Lowell Yerex
Lowell Yerex (24 July 1895 – 1968) was a New Zealand-born aviator and airline industry executive.
Yerex was born in Wellington, New Zealand and attended Valparaiso University in Valparaiso, Indiana. He graduated from Valparaiso University in 1916. He volunteered for the British Royal Flying Corps in 1917, was shot down over France and spent four months in a German prisoner-of-war camp.
In 1924 he was put in charge of a small new Zealand force and was sent to Honduras to deal with the second Honduran Civil War .
In 1931, he founded Transportes Aéreos Centro Americanos (TACA), but was forced out at the end of 1945. He went on to found British West Indian Airways[1] in Trinidad and Tobago in 1940, at the invitation of Lady Young, wife of Trinidad and Tobago's new governor Sir Hubert Winthrop Young.[2]
In 1941, he founded Aerovias Brasil in Rio de Janeiro. After several mergers and acquisitions, the successor companies were eventually acquired by VARIG in 1961.
Yerex died in Buenos Aires, Argentina in 1968.
References
[edit]- ^ BWIA: The BWIA Story
- ^ "TACA Airlines history from Americas, El Salvador". Airline History. Retrieved 21 August 2022.
- Yerex of TACA: A Kiwi Conquistador (1985, Ampersand, New Zealand) by David Yerex (nephew) ISBN 0-9597624-3-4
- Aviator of Fortune: Lowell Yerex and the Anglo-American Commercial Rivalry 1931-1946 by Eric Benson (2006, Texas A&M University Press) ISBN 1-58544-500-2
External links
[edit]- 1895 births
- 1968 deaths
- Businesspeople in aviation
- Valparaiso University alumni
- Royal Flying Corps officers
- World War I prisoners of war held by Germany
- British Army personnel of World War I
- 20th-century American businesspeople
- 20th-century New Zealand businesspeople
- New Zealand prisoners of war in World War I
- New Zealand emigrants to the United States