Walter Varney

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Walter Varney is the founder of Varney Airlines, based in Boise, Idaho, and Varney Speed Lines at El Paso, Texas. Varney Airlines is the root of what became United Airlines, and Varney Speed Lines became Continental Airlines.

Contents

[edit] Overview

“The Boise Airport at that time was located on the Boise State campus, that was a special day in terms of transportation because it marks the birth of United Airlines,” said United Archivist Roni Adams.

World War I established a military use for airplanes. But after the war, the country began to look at commercial enterprises. The United States had great fleets of airplanes with hundreds of ex-GI pilots with nothing to do. Many came home and bought surplus airplanes from the scrap heaps for as little as a $100 dollars and made a meager living barnstorming across the country.

[edit] Early Airmail

In May 1918, the U.S. Post Office established the first overnight airmail route between New York City and Washington, D.C. By 1920, service had expanded to Chicago, and the post office was beginning to think in terms of transcontinental routes. Airmail delivery would be accomplished in much the same way as the old Pony Express worked — a series of shorter hops across the country.

Given its position as a crossroads and transportation center dating back to the Oregon Trail days, Boise was a natural choice for one of the new airmail stations.

The inaugural flight of the transcontinental airmail system took place on Sept. 8, 1920. A pilot took off from Hazelhurst Field, N.J., early that day, and after a series of relays, the mail reached Salt Lake City by 5:03 that afternoon. It took three more days before the first airmail reached San Francisco.

By the mid 1920s, the Post Office airmail flew 2.5 million miles and delivered 14 million letters. But the government didn’t want to continue airmail service on its own. Traditionally they had used private companies for the shipment of mail. So when the feasibility of airmail was ironed out, and landing strips became Airports, the government moved to transfer airmail service to the private sector with competitive bids.

Varney was well known for his California flying school and air-taxi service. His friends and colleagues thought he was crazy coming to Boise and taking on this route. They thought there wasn’t much money to be made between the three ‘cow-towns.’

A few months before the Mayor and Boise City Council got wind of a new airmail route proposed in the Northwest and decided to build the first municipal airport on the old Booth tract of land along the river. The American Legion helped out by clearing the landing strip and building the runways. The city furnished tractors, trucks and horses, while most of the work was completed by the members of the Legion.

Contract Air Mail routes were bid on across the country, all the easy routes went early and for a lot of money. The Pasco to Boise to Elko route was the least appealing because the 460 mile ran "from nowhere to nowhere" over the uncharted and barren high desert to treacherous snow-capped mountains.

[edit] Contract Air Mail Act

The legislative push for the airmail routes was the 1925 Contract Air Mail Act, also called the Kelly Act. Winners of the initial five contracts were National Air Transport, Varney Airlines, Western Air Express, Colonial Air Transport, and Robertson Aircraft Corporation.

April 6, 1926 was the first official mail transport after the contract was awarded. The event held such great promise that Idaho Senator William Borah came out from Washington for the ceremony. He joined Governor C.C. Moore and Boise Mayor E.G. Eagleson and a thousand screaming people because they knew that air freight meant new commerce dollars and growth. Varney Airlines represented an aerial port with new jobs and notoriety from air freight company.

National and Varney later became the heart and soul of United Airlines they teamed with the Boeing Airplane Company and Pratt & Whitney. Western would merge with Transcontinental Air Transport (TAT), another Curtiss subsidiary formed Transcontinental and Western Air.

“The companies didn’t merge all at once, they merged along the way,” said Roni Adams. “Like Boeing air transport absorbing Pacific air transport, and so on. But the four were Boeing Air Transport, Pacific Air Transport, National Air Transport and Varney Airlines.”

The Post Office paid private operators handsomely to transport the mail, and by the pound. For the first time in history there was real money to be made flying airplanes. Air freight and commercial aviation in the United States was born and Boise had a hand in that.

[edit] Initial Hardships

There were no radios and few beacons on the ground to light the way, night flight increased the risk of what was already a dangerous job. Within the first three years of airmail service, 19 of the Post Office's original 40 pilots died in crashes, Varney’s route also saw its share of crashes the first coming on the inaugural flight.

Pilot Franklin Rose noticed the menacing dark clouds coming in from the west and tried to miss them but they closed in too fast. His plane was suddenly surrounded by buffeting winds and sheets of blinding rain, and the flash of lightning. Rose tried to get below the clouds but the engine sputtered and cut out. He tried to bring the Swallow down as gently as possible but his wheel caught in the sage brush and caused the plane to nose over. He was miles from anywhere.

Unhurt, except for a couple of bruises, he climbed down to look over the situation. He gathered up what he could carry and headed out, soon two cowboys rode up. They accused Rose of being a Prohibition agent spying on them. Rose had to walk out on his own, two days later he found a ranch house with a phone and called Elko and told them he was fine.

The victory celebration in Elko was postponed for 24 hours while Varney tried to locate the missing pilot when he turned up it was back to the business of flying mail.

(Thanks to United Airlines, Idaho Statesman, Idaho State Historical Society, History Link, Washington State University, Warhawk Air Museum, Sue Paul, Roni Adams)