Delta Ship 41 is a Douglas DC-3 that flew for Delta Air Lines from 1941 to 1958.[1]

Delta Ship 41
Delta Ship 41 in Historic Hangar 1
General information
TypeDouglas DC-3
Construction number3278
RegistrationN28341
History
Manufactured1940
Preserved atDelta Flight Museum

Operational history

edit

Delta's Ship 41 was the second of Delta's first five iconic DC-3 airplanes to be delivered from Douglas Aircraft Co. between November 1940-January 1941:

  • The first DC-3, Delta Ship 40, was christened "City of Atlanta" with a bottle of Coca-Cola. It went into scheduled service on December 24, 1940.
  • Ship 41 went into service on January 19, 1941, flying from Atlanta to Ft. Worth, Texas.[2] Delta Air Lines used the airplane for 17 years until 1958.[3]

Ship 41 was acquired by another airline in Delta's family tree—North Central. North Central became part of Delta's history through its merger with Northwest Airlines in 2008.[4]

The aircraft then flew for a number of different airlines before finally being operated by Air Puerto Rico, a Puerto Rican cargo airline company.

Restoration

edit

In 1990, a group of Delta retirees and enthusiasts located one of Delta's first five DC-3s in order to restore it to flying condition. Their investigation led them to "Ship 41", then flying as a cargo aircraft, registered N29PR for a local Puerto Rican airline, Air Puerto Rico. In 1993, Delta bought the aircraft from Air Puerto Rico and it was flown to Atlanta, where it underwent a five-year restoration and is now on display at the Delta Flight Museum.[2]

References

edit
  1. "PastPerfect". deltamuseum.catalogaccess.com. Retrieved December 12, 2024.
  2. 1 2 "Delta Douglas DC-3 Ship 41". DeltaMuseum.org. Delta Flight Museum. Retrieved June 1, 2023.
  3. "Pioneering DC-3 celebrates 75th anniversary - Delta News Hub". News.Delta.com. Archived from the original on March 16, 2017. Retrieved March 16, 2017.
  4. "Northwest Airlines". DeltaMuseum.org. Archived from the original on November 24, 2021. Retrieved October 2, 2019.
edit