Air Board (Canada)


The Air Board was Canada's first governing body for aviation, operating from 1919 to 1923. The Canadian government established the Air Board by act of Parliament on June 6, 1919, with the purpose of controlling all flying within Canada. Canada was the first country to legislate and implement rules governing the entire domain of aviation.

Functions

The Air Board had three functions: devising a means of, and administering Canadian air defence; controlling and conducting all civil the Department of the Controller of Civil Aviation which controlled all civil flying; 2) the Directorate of Flying Operations which controlled civil flying operations of the Air Board; and 3) the Headquarters of the Canadian Air Force, which operated at Camp Borden.

Flying operations

Five air stations were established for civil flying operations in 1920:
  • Halifax, Nova Scotia, a former US Navy seaplane base responsible for the overhaul of Curtiss HS-2L flying boats, fishery and forestry patrols, and aerial photography.
  • Roberval, Quebec, a seaplane base on Lac Saint-Jean responsible primarily for forestry patrols and surveying.
  • Jericho Beach, British Columbia, a seaplane base responsible for fishery, forestry, anti-smuggling patrols.
  • Morley, Alberta, a landplane base responsible primarily for forestry patrols.
  • Rockcliffe, Ontario, a landplane and seaplane base responsible primarily for photo surveying.
Additional stations were added in subsequent years:
  • Victoria Beach, Manitoba, established in 1921 as a seaplane base responsible primarily for forestry patrols.
  • High River, Alberta, moved from Morley in 1921 due to poor flying weather.
  • The Northern Ontario Mobile Unit, a temporary seaplane base operated from boxcars on a Canadian National Railway siding in Sioux Lookout, Ontario for the 1921 flying season responsible primarily for forestry patrols.
  • Temporary seaplane bases at Whitney, Ontario and Parry Sound, Ontario for the 1922 flying season, responsible primarily for forestry patrols.

    Members

List of members of the board from 1920:
In 1922 the Air Board was combined with the Department of Militia and Defence and the Department of Naval Service to form the Department of National Defence. January 1, 1923, however, was set as the formal change-over date to allow time for reorganization. The CAF, which had been a small non-permanent air militia directed by the Air Board and originally formed to provide refresher flying training to veterans, was reorganized and became responsible for all Canadian aviation, including the control of civil aviation. Both the Controller of Civil Aviation Branch and responsibility for civil government air operations remained under DND until 1936. In November 1936 the Civil Aviation Branch was transferred to the new Department of Transport, which would control all civil flying except for work directly related to defence.