Aviron flying school
Aviron Aviation Company was established in April, 1936 in Mandatory Palestine (now Israel). The company was intended to train pilots and then operate a mainly internal airline, which would serve the security needs of the Yishuv, the Jewish community in Palestine.[1][2]
Name
Aviron is the Modern Hebrew word for airplane.
History
The Aviron airline company was established in 1936 by Dov Hoz and Yitzhak Ben Ya'akov[1] at the initiative of the Histadrut trade union association and the Jewish Agency.[2] At its beginnings, the Aviron flight school was based in three kibbutzim in the northern Jordan Valley, with the flight school in the attic of the cowshed at Degania Alef, an improvised airstrip at Afikim, and a hangar at Ashdot Ya'akov.[2] Yitzhak Ben Ya'akov was one of the first members of Degania.
Two years previously, in 1934, Zionist officials who dealt with Jewish immigration from Poland obtained from David Ben-Gurion, who acted on behalf of the Jewish Agency, the money for buying a de Havilland Tiger Moth.[3] The airplane arrived in October that year, flown by a British instructor-pilot.[3]
Gallery
- 1947 in the British Mandate of Palestine
See also
- Palavir, the air branch of the Palmach
- Sherut Avir, the air branch of the Haganah, which took over Aviron's materiel in 1947-48
- Israeli Air Force
References
- The Central Zionist Archives, Flights & Aviation, retrieved 14 December, 2017
- Degania Alef website, Founding Figures: Yitzchak Ben-Yaakov , retrieved 14 December, 2017
- http://www.boeliem.com/content/1985/324.html