Born: 03/24/1869
Died: 11/29/1954
Inducted: 10/24/1992
Alfred W. Lawson was born in London, England and
three weeks later his family emigrated to Ontario, Canada. In 1872
another move to the outskirts of Detroit, Michigan and American
citizenships.
Lawson observed the flight of a dirigible in 1907.
He later reported, "That was the spark that set me afire, and
forever afterward I was unable to extinguish the aeronautical blaze
that burned within me."
In 1908, after a career in baseball, Lawson
settled in Philadelphia where he launched a popular aviation
magazine entitled Fly. Two years later Lawson moved to New York City
and started a second aviation magazine called Aircraft. The 1912
edition of Webster's dictionary included a "Glossary of
Aviation Terms" that had been edited by Lawson.
In the October 1916 issue of Aircraft, Lawson
provided his view of aviation's future. This is the first of several
predictions he made: "Prior to the year 1970 air traffic will
be practiced to such an extent that traffic rules of the air will
have to be enforced, certain routes being charted altitudinally, the
larger, long-distance ships being given the right of way at the
higher altitudes."
Lawson began to seek support for establishing an
aircraft factory during March, 1917. Businessmen of Green Bay,
Wisconsin offered to invest and the Lawson Aircraft Corporation was
established to build training planes for the Army.
The company's first prototype, the Lawson Military
Trainer One or MT-1 first flew on September 10, 1917. Lawson was at
the controls for that first flight which lasted about 15 minutes.
Lawson reportedly exclaimed, "Boys, any old woman that don't
drink, smoke or chew tobacco ought to be able to fly the MT One! That
is how safe we have made her."
Lawson spent two weeks in January, 1918 trying to
sell the aircraft design to the military and came home with nothing
but a request. Military officials wanted an improved model with
higher performance capabilities.
Lawson's team went to work designing enhancements
to the MT-1 creating a new aircraft designation, the MT-2. Other
design work was also being accomplished on a reconnaissance aircraft
as well as a steel armored craft called the "Lawson
Battler".
The Military Trainer Two (MT-2) flew for the first
time on May 1, 1918. The top airspeed was, at 90 MPH, a full 12 MPH
faster than the MT-1. Other design enhancements had been made to
meet the military requirements. A purchase agreement for the MT-2
was signed by the Army but was withdrawn after the armistice.
The Lawson Aircraft Company ceased operations in
Green Bay, Wisconsin mid-February, 1919. Lawson however had plans
for large transport aircraft, plans that required more capital.
Lawson traveled south to Milwaukee, Wisconsin where he found
support for those ideas.
The Lawson Airplane Company opened its facilities
on South Water Street in Milwaukee during April, 1919. The company
was formed to build aircraft for the Lawson Transportation Company.
The Lawson C-2, which he called an airliner, was completed in
August, 1919.
The following week it left on a trip to New York
City and Washington, D.C. with stops along the way. Large crowds
marveled at this latest step in aviation progress.
In
1920, based on the success of his first airliner, a larger design
was built. Completed in 1921, an attempt to takeoff resulted in a
crash and the end of the company. In 1928 Lawson made another
attempt to enter the airline industry with a 100 passenger design
which was never completed. In the history of aviation, Lawson's work
stands out as a significant contribution to the founding of the
aviation industry.
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Alfred W Lawson
(Photo courtesy George Hardie)

Lawson soloed in a Bleriot in 1913
(WAHF photo)

Lawson Airplane Company,
Milwaukee, WI 1919
(Photo courtesy George Hardie)

Lawson Airliner, 1919
(Photo courtesy George Hardie)

Lawson Airliner - interior
(Photo courtesy George Hardie)

Lawson Airplane Company,
Milwaukee, WI 2004
(WAHF photo by Rose Dorcey)
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