Transportes Aéreos de Timor

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Transportes Aéreos de Timor
Darwin
  • Kupang
  • Domestic destinations
  • HeadquartersDili, Portuguese Timor

    Transportes Aéreos de Timor (transl. Air Transportation of Timor) or TAT was an airline of the then colony of Portuguese Timor, headquartered in Dili. It operated between 1939 and 1975.

    History

    TAT was founded as the colony's national airline in July 1939, several years before

    Transportes Aéreos Portugueses (transl. Portuguese Air Transportation), the national airline of the motherland.[1] It was headquartered in Dili,[1] and its operating bases were at Dili Airport and Baucau Airport.[2]

    TAT served destinations within the colony and the neighbouring countries of Australia and the Dutch East Indies / Indonesia.[3] It carried 15,000 passengers in 1964 and 20,000 in 1974.[4]

    Destinations

    During 1940, TAT began flying a weekly service between Dili and

    Dutch Timor, using a de Havilland Dragon Rapide wet-leased from Koninklijke Nederlandsch-Indische Luchtvaart Maatschappij (KNILM), the airline of the then Dutch East Indies. Those services continued, for political reasons, even after April 1941, by which time TAT was six months behind in paying the lease fees and salaries of the pilot and mechanic.[5] In February 1942, civil aviation operations from Dili Airport were suspended after Japanese forces captured Dili.[6]

    The TAT hangar at Dili Airport during the colonial period

    As of 1967, TAT was flying between Baucau and

    Darwin, Australia, with two de Havilland Doves.[7]

    In 1969, TAT was operating flights to six destinations in Portuguese Timor, and once a week a chartered Fokker F27 Friendship of Trans Australia Airlines (TAA) flew the Baucau to Darwin route.[2]

    In June 1973, the Indonesian government authorised TAT to start flying biweekly between Dili and Kupang, which by then was in West Timor in independent Indonesia. Later that year, TAT was to have begun operating regular services between Dili and Lisbon, but those flights never materialised.[8]: 52–53 

    In 1974 and 1975, TAT was operating scheduled domestic services from Dili to Atauro, Baucau, Maliana [id], Oecusse and Suai. The Baucau to Darwin services operated by TAA for TAT had become thrice-weekly, and TAT was also serving Kupang from Dili once a week, using a Douglas DC-3 chartered from Merpati Nusantara Airlines.[3][9]

    After Cyclone Tracy devastated Darwin at the end of 1974, the flights between Baucau and Darwin were suspended for a time.[10] They finally came to an end on 7 August 1975, due to the fighting that had broken out in Portuguese Timor.[11]

    Fleet

    TAT's de Havilland Dove CR-TAH "Oe-Cusse" at Dili airport in 1971
    TAT's de Havilland Dove CR-TAH "Oe-Cusse" at Dili airport in 1971

    From the mid-1950s to 1975, the backbone of TAT's fleet was a pair of de Havilland Doves, which were small airliners powered by twin piston engines. They regularly visited Australia for scheduled maintenance, initially at Bankstown Airport in Sydney, and in the 1970s at Jandakot Airport in Perth.[12]

    The first Dove, Series 1B CR-AGT "Manatuto", was built and registered to TAT in 1952. The second one, Series 2A CR-AHT "OeCusse", also built in 1952, was added to the TAT fleet in 1955. Both were re-registered in 1959: CR-AGT as CR-TAG, and CR-AHT as CR-TAH.[12]

    Also in 1959, TAT acquired a de Havilland Heron, which was a development of the Dove with a longer fuselage and four piston engines. A model 2D, it was registered as CR-TAI.[13] In January 1960, it crashed in the Timor Sea;[14] only small items of wreckage were recovered.[15]

    As of 1967, TAT's fleet comprised the two Doves.[7] By 1969, three Austers had joined the fleet,[2] but they had gone by 1971.[16] At the time the airline was shut down following the Indonesian invasion of East Timor at the end of 1975, the fleet consisted of the two Doves and a Britten-Norman BN-2 Islander,[1] which had been acquired in late 1974.[8]: 104 

    One of the Doves, CR-TAG, escaped to Australia in late 1975. According to the

    medevac flight, with Timorese refugees on board.[12][18][19] TAT's second Dove, CR-TAH, is presumed to have been destroyed during the Indonesian invasion.[19] The airline's Islander was captured by the Indonesians and later placed into military service.[19]

    Incidents and accidents

    Aircraft on display

    The former TAT de Havilland Dove CR-TAG "Manatuto", which escaped the Indonesian invasion of East Timor in late 1975, is now on display at the Darwin Aviation Museum.[17][21] After being admitted to Australia as an 'aircraft in transit', it remained in Darwin and was ultimately declared to be an illegal import by the Australian government and impounded. Following extensive diplomatic communications between Australia, Portugal and Indonesia, it was donated by the Portuguese government to the museum in January 1978, and formally approved for import four months later. It then underwent a long conservation process prior to being placed on public display in December 1990.[17]

    References

    1. ^ a b c Stroud, Michael (10 April 1976). "World airline directory". Flight International. 109 (3500): 895, at 963. Retrieved 1 November 2018.
    2. ^ a b c "World airline survey". Flight International. 95 (3135): 549, at 596. 10 April 1969. Retrieved 1 November 2018.
    3. ^ a b Stroud, Michael (21 March 1974). "World airline directory". Flight International. 105 (3393): 1, at 58. Retrieved 1 November 2018.
    4. ^ Jannisa, Gudmund (2019). Timor-Leste in the World: BC to Independence (PDF). Lund, Sweden: A Malae Production. p. 93. Retrieved 16 February 2022.
    5. ^ Lee, Robert (2000). "Crisis in a Backwater. 1941 in Portuguese Timor". Lusophonies Asiatiques, Asiatiques en Lusophonies (7): 175–189, at 177. Retrieved 3 March 2022.
    6. ^ "Dili Airfield (Presidente Nocolau Lobato Airport) Dili Municipality East Timor". Pacific Wrecks. 7 April 2020. Retrieved 15 February 2022.
    7. ^ a b "World airline survey". Flight International. 91 (3031): 549, at 595. 13 April 1967. Retrieved 1 November 2018.
    8. ^
      OCLC 66016286
      .
    9. ^ Stroud, Michael (20 March 1975). "World airline directory". Flight International. 108 (3445): 459, at 507. Retrieved 1 November 2018.
    10. .
    11. ^ Trans Australia Airlines. (1951), "v. ; 24-28 cm.", Annual report, Parliamentary paper (Australia. Parliament), [Melbourne]: TAA, nla.obj-845454130, retrieved 16 February 2022 – via Trove
    12. ^ a b c d e Goodall, Geoff. "de Havilland DH.104 Dove in Australia". Geoff Goodall's Aviation History Site. Retrieved 16 February 2022.
    13. ^ "De Havilland DH-114 Heron production list". rzjets.net. Retrieved 16 February 2022.
    14. ^
      Aviation Safety Network
      . Retrieved on 1 November 2018.
    15. ^ a b "Thorak History: Dr Klaus Eberhard Thorak". Litchfield Council. Retrieved 16 February 2022.
    16. ^ Stroud, Michael (6 May 1971). "World airlines". Flight International. 99 (3243): 607, at 649. Retrieved 1 November 2018.
    17. ^ a b c de Havilland DH.104 Dove: Our Aircraft (Museum information board (as of 28 August 2023)). Winellie, NT: Darwin Aviation Museum.
    18. ^ "Aerial Visuals - Airframe Dossier - de Havilland Dove 1B, c/n 04373, c/r CR-TAG". Aerial Visuals. Retrieved 15 February 2022.
    19. ^
      Aviation Safety Network
      . Retrieved on 15 February 2022.
    20. .
    21. ^ "de Havilland Dove CR-TAG". Darwin Aviation Museum website. Retrieved 1 November 2018.

    External links

    Media related to Transportes Aéreos de Timor at Wikimedia Commons