Civil Aviation
Modern civil aviation has its roots in the 1930s, when the postal service of the British Empire made it necessary to build aircraft capable of reducing delivery times compared to sea or land. More or less in the same period, the United States with Boeing and Pan Am created the Pacific routes, towards Hong Kong and the Far East and in Australia QANTAS (Queensland and Northern Territories Aerial Services) followed the same way.
The generations of large flying boats built by Short brothers and Boeing allowed the development of passenger service, cargo, logistics and navigation, creating the basis for the birth of modern commercial aviation, when the expanses of water gave way to land runways and piston engines were replaced by jets.
The pages of this section illustrate the main protagonists of this period of aviation through oil paintings and pencil drawings.