Pan American World Airways DC-7B exterior in flight over Buenos Aires
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1950-1960
Pan American World Airways Boeing 707 jetliner
Written on verso: "Pan American World Airways' fleet of Boeing 707 jetliners, heralded the modern jet age for commercial travel. The inaugural flight was on Oct. 26, 1958, New York to Paris. Pan Am was Boeing's largest 707 customer. Pan Ams Boeing 707 represented the world's first regular scheduled jet service that continued uninterrupted."
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Pan American World Airways China Clipper, Martin M-130, landing on water in a spiral
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1930-1940
Mailbags arranged in front of a Pan American Airways Sikorsky S-38
Written on front: "2384 pounds of U.S. mail carried by Pan American Airways, Inc. airliner on a single trip from Miami to Havana. In the 21 months to August 1st, 1929 the system carried a total of 631,376 pounds of U.S. mail. In that time 1,856,598 miles were flown, with an operating efficiency ratio of 99.8 percent."
1929
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1920-1930
Pan American World Airways "A Very Small World Indeed" ad sketch, orginal sketch by Paolo Garretto
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1960-1970
Pan American World Airways' first China Clipper, Martin M-130 in service in 1935, and forty-five years later, its second China Clipper, Boeing 747SP
Written on front: "Majestically winging its way west, Pan American World Airways' first China Clipper, the Martin M-130 flying boat, launches pioneer transpacific service in 1935. Forty-five years later, history is repeating itself. Pan Am's second China Clipper, the long-range Boeing 747SP, is now linking the U.S. and China for the first time since 1949."
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Early Pan American World Airways Western Division route map with postal rates per pound of mail for various regions written in by George Rihl
1929
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1920-1939
Africa Orient Division of Pan American World Airways, crew of 5,000th Atlantic crossing
Pan Am caption: "PAA CREW THAT FLEW TRANSPORT ON FIVE THOUSANDTH CROSSING OF ATLANTIC: Miami, Fla. - Here's the crew that flew a giant transport from Casablanca to Miami to chalk up the 5,000th Atlantic crossing by the Africa-Orient Division of the Pan American World Airways for the Air Transport Command. Reading up from the bottom, they are: Capt. R. A. Holman, pilot, of Lodi, Calif.; co-pilot Kenneth G. Brosdal, of Duluth, Minn.; Robert C. Simmons, navigator, Miami Beach, Fla.; John A. Grimshaw, flight engineer, Glenalden, Pa.; and A. E. Deese, radio operator, Miami, Fla."
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1940-1950
Pan American - Africa, Ltd map of trans-African serial lifeline
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1940-1950
Pan American World Airways Boeing 314 cross section
Pan American Airways System Photographic Dept, N.Y.
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1930-1940