" Conventional wisdom credits only entrepreneurs with the vision
to create America's commercial airline industry and contends that
it was not until Roosevelt's Civil Aeronautics Act of 1938 that
federal airline regulation began. In Airlines and Air Mail, F.
Robert van der Linden persuasively argues that Progressive
republican policies of Herbert Hoover actually fostered the growth
of American commercial aviation. Air mail contracts provided a
critical indirect subsidy and a solid financial foundation for this
nascent industry. Postmaster General Walter F. Brown used these
contracts as a carrot and a stick to ensure that the industry
developed in the public interest while guaranteeing the survival of
the pioneering companies. Bureaucrats, entrepreneurs, and
politicians of all stripes are thoughtfully portrayed in this
thorough chronicle of one of America's most resounding successes,
the commercial aviation industry.
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