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De Havilland

De Havilland Aircraft Company Limited
Industry Aerospace
Fate Incorporated into Hawker Siddeley
Founded 1920
Defunct 1964
Headquarters Hatfield, Hertfordshire, England
Key people
Geoffrey de Havilland, founder and aircraft designer
Products Civil and military aircraft, aero-engines, guided weapons
Parent Hawker Siddeley (from 1959)
Subsidiaries de Havilland Canada (1928)
de Havilland Australia (1927)
Airspeed Ltd. (1940–1951)
De Havilland Propellers (1935–1961)
de Havilland Engine Company (1944–1961)

De Havilland Aircraft Company Limited /dəˈhævlənd/ was a British aviation manufacturer established in late 1920 by Geoffrey de Havilland at Stag Lane Aerodrome Edgware on the outskirts of north London. Operations were later moved to Hatfield in Hertfordshire.

Known for its innovation, de Havilland were responsible for a number of important aircraft, including the Moth biplane which revolutionised general aviation in the 1920s, the 1930s Fox Moth, the first commercial transport able to operate without government subsidy, the wooden World War II Mosquito light bomber, and the passenger jet service pioneering Comet.

The De Havilland company became a member of the Hawker Siddeley group in 1960, but lost its separate identity in 1963. Today it is part of BAE Systems plc, the British aerospace and defence business.

In January 1920 Geoffrey de Havilland was working for Airco as technical director and chief designer. BSA bought Airco on 20 January 1920 from George Holt Thomas on the say-so of one BSA director, Percy Martin, having done inadequate due diligence. Within days BSA discovered Airco's true circumstances and shut it down. The resulting losses were so great BSA was unable to pay a dividend for the next four years.


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