Hunting Aircraft

British aircraft manufacturer

Hunting Aircraft
IndustryAerospace
Founded1933 (as Percival Aircraft Co.)
Defunct1960
FateMerged to form British Aircraft Corporation
HeadquartersLuton, Bedfordshire, UK

Hunting Aircraft was a British aircraft manufacturer that produced light training aircraft and the initial design that would evolve into the BAC 1-11 jet airliner. Founded as Percival Aircraft Company in 1933, the company later moved to Luton, UK. It was eventually taken over by the British Aircraft Corporation (BAC) in 1960.

History

Jet Provost T.1 prototype wearing the titles of Hunting Percival Aircraft in 1955

The company was formed as Percival Aircraft Co. in Gravesend in 1933 by Edgar Percival with Lt. Cdr E.B.W. Leak to produce his own designs. The first aircraft was the Percival Gull - the prototype was built for Percival by the British Aircraft Company and production aircraft by Parnall Aircraft.

The company moved to Gravesend Airport in Kent, where it could build the Gull itself[1]

Restructured in 1936, it became Percival Aircraft Ltd, and moved to Luton Airport.

The company became part of the Hunting Group in 1944. Percival, who had resigned from the board to serve in the Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve during the war sold his remaining interest in the company at that point.

From 1947 some internal components of Britain's Blue Danube atomic bomb were designed and manufactured by Percival Aircraft, in collaboration with the High Explosive Research project at Fort Halstead, Kent.[2]

It changed its name to Hunting Percival Aircraft in 1954 and then to Hunting Aircraft in 1957.[3]

In 1960 the company was taken over by the British Aircraft Corporation (BAC), itself formed earlier that same year through the merger of the Bristol Aeroplane Company, English Electric and Vickers-Armstrongs.[4] BAC later became part of British Aerospace, now BAE Systems.

Aircraft

Percival Aircraft

The first Percival type to be allocated a "P" number was the P.40 Prentice. Previous designs (including unflown designs) were unofficially allocated such a number by the Percival Sales Manager in 1944 when Percival was acquired by the Hunting Group. However, this was "purely a cosmetic exercise" and such numbers have no actual basis in history.[5][page needed]

Hunting Aircraft

See also

References

  1. ^ Grey 1972, pp. 64c–65c.
  2. ^ Cocroft, Wane. "Fort Halstead, Dunton Green Sevenoaks, Kent: A brief assessment of the role of Fort Halstead in Britain's early rocket programmes and the atomic bomb project". English Heritage. p. 15. Retrieved 7 February 2022.
  3. ^ "Hunting Percival name change". Flight. 13 December 1957. p. 912. Archived from the original on 20 April 2016. Retrieved 18 August 2011.
  4. ^ Gunson, W.; World Encyclopaedia of Aircraft Manufacturers, 2nd Edition, Sutton (2005).
  5. ^ Silvester, John. Percival and Hunting Aircraft. Leicester: Midland Counties Publications 1987. ISBN 0-9513386-0-9
  6. ^ "Hunting Percival". Flight. 3 September 1954. p. 337. Archived from the original on 5 March 2016.
  • Grey, C.G. Jane's All the World's Aircraft 1938. London: David & Charles, 1972, ISBN 0-7153-5734-4.


  • v
  • t
  • e
Percival, Hunting Percival and Hunting aircraft
Percival Aircraft (1933-1954)Hunting Percival aircraft (1954-1957)Hunting aircraft (1957-1959)Designers
  • v
  • t
  • e
Companies
Current
Defunct
Government and
regulatory bodies
Related topics
Category
  • v
  • t
  • e
Timeline of British aerospace companies since 1955
1950s 1960s 1970s 1980s 1990s 2000s
5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4
Short Brothers & Harland Limited Short Brothers Limited Short Brothers plc[a]
Handley Page
FG Miles Beagle Aircraft[b]
Auster
Scottish Aviation[c] British Aerospace (BAe) BAE Systems
Blackburn Hawker Siddeley Aviation
Hawker Siddeley Dynamics
Avro
de Havilland
Folland
Hawker Siddeley[d]
Vickers-Armstrongs British Aircraft Corporation (BAC)[e]
English Electric[f]
Bristol
Hunting
The General Electric Company (GEC) The Marconi Company GEC-Marconi/Marconi Electronic Systems
The English Electric Company[g] Marconi plc
  1. ^ Part of Bombardier Inc.; since 2019 part of Spirit AeroSystems
  2. ^ Government owned from 1966 to liquidation
  3. ^ Purchased rights for various Beagle and Handley-Page designs from the liquidator.
  4. ^ Comprising Hawker Aircraft, Gloster Aircraft Company and Armstrong Whitworth Aircraft.
  5. ^ BAC comprised the aviation interests of the companies that formed it, and wholly owned Hunting Aircraft.
  6. ^ English Electric Aircraft, a subsidiary of the English Electric Company.
  7. ^ GEC purchased EE and with it The Marconi Company and EE's shareholding in BAC, through its subsidiary EE Aircraft.