U.S. Air Service, Vol. 5, No. 2, March 1921, page 13-16; Air Mail Pilots Cross Country in 33 Hours 20 Minutes Flat
Airmail 1.5 March 2017 Airmail 1.5 March 2017. Bugfix Airmail 1.5 January 2017. New Custom Actions New Workflow app integration New Gmail authentication New default Inbox New Bear app integration New OpenURL action; Airmail 1.4. New haptic feedback Improved notification preview Minor fixes; Airmail 1.3. Send an email hands-free via Siri.
![Airmail 3 3 5 9 Airmail 3 3 5 9](https://sparks-auctions.com/SAN/32/321804_3.jpg)
- The first airmail route in the United States was over the 200 mile distance between New York and Washington, D.C., with a stop in Philadelphia. One round-trip flight was flown each day except Sunday. For the first few months, the airmail service was a joint effort of the War Department, which provided the planes and pilots, and the Post Office.
- May 21, 2020 Airmail 3.5: Sailmail is now a certified application for the Iridium GO! And Airmail ver 3.5 adds support for this device, as well as a new 'Dedicated Route' function to solve the problem of other applications jumping on an open sat-phone connection.
- $9.99 yearly which renew every year. Prices may vary based on your region or current promotions. Airmail for Business is one single purchase $49.99 Business and Education discount follow Apple Volume Purchase guideline. Airmail Pro is free for all users that are subscribed to Airmail Pro for iOS or have purchased Airmail 3 since 1st January 2019.
U.S. Air Service, Vol. 6, No. 1, August 1921, page 31: Remodeled DH's for Air Mail
U.S. Air Service, Vol. 7, No. 1, November 1922, page 24: Night Flying From Coast to Coast in 28 Hours By Colonel Paul Henderson
U.S. Air Service, Vol. 8, No. 5, May 1923, page 13: Post Office Department Asks Bids for Air Mail, New Orleans LA-Pilottown LA
U.S. Air Service, Vol. 8, No.5, May 1923, page 32: Air Mail Service Schedule, New York to San Francisco
U.S. Air Service, Vol. 8, No.5, May 1923, page 56: Air Mail Developing Aces (transcontinental route)
U.S. Air Service, Vol. 8, No. 9, September 1923, page 9-17: Night Air Mail Service From oast to Coast (has photos)
U.S. Air Service, Vol. 8, No. 9, September 1923, page 5: (advertisment) Photo of U.S. Air Mail Field, Cheyenne WY.
U.S. Air Service, Vol. 8, No. 9, September 1923, page 30-32: Night Flying Progress by M.L. Patterson
U.S. Air Service, Vol. 9, No. 12, December 1924, page 25-28: Chicago-New York Night Air Mail Planned
Overnight Air Mail Service between New York and Chicago, to start early next spring, was announced, recently, by Carl F. Egge, General Superintendent of the Post Office Departmen's Air Mail Division, who has just completed his report to Col. Paul Henderson, Second Assistant Postmaster General, embracing plans for illuminating the 780-mile route and working out emergency landing fields. Turbomosaic 3 0 8 – photo mosaic maker countertop.
U.S. Air Service, Vol. 10, No. 2, February 1925, page 4: (advertisement) U.S. Air Mail Plane at Emergency Landin Field
U.S. Air Service, Vol. 10, No. 4, April 1925, page 13-16: Birds of the Night (page 15, shows 'Views along the Route of Our Great Air Mail')
U.S. Air Service, Vol. 10, No. 4, April 1925, page 20: The Curtiss 'Carrier Pigen' to Operate Between New York and Chicago
U.S. Air Service, Vol. 10, No. 4, April 1925, page 48: Overnight Airmail New York and Chicago announced by Postmater General New on March 5
U.S. Air Service, Vol. 10, No. 5, May 1925, page 48: New Air Mail Contracts
![3.3.5 3.3.5](https://alexnld.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/82337466-6305-43b9-b567-7b50001892da.jpg)
U.S. Air Service, Vol. 10, No. 6, June 1925, page 7: (advertisement) Only A Night's Flight
U.S. Air Service, Vol. 9, No.2, February 1925, page 34-38: The Gay White Way of the Air Mail
An Interview With Colonel Paul Henderson, in Charge of Air Mail by C. Moran. (has some great photos)
U.S. Air Service, Vol. 10, No. 6, June 1925, page 20: New Air Mail Line to Start July 1
U.S. Air Service, Vol. 9, No.6, July 1924, page 7-15: The First Night Airways, Lieut. D. L. Bruner and Liewt. H.R. Harris A.S.
U.S. Air Service, Vol. 10, No. 7, July 1925, page 10-16: Make Way for the New York-Chicago Night Air Mail
Never Before Has Night Flying Been Attempted as a Scheduled Undertaking Over Mountainous Regions Atext 2 24.
U.S. Air Service, Vol. X, No.7, July 1925, page 59: (Advertisment) GE Searchlights Guide the Night Air Mail (nice beacon photo)
U.S. Air Service, Vol. X, No.9, September 1925, page 31: Photo of a B.B.T. dioptric 500 million Candle Power Flood Light
U.S. Air Service, Vol. X, No. 11, November 1925, page35: Five Air Mail Routes Awarded to Private Corporations
Boston to New York Via Hartford: The successful bidder is Colonial Air Lines, Inc., Naugatuck, Conn.
Chicago to St. Louis via Springfield: The successful bidder is Robertson Aircraft Corporation, St. Louis, Mo.
Chicago to Dallas and Ft. Worth: The successful bidder is National Air Transport, Inc., of Chicago, Ill.
Chicago to Birmingham: No award.
Chicago to Saint Paul and Minneapolis: No award.
Salt Lake City to Los Angeles: The successful bidder is Western Air Express, Inc., of Los Angeles.
Elko to Pasco: The successful bidder is Walter T. Varney of San Francisco, Calif.
Seattle, Washington, to Los Angeles: The bid of Vern C. Corst (Gorst) is now under consideration.
Chicago to St. Louis via Springfield: The successful bidder is Robertson Aircraft Corporation, St. Louis, Mo.
Chicago to Dallas and Ft. Worth: The successful bidder is National Air Transport, Inc., of Chicago, Ill.
Chicago to Birmingham: No award.
Chicago to Saint Paul and Minneapolis: No award.
Salt Lake City to Los Angeles: The successful bidder is Western Air Express, Inc., of Los Angeles.
Elko to Pasco: The successful bidder is Walter T. Varney of San Francisco, Calif.
Seattle, Washington, to Los Angeles: The bid of Vern C. Corst (Gorst) is now under consideration.
U.S. Air Service, Vol. 12, No. 8, December 1925, page 39-45: Tales of the Air Mail Pilots, by Burt M. McConnell
Stories along the transcontinental airway. Pilots mentioned are: Claire K. Vance (photo), Slim Lewis, Wesley Smith, Robert H. Ellis (photo), Boonstra, Chandler, Huking, Blanchfield, Lester F. Bishop (photo),
Stories along the transcontinental airway. Pilots mentioned are: Claire K. Vance (photo), Slim Lewis, Wesley Smith, Robert H. Ellis (photo), Boonstra, Chandler, Huking, Blanchfield, Lester F. Bishop (photo),
Clipped from The Indianapolis News, 29 Jan 1926, Fri, Page 8
Rapidweaver 8 2 14. Clipped from The Sedalia Democrat, 16 Jan 1927, Sun, Page 18
Clipped from El Paso Herald, 25 Jun 1927, Sat, Page 2
Clipped from The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 28 Jun 1927, Tue, Page 22
Program of Lighting:
Wow Patch 3.3.5
Routes lighted by June 30, 1927
Transcontinental airway
New York-Boston
St. Louis-Chicago
Dallas-Chicago
Salt Lake-Pasco
Los Angeles-Salt Lake (partial)
Pueblo-Cheyenne (under contract)
Dallas-Chicago (under contract)
New York-Boston
St. Louis-Chicago
Dallas-Chicago
Salt Lake-Pasco
Los Angeles-Salt Lake (partial)
Pueblo-Cheyenne (under contract)
Dallas-Chicago (under contract)
Routes to be lighted by June 30, 1928:
New York-Atlanta
Los Angeles-Seattle (partial)
Chicago-Twin Cities (partial)
Salt Lake-Pasco (partial)
San Francisco-Salt Lake
Los Angeles-Salt Lake (to complete)
Louisville-Cleveland
Los Angeles-Seattle (partial)
Chicago-Twin Cities (partial)
Salt Lake-Pasco (partial)
San Francisco-Salt Lake
Los Angeles-Salt Lake (to complete)
Louisville-Cleveland
Airmail 3 3 5 90 Degree
Routes to be considered for fiscal year 1929:
Cleveland-Detroit
Los Angeles-Seattle (to complete)
Chicago-Twin Cities (to complete)
Miami-Atlanta
Dallas-Galveston
Cleveland-Albany
Dallas-Laredo
New Orleans-Atlanta
Boston-Albany
New York-Albany
Atlanta-St. Louis via Birmingham and Memphis
St. Paul_Winnipeg (to United States border)
Albany-Montreal (to United States border)
Jacksonville-Savannah-Charleston-Norfolk (seaplane airway)
Pittsburgh-Cleveland
Key West-Miami
Chicago-Indianapolis-Cincinnati
Birmingham-Louisville via Nashville
Tampa-Titusville
Los Angeles-Seattle (to complete)
Chicago-Twin Cities (to complete)
Miami-Atlanta
Dallas-Galveston
Cleveland-Albany
Dallas-Laredo
New Orleans-Atlanta
Boston-Albany
New York-Albany
Atlanta-St. Louis via Birmingham and Memphis
St. Paul_Winnipeg (to United States border)
Albany-Montreal (to United States border)
Jacksonville-Savannah-Charleston-Norfolk (seaplane airway)
Pittsburgh-Cleveland
Key West-Miami
Chicago-Indianapolis-Cincinnati
Birmingham-Louisville via Nashville
Tampa-Titusville
Airmail 3.3.2 MAC OS X
Name: Airmail
Version: 3.3.2
Size: 45.80 MB
Mac Platform: Intel
Includes: Pre-K’ed
OS version: 10.10 or later
Processor type(s) speed: 64-bit processor
RAM minimum:
Video RAM:
What’s New in Version 3.3.2
– Fix on templates with images
– Improved Sync with Rules
Airmail 3 is a new mail client designed with performance and intuitive interaction in mind optimized for macOS Sierra!
Support for iCloud™, MS Exchange, Gmail™, Google™ Apps, IMAP, POP3, Yahoo!™, AOL™, Outlook.com™, Live.com™
Airmail was designed from the ground UP to retain the same experience with a single or multiple accounts and provide a quick, modern and easy-to-use user experience. Airmail is clean and allows you to get to your emails without interruption – it’s the mail client for the 21st century.
We have taken usability and function to the next level with Airmail and bring a striking-design with support for all major email services. Switch between accounts like a breeze and quick reply to incoming messages within seconds – email has never been so easy and productive.
iCloud Account sync
iCloud attachment upload and share the link.
Handoff support, Composing Draft and folder selection are mirrored on different devices
Today Extension, quick access to your inbox.
Action Extension, Airmail Compose, Inline create and send messages directly form other apps
Action Extension, Airmail Share to quick send messages and attachments.
Name: Airmail
Version: 3.3.2
Size: 45.80 MB
Mac Platform: Intel
Includes: Pre-K’ed
OS version: 10.10 or later
Processor type(s) speed: 64-bit processor
RAM minimum:
Video RAM:
What’s New in Version 3.3.2
– Fix on templates with images
– Improved Sync with Rules
Airmail 3 is a new mail client designed with performance and intuitive interaction in mind optimized for macOS Sierra!
Support for iCloud™, MS Exchange, Gmail™, Google™ Apps, IMAP, POP3, Yahoo!™, AOL™, Outlook.com™, Live.com™
Airmail was designed from the ground UP to retain the same experience with a single or multiple accounts and provide a quick, modern and easy-to-use user experience. Airmail is clean and allows you to get to your emails without interruption – it’s the mail client for the 21st century.
We have taken usability and function to the next level with Airmail and bring a striking-design with support for all major email services. Switch between accounts like a breeze and quick reply to incoming messages within seconds – email has never been so easy and productive.
iCloud Account sync
iCloud attachment upload and share the link.
Handoff support, Composing Draft and folder selection are mirrored on different devices
Today Extension, quick access to your inbox.
Action Extension, Airmail Compose, Inline create and send messages directly form other apps
Action Extension, Airmail Share to quick send messages and attachments.