 45 Solent 1946 Short S 38 SA1 Sturgeon 1946 Short S 39 SA2 Sturgeon Short Nimbus 1947 Short S 40 Shetland 2 1947 Short S 41 1946 Design proposal for a naval fighter to specification N 7 46 No built 41 Short SB3 Sturgeon Short SA6 Sealand 1948 1950 1959 edit Short S 42 SA4 Sperrin 1951 Short S 43 SA5 project only Short S 48 SA9 glider project only Short SB1 1951 Short SB5 1952 Short SB 4 Sherpa 1953 Short SB6 Seamew 1953 Short SB7 Sealand III Short SC1 1957 English Electric Canberra sub contract Bristol Britannia sub contract1960 1989 edit nbsp Royal Air Force Short 312 Tucano in special colours as the RAF s 2008 display aircraft Short SC9 Canberra 1961 Short SD1 Canberra 1961 Short SC7 Skyvan 1963 Short SC5 Belfast 1964 Shorts 330 1974 Shorts 360 1981 Shorts C 23 Sherpa 1985 Short 312 Tucano 1986 last aircraft design prior to becoming part of Bombardier Aerospace in 1989 Airships edit R31 R32 R38 ZR 2 Missiles edit Shorts missile division which evolved into Shorts Missile Systems 1993 2000 then sold produced surface to air missiles Year of first use by a military in parentheses Seacat shipboard short range surface to air missile 1962 Tigercat land based trailer mounted version of Seacat 1967 Blowpipe soldier portable 1975 Javelin soldier portable post Blowpipe pre Starburst Starburst soldier portable 1989 Starstreak soldier portable 1997 Rotorcraft edit Cierva C 14UAVs and drones edit Test and trial programs from the 1960s and 1970s Shorts MATS B Shorts Skeet Short Skyspy 42 Shorts SD 2 Stiletto launched from Short SD1 Canberra 43 Chief test pilots editFrancis McClean honorary until 1912 44 Gordon Bell 1912 1914 45 Sydney Pickles 1913 Acting CTP during Bell s absence following a crash at Brooklands 46 Ronald C Kemp 1914 1918 47 John Lankester Parker 1918 1945 Geoffrey Dyson 1945 1946 Harold Piper 1946 1948 Tom Brooke Smith 1948 1960 Denis Tayler 1960 1969 Donald Burn Wright 1969 1976 Lindsay Cummings Allan Deacon Graham Andrews Jack Eaton 1984 presentArmoured vehicles editShorland Armoured Car Shorland S600See also editAerospace industry in the United Kingdom Canadair de Havilland Canada Learjet Bombardier Aerospace Oswald ShortNotes edit Barnes 1966 p 8 Shorts as a Centre of Excellence within Bombardier 2007 a b McAleer Ryan 29 November 2020 Short Brothers new US owner reports 136m operating loss for third quarter The Irish News Belfast Retrieved 29 November 2020 Manufacturing profiles Archived 15 March 2006 at the Wayback Machine Barnes 1967 p 3 Barnes 1967 pp 1 6 Barnes 1967 p 6 Barnes pp 6 8 Driver Hugh 1990 The Birth of Military Aviation Woodbridge Suffolk Boydell Press for the Royal Historical Society p 65 ISBN 0 86193 234 X Barnes 1967 pp 8 12 120 The supply ship had already been hit by a torpedo from the submarine HMS E14 4 days earlier and had run aground See Short Type 184 for further details Barnes 1967 p 113 Barnes and James 1989 p 16 a b Hanson Richard Borstal Short Brothers 1 Archived 2 August 2005 at the Wayback Machine Short Brothers by Richard Hanson Archived from the original on 18 November 2008 Retrieved 6 May 2009 Access date 15 January 2007 a b Cassidy Brian Flying Empires Short C class Empire flying boats Queens Parade Press 2004 2 Access date 15 January 2007 Barnes amp James 1989 p 15 Barnes and James 1989 p 19 Service from Foynes Republic of Ireland Archived 13 April 2007 at the Wayback Machine Barnes and James 1989 p 28 Barnes and James 1989 p 388 Barnes and James 1989 p 368 Barnes and James 1989 p 541 Barnes and James 1989 p 30 Barnes and James 1989 p 32 Barnes and James 1989 p 508 Barnes and James 1989 p 509 Shorts Quarterly Review Vol 2 No 3 Autumn 1953 p 1 Barnes and James 1989 p 510 The 50 seat jetliner Flight International 4 March 1989 O Keeffe Niall Boom and bust the regional jet phenomenon Flight International Retrieved 10 April 2012 NI 1987 State papers Wildcat strikes over flags at Shorts revealed BBC News 21 August 2015 Retrieved 20 March 2021 a b McKittrick David 29 October 1991 Arms from Africa fuel paramilitary terror The Independent London Catholic shot dead in ambush Attack on workmen in mini bus seen as loyalist warning to workers at Shorts aerospace factory The Independent 22 October 2011 Retrieved 20 March 2021 John Major 1999 John Major The Autobiography Phoenix Books p 110 Anthony Seldon 1997 Major A Political Life HarperCollins p 82 Harrison Michael 8 June 1989 Shorts sold to Bombardier The Independent Bombardier of Canada Wins Competition to Buy Short Brothers Aviation Week amp Space Technology 12 June 1989 p 63 Shorts is private Flight International 14 October 1989 Campbell John 31 October 2019 Bombardier NI operations sold to US firm BBC News a b c Thirty Short Years Flight 20 April 1939 p G Buttler page 321 photo caption PDF Flight International p 787 27 November 1975 Ransom Stephen Fairclough Robert 1987 English Electric Aircraft and Their Predecessors London Putnam p 352 ISBN 0 85177 806 2 EarlyAviators com EarlyAviators com EarlyAviators com EarlyAviators comReferences editBarnes C H 1989 revisions by James Derek N Shorts Aircraft since 1900 Putnam 1967 1989 revised ISBN 0 85177 819 4 Buttler Tony 2017 British Secret Projects Jet Fighters since 1950 2nd ed Manchester Crecy Publishing ISBN 978 1 910 80905 1 Jackson A J British Civil Aircraft since 1919 Volume 3 Putnam 1973 ISBN 0 370 10010 7 Warner Guy July August 2002 From Bombay to Bombardier Aircraft Production at Sydenham Part One Air Enthusiast No 100 pp 13 24 ISSN 0143 5450 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Short Brothers Building Britain s WW1 flying boat fleet Grave of Horace Short findagrave Grave of Albert Eustace Short findagrave Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Short Brothers amp oldid 1149783504, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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