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Short S.23 Empire

Empire
Short Empire G-AFBL Cooee - Rod El Faray - Cairo.jpg
The BOAC Short 'C' Class flying boat G-AFBL Cooee, at Rod El Farag, Egypt, c. 1946
Role Flying boat mail and passenger carrier
Manufacturer Short Brothers
Designer Arthur Gouge
First flight 3 July 1936
Introduction Delivered 22 October 1936,
First revenue flight 6 February 1937
Retired 1946–47
Status Retired
Primary users Imperial Airways/BOAC
Qantas Empire Airways
Royal Australian Air Force
Royal Air Force
Produced 1936–1940
Number built 42
Unit cost
£ 48,830
Variants Short Mayo Composite
External video
Compilation of statistics and footage on the Short Empire flying boats
Period amateur video of an Empire in Sumba, Indonesia, in 1937
British Pathé newsreel of a Empire Flying Boat flying the first experimental flight from Sydney to Southampton

The Short Empire was a medium-range four-engined monoplane flying boat, designed and developed by Short Brothers during the 1930s to meet the requirements of the growing commercial airline sector, with a particular emphasis upon its usefulness upon the then-core routes that served the United Kingdom. It was developed and manufactured in parallel with the Short Sunderland maritime patrol bomber, which went on to serve in the Second World War; a further derivative that was later developed was the piggy-back Short Mayo Composite.

The development of the Short Empire had been heavily influenced by its primary customer, Imperial Airways, who had originally developed the requirements to which it was initially ordered and designed from. Imperial Airways, and its successor, the British Overseas Airways Corporation (BOAC), along with Qantas and TEAL, operated the type in commercial service. Upon entering service, the Empire routinely flew between the British mainland and Australia and the various British colonies in Africa and Asia, typically carrying a combination of passenger and mail cargoes; the Empires were also used on various other routes, such as on the service between Bermuda and New York City.

The Empire also saw military service during the Second World War. The Royal Air Force (RAF), Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF), Royal New Zealand Air Force (RNZAF), and briefly the Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF) used the type to conduct various military operations, particularly as an airborne platform for anti-submarine patrols and for general transport duties.


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