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With funding from the Orient Steam Navigation Company a new Australian National Airways was registered on 13 May 1936, and began services under its new name on 1 July 1936. It acquired a second DC-2 VH-UXJ Loongana that began a twice-weekly service between Melbourne and Perth on 21 December 1936.
Australian National Airways timetable from 1930. Australian National Airways, Ltd. (ANA) was a short-lived Australian airline, founded on 3 January 1929 by Charles Kingsford Smith and Charles Ulm. [1] ANA began scheduled services on 1 January 1930. [2]
It was founded in 1962 as the Australian Aircraft Restoration Group, in an attempt to maintain a World War II-era Bristol Beaufighter aircraft. It has since become a museum, with a large aircraft collection. It was known as the Australian National Aviation Museum up until October 2021. As of 2021 it held nearly 60 aircraft and 25 engines.
The Australian National Airways (ANA) was the predominant domestic carrier from the mid-1930s to the early 1950s. After World War II , Qantas was nationalised and its domestic operations were transferred to Trans Australia Airlines (TAA) in 1946.
Australian Gliding Museum, Bacchus Marsh [5] Australian National Aviation Museum, Melbourne; B-24 Liberator Memorial Australia, Werribee [6] Ballarat Aviation Museum, Ballarat; Derelict Aircraft Museum, Launching Place – closed; Drage Aviation Museum, Wangaratta; Friends of the Anson Air Museum, Ballarat; Latrobe Flying Museum, Traralgon ...
Australian National Airways (ANA) gained a controlling interest in Airlines of Australia in April 1937, although the two airlines and assets retained separate public identities until 1 July 1942. Their two surviving Stinsons were then renamed VH-UKK Binana and VH-UYY Tokana. Airlines of Australia also held shares in ANA. [7]
Southern Sun Avro 618 Ten, 'Faith in Australia' (formerly Southern Moon) cockpit, 1933. The first five aircraft were sold to the new Australian National Airways.The type entered service on 1 January 1930 on the Brisbane-Sydney route, and later Melbourne-Sydney. [1]
Central Australian Aviation Museum General view of the museum Location 6 Memorial Avenue, Gillen, Alice Springs NT Australia Coordinates 23°42′9.4″S 133°51′51.5″E / 23.702611°S 133.864306°E / -23.702611; 133.864306 Type Aerospace Website Central Australian Aviation Museum The Central Australian Aviation Museum is an aviation museum in Alice Springs, Northern Territory ...