Photographic Print

Stewart Collection ➔ Photographic Print

Archival Item


2008.5.102 a-b
Two copies of a black and white of Yukon Airways & Exploration Company Ltd. staff John Patterson, Clyde Wann and Gordon Stewart standing in front of a plane, the Queen of the Yukon II (CF-AHD). The plane is on pontoons next to water. There are mountains in the background.
The back of the photos have "972" stamped on it in blue ink. Photographs have a 0.5 cm white border around them.
Gordon Stewart joined Yukon Airways & Exploration Company Ltd. in the summer of 1929 when the company purchased a new Ryan B5, to be the Queen of the Yukon II. The plane was picked up in St. Louis, Missouri by pilot John Patterson and flown to Seattle, Washington. It was in Seattle that Gordon Stewart began his tenure with Yukon Airways. Pontoons were fitted on the plane at Renton airport and they began their barnstorming trip up the west coast of B.C. on their way to the Yukon.

Barnstorming was often a way for pilots and airlines to finance their trips or company. The pilot would fly over a small rural town and attract the attention of the local inhabitants. The pilot would then land at a local farm (hence the name "barnstorming") and negotiate with the farmer for the use of one of his fields as a temporary runway from which to stage an air show and offer airplane rides to customers. After obtaining a base of operation, the pilot would fly back over the town, or "buzz" the village, and drop handbills offering airplane rides for a small fee, usually from one to five dollars. Crowds would then follow the airplane to the field and purchase tickets for joy rides. The locals, most of whom had never seen an airplane up close, were thrilled with the experience. For many rural towns, the appearance of a barnstormer or an aerial troop on the horizon was akin to declaring a national holiday; almost everything in the town would shut down at the spur of the moment so that people could purchase plane rides and watch the show. From Wikipedia