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Bordeaux Aéronautique (BA) was a French aeronautic company founded on 17 March 1939,[1] by Marcel Bloch, André Curvale, Henri Deplante and Claude de Cambronne.[2]

Bordeaux-Aéronautique
IndustryAerospace, Defense
Founded1939
FounderMarcel Dassault
(born Marcel Bloch)
HeadquartersTalence, France
Key people
André Curvale
Henri Deplante
Claude de Cambronne
ProductsCivil aircraft
Military aircraft
ParentDassault Group

History


Facing plane production increase, the SAAMB buys in September 1939, in Talence, near Bordeaux, industrial buildings in a workshop next to the Château de Brama (also called Castle of Edward, the Black Prince)[3][4] which is retroceded to Bordeaux-Aéronautique. France produces at that time the most important rearmament.[5]

The company was supposed to produce for the Vichy French Air Force, front fuselages of Bloch MB.175 and Bloch MB.1020 aircraft,[6] but after the Battle of Dunkirk, production stopped at the end of 1940, during the German military administration[7] when Marcel Bloch is arrested on 6 October 1940. During his detention at Thiers, theCommissariat général aux questions juives sends to the regional directions of the economic epuration service of Marseilles and Limoges the order to investigate the Bloch companies.

The Comité d'organisation de l'aéronautique directed by Joseph Roos achieves to slow down all processes of Aryanisation,[8] but in 1942, the German authorities of the Militärbefehlshaber in Frankreich (MBF) names a short-term administrator of the Bloch company in Saint-Cloud, Jean de Broë.[8] On 20 December 1940, Marcel Bloch delegates authority to Henri Carol.

The Vichy French Air Force uses Bloch MB.150 family fighter aircraft and Bloch MB.170 family bomber aircraft, equipping all fighter and bomber units in the unoccupied zone under the Franco-German Agreements. Also being limited to three groups stationed in North Africa. In November, 173 MB.152/155 are gathered at Guyancourt, Orange-Caritat and Châteauroux, for use in training fighter pilots for the Luftwaffe.

Chuck Yeager, first pilot confirmed to have exceeded the Sound barrier in level flight (played by Sam Shepard in The Right Stuff), flew P-51 Mustangs in combat with the 363d Fighter Squadron, named Glamorous Glen, and survived after he was shot down over Nérac, between Bordeaux and Toulouse, in his first aircraft (P-51B-5-NA s/n 43-6763) on March 5, 1944 during his eighth mission, by Focke-Wulf Fw 190 from the Ergänzungs-Jagdgruppe West, based in Cazaux and directed by Herbert Wehnelt, 1971-1974 commander of the German Air Force Command.

After leaving Pau on 20 August 1944, the Germans leave Bordeaux on 28 August. SNCASO comes back to Bordeaux–Mérignac Airport to work for the Allies and after his return from Buchenwald, in April 1945, Marcel Dassault (née Bloch) calls back the group of Talence to relaunch his aircraft company. In June 1945 Marcel Dassault reorganizes the BA 30 project[9] and in July 1946, two prototypes are ordered: the Sud-Ouest Bretagne and the Dassault MD 315 Flamant with the SNECMA-Argus S12 and V12 that equipped the Fw 189.[10] In 1947, Jacques Chaban-Delmas, former general of the French Résistance close to the aircraft manufacturer, becomes Mayor (Maire) of Bordeaux.




See also



Bibliography



References


  1. La nationalisation et le réarmement Archived 27 June 2013 at the Wayback Machine, Dassault Aviation
  2. La Mission Impossible des Historiens du régime de Vichy, Times of Israel
  3. Souterrain du Prince Noir, Talence
  4. Aviation erienne, Aerobordelaise
  5. La nationalisation et le réarmement Archived 27 June 2013 at the Wayback Machine, Dassault Aviation
  6. Le bestiaire extraordinaire de l'armée française, Model Archives
  7. Mérignac, Dassault aviation
  8. Assouline, p. 161.
  9. Guerres mondiales et con flits contemporains : Des hommes d'église dans la grande guerre, Numéros 187 à 188, 1996, p. 86
  10. Le MD 315 Flamant ou le premier avion de Marcel Dassault, Aerobuzz
  11. La conception de l’usine Dassault de Mérignac dans l’histoire architecturale aéronautique française, de l’entre-deux-guerres à la guerre froide par Laetitia Maison Soulard, Openedition

Notes





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