Cvairwerks wrote:
Small problem in there Noah... Consolidated became Consolidated Vultee, which morphed into Convair, which became part of General Dynamics. The Fort Worth aircraft production operations were sold to Lockheed, including all production assets and staff, in 1992.
Thanks for the insight. I always appreciate corrections.
Convair was a difficult one to parse out because it wasn't bought wholesale by a single company, but was sort of bought piecemeal by various other defense contractors who took the parts they wanted. It was complicated enough that when I made the timeline I had it with the simplistic bought by McDonnell Douglas and never went back to fix it. (I did somewhat try to address it with the footnote, though.) I don't remember my exact reasoning for this decision, but it was probably based on the fact that: a) it was the last remaining portion of Convair to be sold, b) out of all the pre-1992 divestiture business units it seems to have retained the amount of association with the Convair identity, c) it was closest to the company's traditional (i.e. pre-1945) airframe manufacturing business, which was a closer relationship to the focus of the timeline than say missiles or satellites, and d) it was located in Convair's original home of San Diego. The other issue was that the limitations of the timeline format make it difficult to illustrate the portions that went to other companies that did become part of Boeing. I had the same problems with Stinson, as well as Hiller in the Fairchild chart. However, you're correct that this is an imperfect description of the situation and I need to update it.
Basically, as far as I can tell, the breakdown was:
- 1992: Air Defense Systems Division and unmanned strike systems, Convair Division --> Hughes Missile Systems Company, Hughes Aircraft, General Motors Corporation[1]
- 1993: Fort Worth Division, General Dynamics (F-16) --> Lockheed
- The sale was announced in December 1992, but apparently only became official in March 1993.[2][3]
- After acquisition, it was briefly known as "Lockheed Fort Worth Company".[4] However, according to the byline on the division newsletter, by January 1996 it had become Lockheed Martin Tactical Aircraft Systems.[5]
- 1994: Space Systems Division --> Martin Marietta
- Sale announced in December 1993.[6]
- 1996: Convair Aircraft Structures --> Closed
- Upon further review, it seems that Convair Aircraft Structures was not so much sold to McDonnell Douglas as shut down. However, this is one of those situations where it's difficult to tell. Operations at the San Diego plant apparently ended in 1996, but "manufacturing responsibility [for the MD-11 fuselage was] transferred to McDonnell Douglas".[7] The question is: What exactly was part of that transfer?
Regarding the last point above, this is where the subject really starts to enter the realm of philosophy. When should the identity of a company be considered to have changed hands? What confers the right to claim that one is the legitimate successor of another? (In aviation, this usually most evidence in who gets to put their name in front of the designation. For more on this, see a
post in the Reproduction vs. Replica thread.) Same employees? (e.g. Walter Beech worked for Curtiss-Wright after it purchased Travel Air) Facilities? (e.g. North American used the former Berliner Joyce plant in New Jersey.) Branding? (e.g. The rights to the Pan Am logo went to a
railroad.) Intellectual property? (e.g. Boeing builds helicopters design by Vertol.) A lineage unbroken by bankruptcy or closure? (e.g. Douglas, Lockheed, Martin, McDonnell, Mooney, Northrop, Ryan, and Stearman all started companies that went defunct, but were reconstituted years later.) Do you need two or more of these categories together?
As an aside, what I have found helps with this type of research is access to company annual reports, because they often have organization charts that can reveal the names and relationships of subsidiaries. The Portal to Texas History has a
bunch of General Dynamics reports, but unfortunately the most recent one is 1992. They also have a collection of
Convair/General Dynamics Newsletters and a search of that produced this timeline:

(Source:
The Portal to Texas History)
To address your original statement, it seems like the most accurate statement is that Convair went defunct in 1996 and it has very little connection to Boeing. However, until the exact details of the final arrangements with McDonnell Douglas become clear, this could change. Do you know any more that could help fill in the details?