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Stanley Kennedy Sr.

Stanley Carmichael Kennedy Sr. (July 7, 1890 – April 19, 1968) was a US Naval Aviator during World War I, world record holder and Silver Star recipient, pioneer of commercial aviation in the Hawaiian Islands, and founder of Hawaiian Airlines, one of the world's oldest operating airlines.[1] Kennedy ran Hawaiian Airlines from the time of its incorporation in 1929 until he stepped down from daily operations in 1955. He remained chairman of the board until his death in 1968.

Stanley Carmichael Kennedy Sr.
Photo Courtesy of Hawaiian Airlines Archives
BornJuly 7, 1890
DiedApril 19, 1968 age 77
Honolulu, Hawaii, US
Resting placeOahu Cemetery
Alma materStanford University
Occupation(s)Founder, President, and Chairman of Hawaiian Airlines
Years active1929–1968
SpouseMartha Davenport
Children2
Military career
Allegiance United States
Service/branch United States Navy
Years of service1917-1919
RankEnsign
Battles/warsWorld War I
AwardsCitation Star/Silver Star

Early life edit

Kennedy was born in Honolulu, Hawaii to James A. and Minnie C. (Kirkland) Kennedy on July 7, 1890.[2] His father was an immigrant from Scotland who worked his way up to become an executive at the Honolulu Iron Works, and then in 1902 became President of the Inter-Island Steam Navigation Company, which provided passenger and cargo shipping in the Hawaiian Islands.[3] Kennedy attended the Punahou School in Honolulu graduating in 1908, and then attended Stanford University graduating in 1912. He returned to Honolulu to work for his father at Inter-Island Steam Navigation Company.[4]

 
Ensign Stan Kennedy, circa 1917

Naval career edit

When the United States entered World War I in 1917, Kennedy joined the US Navy on June 27, 1917.[5] He was sent to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology for six weeks of Naval Officer training, and then to Naval Air Station Pensacola to earn his Navy wings.[3] He is listed as Naval Aviator #302.[4][6][7]

Ensign Kennedy was stationed in England, flying Curtiss H-16 Seaplanes patrolling the North Sea for German submarines. On one mission, Kennedy and his crew went on patrol for 7 hours and 59 minutes, setting a world record for sustained flight and earning him the Navy's Citation Star/Silver Star.[7][4]

Airline career edit

Creating Inter-Island Airways edit

Kennedy returned from WWI and resumed his career at the Inter-Island Steam Navigation Company. His experience flying seaplanes led him to the possibility of using seaplanes to connect the people of Hawaii.[8] He approached his father about adding a seaplane division to his company's offerings, but his father saw airplanes as "flying toys"[9] to be used in only good weather.[4]

Shortly after his father's death in 1926, Kennedy's proposal to the company's board of directors was accepted, and on January 30, 1929, Inter-Island Airways became a legal entity with Kennedy appointed vice president and general manager.[9] Inter-Island Steam's Board Member F.C. Atherton was appointed president to oversee their investment of $300,000.[4]

The first employees Kennedy hired were Navy pilot Charles Elliott as Chief Pilot and Army pilot Carl Cover as Operations Manager. Kennedy, Cover, and Elliott, all being WWI veterans, decided on Armistice Day (November 11) to be the inaugural flight in the Sikorsky S-38 amphibious airplanes. On November 11, 1929, Kennedy's dream of scheduled airline service in the Hawaiian Islands took flight as Elliott and Cover flew the two Sikorsky's in formation from Honolulu to Maui, then on to Hilo.[9]

 
Inter-Islands Airways Sikorsky S-43 in Molokai

Starting an airline the month after the Wall Street Crash of 1929, was a daunting task. However, the Board of Directors had great faith in Kennedy, making him the President of both Inter-Island Steam Navigation and Inter-Island Airways in February 1933.[4] The airline lost money for the first 5 years, until Kennedy was able to secure the airmail contract starting on October 8, 1934.[9][10] This allowed Kennedy to start looking for larger airplanes to operate, and 10 days after the maiden airmail flight he decided on the Sikorsky S-43, making Inter-Island Airways the launch customer for this new aircraft.[9][4]

Expanding beyond the islands edit

Kennedy now aimed at expanding Inter-Island Airways to fly to the US mainland. To represent this, on October 1, 1941, Kennedy changed the airline's name to Hawaiian Airlines.[9] In 1943, the Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB) released a route for application from Honolulu to San Francisco with a stopover in Los Angeles. Kennedy and TWA's president, Jack Frye, teamed up on the petition where Hawaiian would fly the routes, TWA would withdraw its application in exchange for 20% ownership of Hawaiian Airlines.[4] Kennedy spent a great deal of time and money traveling to Washington, D.C. arguing Hawaiian's case to the CAB, but since Pacific Overseas Airline submitted they didn't get a chance at the application, the CAB decided to start the entire application process over again, but it was too expensive for Kennedy to attempt once more.[4]

The route application process resurfaced in 1959, after Kennedy had handed over the Presidency to Art Lewis, but remained on as chairman of the board. This time Hawaiian was flying DC-6s to the mainland on charters, and felt they had an excellent chance to win the route. Once again to no avail, the route was awarded to Western Airlines.[4] Kennedy would never get to see his airline fly to the mainland on a scheduled basis, as Hawaiian would have to wait until the Airline Deregulation Act of 1978.

First scheduled air-cargo service in the US edit

After the Attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941, Territorial Governor Joseph Poindexter evoked Martial law in Hawaii.[11] The War Shipping Administration took control of all Inter-Island Steam Navigation's ships, but allowed Hawaiian Airlines to operate under the Army's supervision.[7] The ships that used to supply the islands with its consumer goods, were now devoted to transporting soldiers, munitions, and other war supplies throughout the islands. Kennedy petitioned the CAB to allow Hawaiian to fly these consumer goods on its airplanes, and was granted United States Air Cargo Certificate #1.[9][7] Hawaiian removed the seats of its three remaining S-43s and lone remaining S-38 to use for cargo flights, allowing its DC-3s to fly the passengers.[7] On March 20, 1942, Kennedy watched as Hawaiian's first air-cargo flight departed to serve the people of Hawaii.[9]

 
Hawaiian Air DC-9 in flight

Jet service edit

On April 1, 1966, Kennedy witnessed the final large milestone of his tenure at Hawaiian, the introduction of DC-9 jets for the inter-island service.[7] During Kennedy's oversight of Hawaiian, he had grown it from a fledgling airline flying 8-seat seaplanes to an airline flying a fleet of modern jet airliners.[7]

Inter-Island Steam Navigation Company edit

Kennedy was president of the Inter-Island Steam Navigation Company from February 1933, until it ceased operations in 1947.[4] After WWII, Hawaiian Airlines had both a well established inter-island passenger and air-cargo business. Aloha Airlines began inter-island passenger service in 1946, creating more available seats and fierce competition.[3] The 14 hour overnight steamer voyage from Honolulu to Hilo became an outdated form of transportation, when people and cargo could fly there in an hour and a half.[4]

Personal life edit

After Kennedy returned home from Stanford, he met Martha Davenport on an Inter-Island steamer while she was vacationing in Hawaii from her home in Chattanooga, Tennessee. They wrote to each other after that vacation, and continued during WWI.[6] On his way home after the war, Kennedy stopped in Chattanooga to marry Martha, and then the two continued to Honolulu together.[6] They lived in a beachfront home near Aina Haina, just east of Honolulu, and had a weekend home in Kahuku, on the North Shore of Oahu.[6]

Kennedy was also president of the Coca-Cola Bottling Co. of Hawaii, as well as the Honolulu Chamber of Commerce.[12]

Death edit

Kennedy died of a heart attack April 19, 1968 at his Kahuku beachfront home at the age of 77, ending his tenure as Hawaiian Airline's chairman of the board.[4] He is buried at the Oahu Cemetery in Nuuanu.

References edit

  1. ^ "Oldest Airlines in the World that are still Operating". WorldAtlas.com. Retrieved 15 October 2018.
  2. ^ "Hawaii Births and Christenings, 1852-1933". Familysearch.com. Retrieved 4 October 2018.
  3. ^ a b c Forman, Peter (2005). Wings of Paradise. Kailua, HI: Barnstormer Books. pp. 5–101. ISBN 978-0-9701594-4-1.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Banham, Russ (2014). Hawaiian. Nashville, TN: Greenwich Publishing. pp. 29–105. ISBN 978-1-941800-00-3.
  5. ^ "United States World War I Draft Registration Cards, 1917-1918". familysearch.com. Retrieved 14 October 2018.
  6. ^ a b c d Alice, Sinesky. "Interview with Stanley C Kennedy Jr" (PDF). eVols at University of Hawaii. The Watumull Foundation Oral History Project. Retrieved 7 October 2018.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g Cohen, Stan (1994). Hawaiian Airlines. Missoula, MT: Pictorial Histories Publishing Company. pp. 9–85. ISBN 978-0-933126-81-7.
  8. ^ "Hawaii's Own Airline". Smithsonian Air and Space Museum. Retrieved 14 October 2018.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h Thiele, Ray (1994). Kennedy's Hawaiian Air. Kailua, HI: Olomana Publishers. pp. 1–227. ISBN 978-0-9643365-0-6.
  10. ^ "Celebrate a Legacy Honoree Stanley Kennedy, Sr". Travel Industry Management, University of Hawaii. Retrieved 15 October 2018.
  11. ^ Associated Press (December 6, 2007). "Survivors Recall Living in Fear After Pearl Harbor Attack". Fox News. Retrieved 15 October 2018.
  12. ^ Perez, Rob (2 November 1999). "Interisland Airline Took Off in 1929". Honolulu Star-Bulletin. Retrieved 4 October 2018.

stanley, kennedy, stanley, carmichael, kennedy, july, 1890, april, 1968, naval, aviator, during, world, world, record, holder, silver, star, recipient, pioneer, commercial, aviation, hawaiian, islands, founder, hawaiian, airlines, world, oldest, operating, air. Stanley Carmichael Kennedy Sr July 7 1890 April 19 1968 was a US Naval Aviator during World War I world record holder and Silver Star recipient pioneer of commercial aviation in the Hawaiian Islands and founder of Hawaiian Airlines one of the world s oldest operating airlines 1 Kennedy ran Hawaiian Airlines from the time of its incorporation in 1929 until he stepped down from daily operations in 1955 He remained chairman of the board until his death in 1968 Stanley Carmichael Kennedy Sr Photo Courtesy of Hawaiian Airlines ArchivesBornJuly 7 1890Honolulu Hawaii USDiedApril 19 1968 age 77Honolulu Hawaii USResting placeOahu CemeteryAlma materStanford UniversityOccupation s Founder President and Chairman of Hawaiian AirlinesYears active1929 1968SpouseMartha DavenportChildren2Military careerAllegiance United StatesService wbr branchUnited States NavyYears of service1917 1919RankEnsignBattles warsWorld War IAwardsCitation Star Silver Star Contents 1 Early life 2 Naval career 3 Airline career 3 1 Creating Inter Island Airways 3 2 Expanding beyond the islands 3 3 First scheduled air cargo service in the US 3 4 Jet service 4 Inter Island Steam Navigation Company 5 Personal life 6 Death 7 ReferencesEarly life editKennedy was born in Honolulu Hawaii to James A and Minnie C Kirkland Kennedy on July 7 1890 2 His father was an immigrant from Scotland who worked his way up to become an executive at the Honolulu Iron Works and then in 1902 became President of the Inter Island Steam Navigation Company which provided passenger and cargo shipping in the Hawaiian Islands 3 Kennedy attended the Punahou School in Honolulu graduating in 1908 and then attended Stanford University graduating in 1912 He returned to Honolulu to work for his father at Inter Island Steam Navigation Company 4 nbsp Ensign Stan Kennedy circa 1917Naval career editWhen the United States entered World War I in 1917 Kennedy joined the US Navy on June 27 1917 5 He was sent to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology for six weeks of Naval Officer training and then to Naval Air Station Pensacola to earn his Navy wings 3 He is listed as Naval Aviator 302 4 6 7 Ensign Kennedy was stationed in England flying Curtiss H 16 Seaplanes patrolling the North Sea for German submarines On one mission Kennedy and his crew went on patrol for 7 hours and 59 minutes setting a world record for sustained flight and earning him the Navy s Citation Star Silver Star 7 4 Airline career editCreating Inter Island Airways edit Kennedy returned from WWI and resumed his career at the Inter Island Steam Navigation Company His experience flying seaplanes led him to the possibility of using seaplanes to connect the people of Hawaii 8 He approached his father about adding a seaplane division to his company s offerings but his father saw airplanes as flying toys 9 to be used in only good weather 4 Shortly after his father s death in 1926 Kennedy s proposal to the company s board of directors was accepted and on January 30 1929 Inter Island Airways became a legal entity with Kennedy appointed vice president and general manager 9 Inter Island Steam s Board Member F C Atherton was appointed president to oversee their investment of 300 000 4 The first employees Kennedy hired were Navy pilot Charles Elliott as Chief Pilot and Army pilot Carl Cover as Operations Manager Kennedy Cover and Elliott all being WWI veterans decided on Armistice Day November 11 to be the inaugural flight in the Sikorsky S 38 amphibious airplanes On November 11 1929 Kennedy s dream of scheduled airline service in the Hawaiian Islands took flight as Elliott and Cover flew the two Sikorsky s in formation from Honolulu to Maui then on to Hilo 9 nbsp Inter Islands Airways Sikorsky S 43 in MolokaiStarting an airline the month after the Wall Street Crash of 1929 was a daunting task However the Board of Directors had great faith in Kennedy making him the President of both Inter Island Steam Navigation and Inter Island Airways in February 1933 4 The airline lost money for the first 5 years until Kennedy was able to secure the airmail contract starting on October 8 1934 9 10 This allowed Kennedy to start looking for larger airplanes to operate and 10 days after the maiden airmail flight he decided on the Sikorsky S 43 making Inter Island Airways the launch customer for this new aircraft 9 4 Expanding beyond the islands edit Kennedy now aimed at expanding Inter Island Airways to fly to the US mainland To represent this on October 1 1941 Kennedy changed the airline s name to Hawaiian Airlines 9 In 1943 the Civil Aeronautics Board CAB released a route for application from Honolulu to San Francisco with a stopover in Los Angeles Kennedy and TWA s president Jack Frye teamed up on the petition where Hawaiian would fly the routes TWA would withdraw its application in exchange for 20 ownership of Hawaiian Airlines 4 Kennedy spent a great deal of time and money traveling to Washington D C arguing Hawaiian s case to the CAB but since Pacific Overseas Airline submitted they didn t get a chance at the application the CAB decided to start the entire application process over again but it was too expensive for Kennedy to attempt once more 4 The route application process resurfaced in 1959 after Kennedy had handed over the Presidency to Art Lewis but remained on as chairman of the board This time Hawaiian was flying DC 6s to the mainland on charters and felt they had an excellent chance to win the route Once again to no avail the route was awarded to Western Airlines 4 Kennedy would never get to see his airline fly to the mainland on a scheduled basis as Hawaiian would have to wait until the Airline Deregulation Act of 1978 First scheduled air cargo service in the US edit After the Attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941 Territorial Governor Joseph Poindexter evoked Martial law in Hawaii 11 The War Shipping Administration took control of all Inter Island Steam Navigation s ships but allowed Hawaiian Airlines to operate under the Army s supervision 7 The ships that used to supply the islands with its consumer goods were now devoted to transporting soldiers munitions and other war supplies throughout the islands Kennedy petitioned the CAB to allow Hawaiian to fly these consumer goods on its airplanes and was granted United States Air Cargo Certificate 1 9 7 Hawaiian removed the seats of its three remaining S 43s and lone remaining S 38 to use for cargo flights allowing its DC 3s to fly the passengers 7 On March 20 1942 Kennedy watched as Hawaiian s first air cargo flight departed to serve the people of Hawaii 9 nbsp Hawaiian Air DC 9 in flightJet service edit On April 1 1966 Kennedy witnessed the final large milestone of his tenure at Hawaiian the introduction of DC 9 jets for the inter island service 7 During Kennedy s oversight of Hawaiian he had grown it from a fledgling airline flying 8 seat seaplanes to an airline flying a fleet of modern jet airliners 7 Inter Island Steam Navigation Company editKennedy was president of the Inter Island Steam Navigation Company from February 1933 until it ceased operations in 1947 4 After WWII Hawaiian Airlines had both a well established inter island passenger and air cargo business Aloha Airlines began inter island passenger service in 1946 creating more available seats and fierce competition 3 The 14 hour overnight steamer voyage from Honolulu to Hilo became an outdated form of transportation when people and cargo could fly there in an hour and a half 4 Personal life editAfter Kennedy returned home from Stanford he met Martha Davenport on an Inter Island steamer while she was vacationing in Hawaii from her home in Chattanooga Tennessee They wrote to each other after that vacation and continued during WWI 6 On his way home after the war Kennedy stopped in Chattanooga to marry Martha and then the two continued to Honolulu together 6 They lived in a beachfront home near Aina Haina just east of Honolulu and had a weekend home in Kahuku on the North Shore of Oahu 6 Kennedy was also president of the Coca Cola Bottling Co of Hawaii as well as the Honolulu Chamber of Commerce 12 Death editKennedy died of a heart attack April 19 1968 at his Kahuku beachfront home at the age of 77 ending his tenure as Hawaiian Airline s chairman of the board 4 He is buried at the Oahu Cemetery in Nuuanu References edit Oldest Airlines in the World that are still Operating WorldAtlas com Retrieved 15 October 2018 Hawaii Births and Christenings 1852 1933 Familysearch com Retrieved 4 October 2018 a b c Forman Peter 2005 Wings of Paradise Kailua HI Barnstormer Books pp 5 101 ISBN 978 0 9701594 4 1 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Banham Russ 2014 Hawaiian Nashville TN Greenwich Publishing pp 29 105 ISBN 978 1 941800 00 3 United States World War I Draft Registration Cards 1917 1918 familysearch com Retrieved 14 October 2018 a b c d Alice Sinesky Interview with Stanley C Kennedy Jr PDF eVols at University of Hawaii The Watumull Foundation Oral History Project Retrieved 7 October 2018 a b c d e f g Cohen Stan 1994 Hawaiian Airlines Missoula MT Pictorial Histories Publishing Company pp 9 85 ISBN 978 0 933126 81 7 Hawaii s Own Airline Smithsonian Air and Space Museum Retrieved 14 October 2018 a b c d e f g h Thiele Ray 1994 Kennedy s Hawaiian Air Kailua HI Olomana Publishers pp 1 227 ISBN 978 0 9643365 0 6 Celebrate a Legacy Honoree Stanley Kennedy Sr Travel Industry Management University of Hawaii Retrieved 15 October 2018 Associated Press December 6 2007 Survivors Recall Living in Fear After Pearl Harbor Attack Fox News Retrieved 15 October 2018 Perez Rob 2 November 1999 Interisland Airline Took Off in 1929 Honolulu Star Bulletin Retrieved 4 October 2018 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stanley Kennedy Sr amp oldid 1086570959, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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