The University of Texas at Dallas
close menu
Close Menu

Eugene McDermott Library

Bell HTL-4 12889U LST 5UI Project 512 1955 Artic Supply Malone H Farrar.

The Aircraft of Air America

5th edition of 24 August 2015, by Dr. Joe F. Leeker

icon of a camera (text with tooltip) Bell HTL-4 12889U LST 5UI Project 512 1955 Artic Supply Malone H Farrar.<hr /><strong>Collection:</strong> Wayne Mutza Collection

Information About Previous Editions and Corrections

The second edition of this database includes all additions and corrections that have been sent over to Dr. Carlson and to myself since August 2003. Some files like the B-26 file have been completely restructured, others like the B-17 file have been added. Whenever possible, the present status of a former Air America aircraft has been added from FAA files, and a lot of material about Air America’s contribution to the Bay of Pigs operation has been added from CIA documents or other sources. Additional information about VIAT has come to light, and many new photos have also been included in this second edition.

Yet, even after all these additions and corrections, this second edition will certainly still contain errors and gaps. So, once again, I kindly ask to send all corrections and all further additions to the History of Aviation & Archives. They will kindly forward all material to me.

© University of Texas at Dallas, 3 June 2004


The third edition of this database contains two types of new information:

  1. More details about individual aircraft:
    • A number of additions and corrections has been made to the aircraft files.
    • More information about the aircraft of VIAT has come to light.
    • The C-54 file contains new information about the C-54s flown in the Bay of Pigs operation.
    • New information about the C-46s, Helios, and Twin Helios operated by the Aviation Research Center of India is shown in the respective files.
    • Then, for the first time, the aircraft of the Khmer Air Force maintained at Phnom Penh under the supervision of Air America’s LMAT group are described here in detail.
  2. Finally, a new type of files has been added for the first time, that is files that describe in detail the history of selected types of missions flown by Air America. This is not a complete history of Air America, but a number of narrative texts about such issues as “Air America Japan – since the days of CAT”, or “Air America in Laos” or “Scheduled Air Services Ryukyus”. This explains the new subtitle of this database “(including the history of some of Air America’s operations)”.

Note: In the forth edition, these narrative files have been put together in the new e-book called The History of Air America, where they have also been updated and supplemented by some more narrative files about Air America’s activities.

Yet, even after all these additions and corrections, this third edition will certainly still contain errors and gaps. So, once again, I kindly ask to send all corrections and all further additions to the History of Aviation & Archives. They will kindly forward all material to me.

© University of Texas at Dallas, 29 May 2006


In the fourth edition of this database, new material has been added that came from a number of new collections received at the Air America Archives. Among these new collections, I’d like to especially mention two new collections:

  1. The material donated to the Archives by Gary Bisson, which contains invaluable microfilms made from Air America’s original business correspondence especially regarding the Corporate Organization, Corporate Affairs like the acquisition and sale of aircraft, and Contracts.
  2. The material donated to the Archives by Margaret Leary, widow of the late Professor William Leary, that contains, among others, invaluable interviews with former Air America personnel, made by Bill Leary since the early eighties and preserved as a large correspondence, as memoirs or as audiotapes.

Yet, even this fourth edition will certainly still contain errors and gaps. So, once again, I kindly ask to send all corrections and all further additions to the History of Aviation & Archives. They will kindly forward all material to me.

© University of Texas at Dallas, 15 August 2003, last updated on 1 June 2009


The updates of 1 June 2009 and 23 August 2010 to this database contain new material that came from a number of new collections and sources. Among them, I’d like to especially mention two new sources:

  1. The material donated to the Archives by Patricia F. Walker, M.D., daughter of Captain Frederick “Fred” Frye Walker. This material includes priceless documents like all types of Memoranda, Notams, Contracts, Radio messages, and Daily Flight Schedules of several Air America bases, including the Saigon Daily Flight Schedules of 28 and 29 April 1975, that is of the last two days Air America was in operation.
  2. The photos sent to the author for publication by Dr. Jonathan Pote, documenting his one-year stay in Laos in 1965/66. These photos not only allowed to considerably augment the file about the RLAF T-28s maintained by Air America, but also to add a completely new section at the end of the C-47 file, presenting all known information about the C-47s flown by the Royal Laotian Air Force that were also maintained by Air America.

Once again, I kindly ask to send all corrections and all further additions to the History of Aviation & Archives. They will kindly forward all material to me.

© University of Texas at Dallas, 15 August 2003, last updated on 23 August 2010


The fifth edition of this database contains two types of new information:

  1. A number of additions and corrections have been made to the aircraft files:
    • The C-130 file has been re-elaborated, as more details about the aircraft used in the
      Tibetan airlift have come to light.
    • The identity of the Grumman Goose has come to light.
    • The identities of VIAT’s C-54s have come to light.
  2. A new section about the aircraft of the Royal Lao Air Force has been added. Some of
    the material had been published before at the end of my files dealing with certain types
    of Air America aircraft. Thanks to the efforts of Sid Nanson and Steve Darke, whom I’d
    like to thank here for their precious contributions, many details about the losses of
    RLAF aircraft (T-28s, O-1s, etc.) have come to light and have been added here.

© University of Texas at Dallas, 15 August 2003, last updated on 4 March 2013


The final edition of this database contains the following new information:

  1. The C-130 file has been completely revised, as more details about the aircraft used in the Tibetan airlift have come to light from the logbooks of Merrill D. (“Doc”) Johnson.
  2. The files about the Khmer Air Force and RLAF T-28s and O-1s have been revised thanks to material coming from the National Archives, provided by Sid Nanson and Steve Darke
  3. The identities of the “Peace Rotor” UH-34s prepared by Air America’s maintenance base at Udorn and delivered by Air America pilots to Indonesia have come to light.
  4. 3 new files have been added to the RLAF section: T-6s, Sikorsky SH-19s, and Alouette IIs

After more than 21 years of work, I can finally say that The Aircraft of Air America and The History of Air America has been completed. Looking back, I am very happy to say that many people have assisted me over the years with the information they sent me – too many to mention here all of them. Whoever has assisted me in writing first The Aircraft of Air America and then The History of Air America is listed in the “Acknowledgments” file of The Aircraft – there is no separate “Acknowledgments” file for the History, as in many cases the material sent to me has been used in both e-books. However, I want to thank especially two persons whom I could contact for help for very many years and without whose indefatigable assistance these two e-books would not have been possible: the late Ward Reimer and Joe Hazen. So once again, many, many thanks!

There are also two institutions whom I’d like to thank here for their assistance: The staff of the History of Aviation & Archives of UTD was always very helpful – not only by making accessible to me the CAT and Air America material that had been donated to them, but also by arranging whatever they could, so that during my one-week trips to Dallas I could check as much material as possible, and by their patience, trying to answer all of my questions that I sometimes sent them from home via e-mail. So thank you very much, Special Collections! The other institution I’d like to thank is the CIA – for generously declassifying an enormous amount of precious documents about CAT and Air America. Already in 1997 or 1998, the first shipments of the “CIA Corporate Records” arrived at Special Collections, followed by more declassified material over the years. In the meantime, CIA’s Electronic Reading Room is another source of information, without whom it would have been impossible to write these two e-books. So thank you very much, Declassification Staff!

utdallas.edu
It was in 1994 that I started to work on Air America, and my first visit to the McDermott Library of UTD was in 1996. Since then, several collections have been revised and so, probably a lot of material that has been quoted in my references by box and folder number, may have changed its box or folder within the same collection and so may have been given new box and folder numbers. Whenever it was possible, I tried to indicate the new box and folder numbers. As this has not always been possible, readers and patrons should ask a librarian when they are unable to locate in the library a document that I quoted.

© University of Texas at Dallas, 15 August 2003, last updated on 24 August 2015

Contact Us

Patrizia Nava, CA
Senior Curator of Aviation Archives
patrizia.nava@utdallas.edu 
972-883-2577