The Sikorsky S-41 was an amphibious
flying boatairliner produced in the United States in the early 1930s.[1] Essentially a scaled-up
monoplane version of the
Sikorsky S-38 biplane flying boat,[1]Pan Am operated the type on routes in the Caribbean, South America, and between
Boston and
Halifax.[1]
Development
The S-41 had a
parasol wing configuration, with two
radial engines mounted on struts between the
fuselage and the wing.[1] The cabin was completely enclosed within the all-metal hull[1] and could seat 15 passengers.[2][3]
The United States Navy purchased three examples and designated them RS-1;[3][4] these were joined by two
Pan Am aircraft pressed into Navy service and designated RS-5.[5][6]
On 27 August 1931, A Sikorsky S-41, NC41V of Boston-Maine Airways crash landed in while making the run between Halifax (N.S.) and Boston (MA).[9] After clinging to the sides of a partially inflated life raft in rough seas for two hours, the 12 survivors were rescued by the F/V Nova Julia, a mackerel seiner out of Gloucester MA, captained by Capt. Leo Favaloro. There was one fatality. Seventy-year-old Edward Bamwell was assumed trapped in the wreckage as it disappeared beneath the waves just a moment after he gallantly allowed one of the three women passengers to precede him to the waiting raft. The Sikorsky had only been in service one month. Heavy fog was cited as the cause of the crash.[10][11] The S-41 was repaired and reregistered as NC60V.[12]
On 28 October 1931, Col
Thomas C. Turner, Chief of the Aviation Section of the
United States Marine Corps, flew as a passenger in a Sikorsky RS-1 to
Port-au-Prince,
Haiti.[13][14] After arrival, the aircraft became stuck in the sand; when he got out to inspect it, he was struck in the head by one of its propellers.[14][15] He died from his injuries two days later.[13][14][15]
Specifications (S-41A)
Data from Jane's all the World's Aircraft 1931,[16] U.S. commercial aircraft[1]
^the Navy applied the designations RS-2, RS-3, and RS-4 to other models of Sikorsky flying boats; refer to Grossnick 1995, p.530 and p.542 and Andrade 1979, p. 218.