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1958 “Conquest of the Air”
Atlantic Petroleum, Australia, 1958


  • Series Title: Conquest of the Air
  • Issued by: Atlantic Petroleum
  • Country: Australia
  • Number of Cards: 64
  • Card Dimensions: 76 x 50 mm
  • Circa: 1958
  • Album: Yes
  • Checklist: Download

Overview


To the aviation historian, airplane trading cards represent an interesting “portal” to the past. They illustrate what the key aviation events of that particular era were. This attractive set of 64 airplane trading cards presents a chronology of the “Conquest of the Air” from the genius of Leonardo da Vinci up to the launch of “Sputnik I” in 1957. These Australian “Picture Pageant” gasoline cards were issued by Atlantic Petroleum circa 1958. The cards measure 76 × 50 mm, and are numbered from 1 to 64 on the reverse side. The reverse side also includes a nicely condensed description of the aircraft. The set was completed with an Atlantic Picture Pageant generic album and a Conquest of the Air insert booklet that contained the information from the Backs of the cards.

Our particular set of cards was obtained from eBay and the cards were glued into the album. In order to scan the images shown below, we had to literally destroy the album and soak off all of the gum residue from reverse side of the cards. We had to do a lot of computer enhancement/restoration to make the following images presentable. The results are shown below.

“Conquest of the Air” Image Guide [1,2,3]


Album Image Guide - “Conquest of the Air” [1]


During the 1950s, Atlantic Petroleum issued a series of Atlantic Picture Pageant trading cards sets. They used “generic” albums with descriptive insert “booklets” for their various card sets. The album shown below is the Atlantic Picture Pageant generic album with the Conquest of the Air airplane cards mounted on the individual pages. When the cards were mounted (glued) into the album, the descriptive text/information on the Backs of the cards were lost. Atlantic Petroleum's solution to the problem was to include an insert booklet that contained the information from the Backs of the cards.

The collector cards themselves were actually larger than the place-holders in the album. This is shown in the image below. The generic album pages were designed to accommodate four trading cards per page. The advertising citation ATLANTIC “For Happy Motoring” appeared at the center-bottom of each page. Were not exactly sure how many “Atlantic Picture Pageant” series were produced, but we have seen a similar series “FILM STARS: SERIES OF 32.” The measured dimensions of a typical album page are 7.58 × 5.76 inches.

Checklist


Conquest of the Air Checklist
1Leonardo da Vinci
2Wilbur and Orville Wright
3Blériot
4Sopwith “Tabloid”
5Vickers “Gun Bus”
6Sopwith Camel
7SPAD S-7
8Bristol Fighter F.2B
9Fokker Type E
10Fokker DR.I
11Handley-Page H.P. 0/400
12Bristol Racer Type 72
13Fokker FV11B—3M “Southern Cross”
14Macchi M39
15Short Calcutta
16Supermarine S6B
17Junkers J13
18Douglas DC-2
19Handley-Page “Hannibal”
20Breguet Helicopter
21Bell 47D
22Piasecki YH-16 Transporter
23Lockheed “Vega”“Winnie Mae”
24Supermarine Spitfire
25Focke Wulf Fw.190
26Messerschmitt Bf.109
27Hawker Hurricane
28MiG-3
29Mitsubishi Zero-Sen
30Messerschmitt Me.262
31Bristol Beaufighter
32Wirraway
33De Havilland Mosquito
34Junkers Ju.87 Stuka
35Lockheed P-38 “Lightning”
36Republic P-47 “Thunderbolt”
37North American P-51 “Mustang”
38Consolidated PBY-5 Catalina
39Short Sunderland
40Vickers Wellington
41Junkers Ju.88
42Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress
43Consolidated B-24 Liberator
44Avro Lancaster
45Handley Page Halifax
46Boeing B-29 “Superfortress”
47V2 Rocket Bomb
48Bell X-1 Skyrocket
49Saunders Roe SR/A1
50Fairey F.D.2
51Boeing RB-52B Stratofortress
52Airspeed Ambassador
53Hawker Hunter
54Commonwealth Sabre CA-27
55Avro 698 Vulcan
56Convair 440 “Metropolitan”
57Douglas DC-7
58Lockheed Super Constellation
59Boeing 707 “Stratocruiser”
60De Havilland Comet
61Vickers Viscount
62Bristol Britannia
63Douglas DC-8
64Sputnik I
-Generic “Atlantic Picture Pageant” Album
-“Conquest of the Air” Insert Pamphlet

Contributors


Pieter van der Zwaart was born in Amstelveen, a village near by Amsterdam, about 1 mile from Schiphol, now known as the Amsterdam Airport. At that time, aviation in the Netherlands was still recovering from the devastation of World War II. As a very young boy, Pieter's family collected airplane cards for two albums “Vliegende Vleugels” (Flying Wings) written by the famous Dutch aviation author C. van Steenderen and issued by Theodorus Niemeyer, producer of coffee and tea.

Pieter's father was a great admirer of Dr. Albert Plesman, a Dutch aviation pioneer and founder of KLM, the oldest airline in the world still operating under its original name. Together they made several visits to Schiphol and as a young boy he saw the KLM-fleet developing from Douglas DC-4s to DC-6s to DC-7s to Lockheed “Constellations” and later on to the beginning of the jet-age with Douglas DC-8s and DC-9s. As a working student, with Avis® Rent A Car at Schiphol, he even witnessed the first arrival of the Boeing 747 at Schiphol.

During his working career and growing a family, for many years there was no time for his aviation interests. But during the last two decades, he revived his interest in Aviation, especially by collecting card albums in that theme from all over the world. On the same terms he also collects card albums on cars. At that time, Pieter also revived his musical interests. After playing trumpet in his youth, he started studying the bass tuba and now plays in several orchestras and occasional groups at the top amateur level in the Netherlands. Pieter has a collection of about 400 card albums from all over the world, evenly distributed about cars and planes. From all the continents only Asian albums are still missing. And after a few decades of collecting he still isn't sure whether the albums are the best things in collecting or the contacts one makes during trading and exchanging information.

Some of his interests in aviation are shared with his son, and together they visit aviation museums in and around the Netherlands. His son is a very enthusiastic advanced flight simulator player on his PC and Pieter hopes to be tutored in flying by him soon.

After receiving his degree in Mechanical Engineering and Mathematics, Pieter had a career in Math Education and Curriculum Development. After his retirement, Pieter is still involved in the development of math tests for secondary education.

Bob Dros — Bob was born on a Dutch island that had a small airfield and a gunnery range for naval aircraft. Bob experienced his first signs of aviation addiction at age of 7, when he was seeing and hearing “Spitfires” that flew overhead from the nearby airstrip as target tugs. Bob's childhood memories include seeing and hearing the low flying Dutch naval “Avengers”, “Harpoons”, “Neptunes” and “Sea Furies” target practicing just five miles from his island village. Bob started off his airplane trading card collection by collecting the wonderful five series of Croydon aircraft cigarette cards, and the Van Dijk's Gouda's Roem albums “History of Aviation” and “World Aviation” and Dutch aircraft gum cards. Much later, Bob started to include other Dutch sets, and airplane card sets from nearby Germany, England, and France. During 2000, Bob started collecting as many airplane sets as he could in order to create an “Encyclopedia of the World's Aviation Trade Cards” which is scheduled for publication in 2015.

Bob's interests also include music. His first group in 1962 was “The Typhoons”. Starting in 1974, Bob played drums in one of Holland's best known blues bands “Barrelhouse”. During 1978 “Barrelhouse” invited the American blues guitarist Albert Collins to Holland and toured and recorded with him. “Barrelhouse” also worked with B.B. King on his European tours. During 2014, “Barrelhouse” did a 40th Anniversary Tour in Europe.

Bob studied psychology from 1968-1975, got his degree and worked for two years, but his love of music pulled him Back into the music world.

During 1986, Bob started his own business … Bel Air Models. At first, Bel-Air Models specialized in miniature musical instruments, like electric guitars, drums and classical instruments. However, Bob's lifelong love affair with aviation later changed the focus of Bel-Air Models completely to model aircraft types. Bel-Air Models specializes in odd types of model aircraft, which are not available on the regular model aircraft market, such as the wonderful airliner designs from the Inter-War years. Bel-Air Models mostly takes commissions from specialist collectors and constructs the models by hand from solid Perspex or Plexiglas. So far, Bel-Air Models has done more than 150 aircraft types, many of them twice, three times and even 25 times, dependent on their popularity.

In Bob's spare time, he writes short articles about model history for a periodic of a group of enthusiast flying model airplane owners.

John Shupek — John is retired Aeronautical/Aerospace Engineer that lives in Southern California. John's 36 year aerospace career/adventure started in the mid-1960s when he worked for Pratt & Whitney at their “FRDC” … Florida Research and Development Center, West Palm Beach, Florida. John was part of the P&W jet engine design team for the CIA/USAF's Lockheed A-12/SR-71A “Oxcart/Blackbird” engines (J58/JT11D-20). He also worked on the RL-10 rocket engine and the JTF-17A which was P&W's entry into the United States' SST competition between Boeing and Lockheed. Several years later, John moved Back to California and worked at the AiResearch Mfg. Company at LAX and Torrance. He originally worked on the thermal design of the HRE (Hypersonic Ramjet Engine) which was a supersonic combustion Mach 7 ramjet engine that was to be tested on the North American X-15. John did about three more years of jet engine design work before he disappeared for 13 years into the classified DOE “GCEP” (Gas Centrifuge Enrichment Plant) Atomic Energy program for the enrichment of U235. After the GCEP program was cancelled by the DOE in 1985, John was hired by Northrop Aircraft to do the thermal design for Northrop's entry into the ATF (Advanced Tactical Fighter) competition, the Northrop YF-23A “Black Widow II” stealth supercruise fighter. He also worked on the Northrop Grumman B-2A “Spirit” stealth bomber. After several years on a classified stealth missile program, John worked the remainder of his Aerospace career as one of Northrop Grumman's Program Directors on the United States Navy's F/A-18E/F “Super Hornet” jet fighter program.

During John's career at Northrop Grumman he served for five years as Northrop's “Vintage Aircraft Club” Commissioner and the Curator and Webmaster for the Western Museum of Flight in Hawthorne, California. Several years later, John was the volunteer webmaster (for about 3 years) for the Yanks Air Museum, Chino, California. He also served as President and webmaster for two different NPO's after his retirement. The Whittier Historical Society & Museum and Whittier Meals on Wheels.

John's love of aviation history and aviation photography lead to the establishment of this Skytamer.com website in 1998. The Skytamer.com site has continued to expand and will always grow and will never be completed. It's sort of analogous to a snowball rolling down a hill without any trees to stop it. In approximately 2002, John remembered that he had collected Topps “Wings” (ACC# R707-4) airplane trading cards while in High School. Somehow the cards had disappeared over the years. So at this point, he started to re-collect airplane trading cards via eBay and become an airplane card “Image Collector” rather than a “Card Collector” per se. After John scans an airplane card for the website, he has no further use for it and he puts it Back into circulation via eBay. John's mission statement for the Skytamer.com is basically to restore and preserve high-quality card images/artwork associated with the various airplane card sets from the early 1900s to the present. These cards are wonderful historical “snapshots” into aviation history showing which aviation events and aircraft were important at that point in time. For the Skytamer.com website, basically if it is a trading card collection that features things that fly, but doesn't have feathers, it is eligible for consideration on the Skytamer.com website. John always welcomes inputs and high resolution scans (600-dpi) that can be used on this website. John can be reached via the “Contact Us” navigation button on the left.

References


  1. Zwaart, Pieter van der. Album, Album Insert and Card Images, 600-dpi card scans from the Pieter van der Zwaart Collection, Borne, The Netherlands
  2. Dros, Bob. Card Images, 600-dpi card scans from the Bob Dros Collection, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
  3. Shupek, John. Card Images, 600-dpi card scans from the Skytamer Images Archive Collection

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