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  1. C. R. Smith
    United States Army general

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  1. C. R. Smith. Cyrus Rowlett " C.R. " Smith (September 9, 1899 – April 4, 1990) was the CEO of American Airlines from 1934 to 1968 and from 1973 to 1974. He was also the wartime deputy commander of the Air Transport Command during World War II, and the United States Secretary of Commerce for a brief period under President Lyndon B. Johnson.

  2. Cyrus Rowlett Smith was born on September 9, 1899, in Minerva, Texas, the eldest of seven children. At the age of nine, he secured his first job – office boy to cattleman C.T. Herring. Young C.R. Smith also worked as a cotton picker, store clerk, bookkeeper and bank teller.

  3. Aug 30, 2020 · The American Airlines museum, which is named after C.R Smith, shares that he was born in Minerva, Texas, on September 9th, 1899. Following his years of studies, he became an accountant with Peat, Marwick, Mitchell, and Company (now incarnated as KPMG) in Dallas in 1924.

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  4. May 10, 2019 · C.R. Smith and American Airlines famously launched the DC-3 and lovingly protected in a covered glass annex of the museum is Flagship Knoxville, a pristine retired 1940 Douglas DC-3 that began its life with the airline. This particular DC-3 was purchased by The Grey Eagles, an American Airlines retired pilots group, and restored by retired and ...

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  5. The CR Smith Museum is named for the innovative aviation pioneer and former President of American Airlines, Cyrus Rowlett Smith (1899-1990). The Museum opened on July 3, 1993, as the culmination of a two-and-a-half year fundraising and building effort led by American Airlines team members. The signature piece of the Museum was and is a retired ...

  6. Jan 28, 2020 · With Cord’s blessing, the thirty-five-year-old CR Smith became president of American on October 26, 1934. Cord then backed away from management, leaving the airline in Smith’s capable hands, though they remained lifelong friends. At the Southern Division, Smith had purchased Curtiss Condor aircraft.

  7. Colonel Smith soon became General Smith, and he was deputy commander of the Air Transport Command (and a major general) when the war ended. In 1945, C.R. returned to American Airlines. For his World War II service, C.R. Smith was awarded a Distinguished Service Medal, a Legion of Merit, and a designation of Commander, Order of the British ...

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