Did you know you can earn 77 Qantas
points if you buy Richard Polt’s The Typewriter Revolution at Booktopia?
I don’t know much about Qantas points but I know The Typewriter Revlution
is an absolutely ripper book, so I guess it’s a good deal. And the offer is the
first thing that pops up when you key Qantas+typewriter into a Google search.
Next up is a suggestion to use Qantas frequent flyer points to stay at Garni
Schönaussicht in Parcines in northern Italy, where you'll be within a five-minute
walk of the Peter Mitterhofer Typewriter Museum.
In 1943, Cornelius the cockatoo kept cigar-chomping Qantas
air traffic controller Geoffrey Allen company at his Imperial Good Companion
portable typewriter in the isolated outpost of Batchelor in the North
Territory, Australia’s “Top End”.
I mention all this because Qantas,
the third-oldest surviving airline in the world and the oldest in the
English-speaking world, has just celebrated its centenary. Admittedly, there
wasn’t a lot of celebrating, since, like 96 per cent of the rest of the world’s airlines,
Qantas has been pretty much grounded during the pandemic. Qantas is possibly
best known to Americans of a certain age because of the massive free plug Dustin
Hoffman’s character Raymond Babbitt gave it in the 1988 movie Rain Man. The Hoffman-Babbitt pronunciation as "Qant-ass" was rather weird, but we still got his point.
The early days.
Babbitt’s claim that “Qantas never
crashes” was, however, wrong. It had eight fatal accidents and an aircraft shot
down between 1927 and 1945, with the loss of 63 people. Post-war, it lost
another four aircraft with a total of 21 people killed. The last fatal accident
suffered by Qantas was on December 13, 1951, when a de Havilland DH84 Dragon crashed
in mountainous country near Mount Hagen, in the central highlands of New
Guinea. The pilot and the two passengers were killed. Qantas’ more recent safety
record allowed the airline to be officially known as the world's safest airline
for seven years in a row from 2012 until 2019.
Miss Cullen of the Qantas publicity manager's
office at her typewriter
at Qantas headquarters, Mascot, New South Wales.
“The Flying Kangaroo”, Australia’s
flag carrier, was founded in Winton, Queensland, as Queensland and Northern
Territory Aerial Services on November 16, 1920, and began international
passenger flights in May 1935.