Plymouth May Become Pick-Up Point for Air Mail Town Is Included on Proposed New Feeder Line from Norfolk To Greensboro: Detail of Plan -o Is Not Necessary For Plane to Land To Pick Up Mail -O Two Routes Now in Daily Operation in Middle Atlantic States -o-— Plymouth would be included as one of the pick-up points on a new air mail route under a tentative plan for the establishment of several pick-up feeder lines in the Norfolk area, simi lar to those now operating in Penn sylvania. West Virginia. Ohio and Delaware. The plan has been developed by Richard C. du Point, of Wilmington. Del., in connection with a program for tire creation of a national air feed er system which he recently submit ted to the Post Office Department and the Civil Aeronautics Society. The proposal that Plymouth be in cluded as one of the pick-up points is now being studied by Postmaster George W. Hardison here, and it is likely that his recommendation will largely determine whether or not the service is to be established here. Pick-up points on the proposed Greensboro to Norfolk, Va., route would be as follows, under the plan submitted: Burlington, Durham. Henderson, Rocky Mount, Tarboro Wilson. Greenville. Washington. Bel liaven. Plymouth, Edenton, Eliza beth City and Suffolk. du Pont is president of All Ameri can Aviation, Inc., the company that operates the present air pick-up routes over which the merit of the unique method of collecting and de livering mail in flight lias been dem onstrated in scheduled operations. He also is president of the Soaring So ciety of America and formerly held the world's distance and altitude re cords for sailplanes. Establishment of a national feeder system to meet the growing demand throughout the country for direct air service will be the next big step in commercial aviation, du Pont said, adding: “Beyond the orbit of the present airways in what might be called the I r ! v. ! HOW AIR MAIL COULD EE HANDLED HERE This picture snows an airplane making a pick-up and delivery in front of the U. S. Capitol in a demonstration of new service at the recent national convention of postmasters in Washington, D. C. Two routes using this system are now in daily operation in 58 cities in Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Ohio and Delaware. twilight zone of our air transporta tion system, for thousands of impor tant and progressive cities which are anxiously seeking direct air service and are entitled to it. Tire next great expansion of commercial aviation lies beyond this frontier. "The development of an adequate air feeder system to tap this rich ter 1 ritoi-y does not simply mean the cre ation of new air lines that will serve only the more populous centers. It means a conprehensive system where by every community in the country regardless of size, geography, proxi mity to one another or airport facili ties, may have the opportunity of being on an airway. This can now be r AREA TO BE SERVED BY AIR PICK-UP FEEDER LINES GREENSBORO, N.C. AREA PROPOSED AIR PICK UP FEEDER LINES The above map shows the proposed air-mail pick-up points on the feeder line now under consideration between Norfolk, Va.. and Greensboro, N. C. Proponents of the plan believe it will serve to bring the advan tages of rapid air-mail service home to the thousands of people who live in smaller towns not served by the established air-mail routes. As will be seen on this map. Plymouth is one of the proposed pick-up points being considered. I \ effectively accomplished through the I air pick-up, which has been aptly | described as the ‘Airway to Every • where.' “Everyone, regardless of where they live or whether they use the airmail, is making a contribution to its sup port and now that a practical and economical means of providing this service is available depriving them of its full advantage is manifestly un fair.'’ The du Pont air feeder program contemplates the establishment of air pick-up lines around the country's principal air terminals through which they would be integrated with the national air transportation system. Citing the benefits of such a sys tem,he said: “Over a feeder network of this kind that was properly coordinated with the trunk lines, mail and ex press could move to and from any point in the United States in less than 24 hours. Such a system pro viding such a service would stimulate the use of the airmail to such a tre mendous extent that there is little doubt that it would be sulf-sustain ing within a short time." Since the program w-as submitted to the government, inquiries have been received from communities throughout the country as to how they would fit into such a system, and requesting information on the es tablishment of air pick-up lines in their localities, with the result that an effort has been made to demon strate how the system would func tion by mapping out sample feeder lines around different air terminals, and this area was among those se lected for this purpose. "This work has been undertaken," du Pont explained, "simply to show how the prospective cities and towns in these areas could be connected through the Air Pick-up national ail transportation system giving them the advantages that are now reserv ed chiefly to larger communities. “The routes that have been laid out should not be considered as af fording the best plan for serving the communities on it, or that the ser vice should be limited to these com munities. "In setting up routes for permanent operations a number of factors must be considered to ensure maximum service to each community such as the normal flow of business between ' communities on the route and to nearby metropolitan cities, local sen timent for direct air service and whe- : ther or not the prospective patronage would justify the serivce economical ly. "It is realized that many commun j ities have been selected for these pro jected routes which do not want air service or have no need for it be cause present transportation facili ties may be adequate Undoubtedly, there have been omitted many in termediate communities which want j a service and have a genuine need for ijt These details can be worked out I properly only through a careful sur vey of local needs and conditions. The point is that the air pick-up sys ; tern is so flexible that is can easily be adapted to meet the air transporta tion requirements of any area." ciu Pont said that his company is not planning to establish air-pick-up routes in this area. Its policy he stated .is to encourage their develop ment through existing air lines or through local enterprise in the area where the service is desired. Discussing the air feeder problem, du Pont said: Air transportation in this coun try has been developed almost exclus ively as a utility for our large metro politan centers. This program has given us the finest planes and the best air transport system in the world, and the tremendous and constantly increasing traffic is a vindication of Its economic soundness. A notorious weakness, however base been its almost complete neglect of the development of supplemental or feeder lines which are an essential adjunct of an efficient transporta tion system. "From the standpoint of serving the public, these facts alone empha size the deficiency of our air trans portation system. "If this effort’is delayed, discour agement will prevail among these ci ties, their airport investments will be lost, the runways will go back to weeds, and the prestige will suffer imeasurably.” The important relationship of the feeder program to the Government pilot training program, was empha sized by du Point. 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