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                   "Honeymoon Joe"  
                  Joe Lewis was born in September 1897 and died September
                    21, 1938 when he flew too low at an airshow during the performance
                    of an outside loop.  His general biography is presented,
                    followed by a collection of 49 images from the Golden Age
                    of Aviation. These images, while related to the Davis-Monthan
                    Register only because they belonged to Pilot Lewis, provide
                    insight into the people and machines of the era.  
                  He
                    was typical of the successful aviation entrepreneurs of the
                    Golden Age.   He
                    translated his passion for flying into the business of aviation,
                    working at all the variations of the trade, through good
                    economic times and bad. Lewis owned a Curtiss JN4D that landed at Tucson, although not piloted by him. Please direct your browser to 2694. 
                  
                    
                      Joe Lewis, Date Unknown                      
                    
                    
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                  Joe Lewis landed at Tucson once on March 19, 1928 flying
                    OX-5 Travel Air NC2927.  He carried one passenger, Don
                    Lay.  They were westbound from Lordsburg, NM to Long
                    Beach, CA.  According to the Register they were in a
                    hurry, as they landed at 10:20AM and departed at 10:50, barely
                  enough time to gas up and use the facilities. 
                  His Travel Air landed twice at Tucson, however.  The
                    second time it was flown by Eloise Burns, one of 41 female
                    pilots to sign the Register.  She landed on October
                    25, 1929 westbound from El Paso, TX to Los Angeles.  She
                    carried one unidentified passenger.  They remained overnight,
                    departing the next day at 8:30AM. 
                  I have only  two images of NC2927 (see the other further
                    below).  It
                    is tempting to identify the woman standing in front of it
                    as Ms. Burns, but according to Mr. Back there was no caption
                    on the photograph.  Site contributor John Underwood states the following possibility, "Joe had a sister by the  name of Bernadine Lewis King who decided to take up flying with her husband, a  wealthy rancher, c. 1932.    They soon had an Eaglerock and then  a Stinson.   I forget who taught them, but it wasn't Joe.    Later,  Joe taught her aerobatics in a Fleet and she was very good.... until she  too got too close to the ground, probably flying inverted, which was her  specialty.   That was after Joe was killed, possibly in 1940 or  '41." From photographs he has seen, Mr. Underwood hypothesizes that the woman  might be Lewis' sister.  If anyone recognizes the pilot,
                    please let me KNOW. 
                  
                    
                      NC2927 & Eloise Burns (?) ca. 1929
                    
                    
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                  Joe Lewis was an intrepid entrepreneur who barnstormed,
                    performed aerobatics at air shows, did movie work and was
                    President of Lewis Air Service at Union Air Terminal, Burbank,
                    CA.  At its peak, his Air Service employed three pilots,
                    six airplanes, two mechanics and a helper. According to his
                    nephew, Mr. Lewis had several women working as pilots for
                    him off and on. He was ahead of the social curve at a time
                    when sexism in aviation was rampant.  
                  He was known on the air show circuit for flying upside down
                    very low to the ground (ten feet), and very fast (150MPH).  His
                    skills were characterized in a contemporary newspaper (Willows,
                    CA) account as, “…more like a great bird soaring
                    over head than like a piece of machinery with a man at its
                    wheel….” 
                  Lewis Air Service  performed charter and air taxi
                    service to points throughout the U.S.  He specialized
                    in carrying eloping couples to Las Vegas and Yuma for quickie
                    weddings.  His so-called “Planelopement” charters
                    were well-subscribed.  He is cited as follows in an
                    article in Popular
                    Aviation, October, 1937:  
                  
                    
                      “The Lewis Air Service – Joe
                          Lewis and two youthful but highly trained transport
                          pilots in his employ – chalks up thousands of
                          miles of cross-country flying each year in the active
                          charter business Lewis directs. 
                        “A stroll along the apron at the Union Air Terminal
                          at any hour of the day or night is liable to bring
                          you alongside a Lewis plane warming up for a flight
                          to far places. 
                        “A goodly portion of his traffic is of a type
                          that has brought the short, stocky Lewis more than
                          a little good-natured ribbing from his fellow airmen.  They
                          call him ‘Cupid’  and ;Love’s Little
                          Messenger’ and ‘Honeymoon Joe’ and
                          accuse him jokingly of getting ‘rates’ from
                          scores of Nevada and Arizona ministers and marrying
                          justices. 
                        “You’ve guessed it – elopers have
                          found Lewis and his pilots always ready for those aerial
                          jaunts to nearby Gretna Greens.  Mary Astor and
                          Manuel del Campo; James Ellison and Gertrude Durkin’ Harry
                          Joe Brown and Sally Eilers; Phillip Karlstein and Dixie
                          Martin; Manly Danforth and Evelyn Hand, and Howard
                          Lang and Vicki Astlett are a few of the prominent motion
                          picture couples that flew to Yuma with Joe Lewis at
                      the airplane controls.”  | 
                     
                   
                  On January 18, 1937, upon return to California after her
                    service, a local newspaper described Ms. Astor, “Dressed
                    in a black dress and shoes, a mink fur coat, and wearing
                    a blue ribbon on her auburn hair, [she] stepped from Lewis’  ship
                    and asked immediately for a cigarette.”   She
                    then asked a woman reporter to lend her some lipstick.  Image,
                    below, is from that news article, presumably after she borrowed
                    the lipstick, but still wearing the mink.. 
                  
                    
                      Joe Lewis & Mary Astor 
                    
                    
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                  Another of Lewis Air Service's satisfied customers: the
                    Danforths.. 
                  
                    
                      Manly Danforth and Evelyn Hand, Date Unknown                    
                    
                    
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                  In the same Popular Aviation article cited above,
                    Lewis provides the following table of cost comparisons between
                  airline and charter flights from Los Angeles to various cities. 
                  
                    
                      Airline vs. Charter Rates                      
                    
                    
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                  Lewis Air Service also gave flight instruction and local
                    rides.  George O’Brien and Cecelia Parker, movie
                    stars, came to the Lewis Air Service when they wanted background
                    for a series of aviation publicity pictures.  They became
                    interested in the Lewis Ryan and Lewis made them regular
                    customers by giving them a ride. Sadly, this airplane, a Ryan ST-A, was the airplane in which Lewis was killed at Modesto, CA on September
                    21, 1938. 
                  
                    
                      George O'Brien, Cecelia Parker, Joe Lewis, Date Unknown                      
                    
                    
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                  One of his airplanes, a Lockheed Vega, was modified as an
                    air ambulance, with bed, medical supplies and room for a
                    patient, doctor and nurse as well as the pilot.  With
                    a range of 900 miles it was advertised as being able to transport
                    patients just about anywhere in the country. 
                  ---o0o--- 
                  The 49 images below also come to us from Mr.
                    Back. The airplanes and people, except for Pilot Lewis, have
                    no known connection with the Davis-Monthan Airfield Register.
                    However, we include them because the airplanes either belonged
                    to Mr. Lewis or the Lewis Flying Service (below, et seq.),
                    or we hope someone in global Web land will be able to identify
                    some of the people and let us KNOW who
                    they are. There are no dates on the images. 
                  Below, eleven  images of Ryan 6584
                    with and without people standing by. It is not cited in the Register. The Ryan is in Lewis
                    Flying Service livery and named "Spirit of St. Louis".
                    Like many Ryan aircraft
                    built after the "Spirit", it was dubbed the "sister ship"
                    of Lindbergh's airplane.  
                  
                    
                      Ryan 6584                      
                    
                    
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                  The location of this image,
                    identified by the storage tank in the background, is  Long
                    Beach, CA. The
                    Rehbock hangar was owned at one time by Register pilot Paul T. Adams?  
                  
                    
                      Ryan 6584                      
                    
                    
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                      Ryan 6584                      
                    
                    
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                      Ryan 6584                      
                    
                    
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                    Ryan 6584 
                    
                     
                    
                    
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                      Ryan 6584                      
                    
                    
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                      Ryan 6584                      
                    
                    
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                      Ryan 6584                      
                    
                    
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                      Ryan 6584                      
                    
                    
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                    Ryan 6584 
                    
                    
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                  Image, below, shows the same women as the image above.  
                  
                    
                      Ryan 6584                      
                    
                    
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                  Below, another image of NC2927 with Eloise Burns (?), date
                  unknown. 
                  
                    
                      NC2927                      
                    
                    
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                      Lewis 03                      
                    
                    
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                  Below, identified by a site visitor, is an Arrow "Sport" powered
                  by a 5 cyl. LeBlond.  
                  
                    
                      Lewis 04                      
                    
                    
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                  Below, five in-air shots. Locations unknown. The first image
                    looks like it was taken either from a wing- mounted camera
                    or by a fellow pilot in close formation. From the aileron
                    deflection, the last two images are during a violent maneuver,
                    perhaps a roll. Your challenge for the day: Figure out the
                    roll direction!  
                  
                    
                      Lewis 26                      
                    
                    
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                      Lewis 05                      
                    
                    
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                      Lewis 20
                    
                    
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                      Lewis 08                      
                    
                    
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                      Lewis 14                      
                    
                    
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                  Below, unknown pilot. Aircraft looks like NC2927.  
                  
                    
                    Lewis 01 
                    
                    
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                      Lewis 06
                    
                    
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                      Lewis 07
                    
                    
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                  Below, identified by a site visitor, is an Arrow "Sport" powered
                  by a 5 cyl. LeBlond. Appears to be the same as image 04, above.  
                  
                    
                      Lewis 09                      
                    
                    
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                      Lewis 10
                    
                    
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                      Lewis 11                      
                    
                    
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                    Lewis 18 
                    
                    
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                  Below, NC6488 is not cited in the
                  Davis-Monthan Register.  
                  
                    
                      Lewis 28                      
                    
                    
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                      Lewis 12
                    
                    
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                      Lewis 13
                    
                    
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                  Below, an interesting aerial shot above the clouds with
                    a mountain in the background. The airplane is NC531 or NC53V,
                  neither of which are cited in the Register. Could be the same
                    Arrow "Sport" powered
                    by a 5 cyl. LeBlond as images 04 and
                    09, above.  
                  
                    
                      Lewis 15                      
                    
                    
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                      Lewis 16
                    
                    
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                  Below, a formal portrait of Joe Lewis, date unknown.  
                  
                    
                      Lewis 17                      
                    
                    
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                      Lewis 19                      
                    
                    
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                  Below, Earl Daugherty. Follow the link to see more images
                    and read his biography. 
                  
                    
                      Earl Daugherty                      
                    
                    
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                      Lewis 22                      
                    
                    
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                      Lewis 23                      
                    
                    
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                      Lewis 24                      
                    
                    
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                      Lewis 25
                    
                    
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                  Below, an unidentified wreck.  
                  
                    
                      Lewis 27                      
                    
                    
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                      Lewis 33                      
                    
                    
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                      Lewis 34                      
                    
                    
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                      Lewis 29
                    
                    
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                      Lewis 30                      
                    
                    
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                      Lewis 31                      
                    
                    
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                      Lewis 32                      
                    
                    
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                      Lewis 35                      
                    
                    
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                      Lewis 36
                    
                    
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                      Lewis 38                      
                    
                    
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                  Below is an image of Joe Lewis' first airplane, which, according
                    to family legend was built in his grandmother's barn. Date
                    unknown.  
                  
                    
                      Lewis 39                      
                    
                    
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                  Dossier 2.1.172 
                  UPLOADED: 03/27/07 REVISED: 03/30/07, 01/24/08, 03/26/08, 11/13/08 
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