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history of KLM
The
letters most commonly associated with the history of Dutch aviation are “K.L.M.,”
which stand for Koninklijke Luchtvaart Maatschappij voor Nederland an
Kolonien (“Royal Dutch Airlines” in English). By the end of the 20th
century, KLM had become one of world's largest airlines in terms of routes
served. KLM also has the distinction of being the world's oldest airline
that is still operating, as well as the longest continually operating
airline.
Like in most major European countries, commercial aviation in the
Netherlands had its beginnings in the immediate aftermath of World War I.
A group of investors and bankers led by 30-year old Albert Plesman formed
KLM on October 7, 1919. The airline began its first service on May 17,
1920, with an Amsterdam-London service flying an old De Havilland DH-16
aircraft chartered from the British company Air Transport and Travel
(AT&T). By September, KLM had expanded its offerings by serving Copenhagen
in Denmark and Hamburg in Germany. In its early days, KLM used Dutch-made
planes such as the four-seater Fokker F.2 and the five-passenger Fokker
F.3 for its flights. By the early 1920s, KLM slowly expanded its routes
via a series of cooperative agreements with other airlines. For example,
KLM signed an agreement with the German company Deutscher Aero Lloyd to
provide services to Hamburg.

In July 1924, KLM began using the new Fokker F.7 aircraft, which could
carry seven passengers in reasonable comfort
KLM
was widely known in Europe as a carrier of impeccable service. In July
1924, the airline began using the new Fokker F.7 aircraft, able to carry
seven passengers in relatively comfortable conditions. KLM had a
reputation for setting the standards of good service, both with the
timeliness of their flights and with interior accommodations for
passengers. Under the leadership of the charismatic and often
authoritarian Plesman, for the first three decades of its operations, KLM
maintained a forward-looking equipment policy, improving its fleet year by
year with larger, faster, and more efficient aircraft. KLM also enjoyed an
advantage over other European countries since the Dutch company Fokker
produced some of the most popular passenger airplanes of the 1920s, such
as the Fokker F.7a/3m and F.7b/3m.
Like most European airlines, KLM also suffered through hard times in the
late 1920s. In fact, the company would have ended up bankrupt had it not
been for a government bailout in 1927 that ensured a strong state role in
future operations of the airline.

The Fokker F.20, used in the early 1930s, had a top speed of about 200
kilometres per hour
During his career, Plesman believed that KLM should have the fastest
available aircraft. The latest Fokker models of the early 1930s, such as
the Fokker F.20 and F.36, were limited by top speeds of about 124 miles
per hour (200 kilometers per hour). Plesman, looking for something faster,
contracted with the U.S. Douglas company for 14 DC-2s, thus opening
Douglas' entry into the European aviation market. When KLM began operating
the Douglas DC-3 in 1937, the airline's services extended to several
cities in Great Britain, France, Austria, Hungary, and the countries of
Scandinavia. In 1930, KLM was carrying about 18,000 passengers per year;
by 1939, it was serving more than 160,000 passengers, fourth only to the
German DLH (later Lufthansa), the Soviet Aeroflot, and Britain's Imperial
Airways.

The Fokker F.36 was a little too slow for Albert Plesman, who ran KLM
during its earlier years
One
of the most noteworthy episodes in KLM's history was the battle with
Imperial Airways to dominate the far reaches of the Dutch and British
colonial empires in the mid-1930s. The competition began a decade earlier
when both companies explored possible routes into Asia. The British were
initially stalled in their goals of further expansion because Imperial
Airways already had commitments to serve a large number of points across
Asia—all of which included passenger, mail, and freight services and its
resources were stretched to the limit. As a result, the airline could not
offer the kind of reliable and high quality service that KLM could provide
to a few key locations in Asia. KLM focused all its resources on a few
important routes, especially those to the Dutch East Indies. Perhaps the
most famous day in the early history of KLM was October 1, 1931, when the
airline began regular passenger service between Amsterdam and Batavia (now
known as Jakarta in Indonesia) using Fokker F.12 aircraft fitted with four
luxury seats. The trip lasted 10 entire days, including 81 hours of flying
time. It was the longest regularly scheduled flight offered by any airline
in the world.

KLM contracted with Douglas Aircraft to purchase 14 DC-2s to replace its
slower Fokker airplanes
KLM's business interests were helped by victories in several famous air
races of the period. For example, in 1935, KLM won the MacRobertson
England-Australia Air Race, using a Douglas DC-2 monoplane. The win
enabled KLM to make significant gains in opening and maintaining air
routes between Great Britain and Australia. By June 1938, KLM was offering
an eight-day service from Amsterdam to Sydney, Australia in parallel with
regular international flights from Europe to Egypt, India, the Caribbean,
and South America. For many business travellers, KLM was the most
convenient way to travel to the farthest reaches of the planet. Almost all
the routes were served by Douglas DC-2, DC-3, and DC-5 aircraft. Plesman
switched completely to Douglas after he had a falling out with the Fokker
company.
In
October 1928, the Dutch established a company known as the Royal Dutch
Indies Airlines (known by the abbreviation KNILM) with strong connections
to KLM for passenger service to east Asia and Australia. KNILM faced stiff
opposition from Britain's Imperial Airways and through the next decade,
the two Dutch airlines fought hard with Imperial Airways to dominate the
air routes into Asia. The British, with their huge empire, were able to
block the Dutch in key routes by denying them the passage of “overflight”
or by cooperative agreements with other national airlines to prevent KLM
from taking business away from Imperial Airways.

KLM began operating the DC-3 in 1937
The
advent of World War II changed the fortunes of the Dutch airline, as it
did almost every other major airline in the world. KLM stopped all its
European flights in August 1939 except to Scandinavia, Belgium, and
London. Despite defiant attempts to continue regularly scheduled service
after the war began, KLM had to close all its European operations in May
1940 when the Nazis invaded and occupied the Netherlands. Amazingly, the
company continued to provide services in eastern Asia even though it no
longer had a “home” country. For a while, KLM operated out of New York.
Longtime KLM president Plesman quickly resumed regular operations as the
war neared its end. In April 1945, he received a loan of 14 Douglas C-54
four-engine transports (the military version of the DC-4) from the U.S.
government. Using these planes, KLM once again began service from
Amsterdam to Jakarta, inaugurating a new post-war era for one of the
greatest airlines in European aviation history.
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