South Bay History: Douglas Aircraft’s plant in El Segundo played a key role in 
World War II
SBD-5 Dauntless dive bombers on the assembly line at Douglas Aircraft Company’s 
El Segundo plant in 1943. (U.S. Navy photo)By Sam Gnerre | [email protected] 
| Daily BreezePUBLISHED: May 18, 2026 at 12:07 PM PDT
Aviation pioneer Donald W. Douglas is most often associated with Douglas 
Aircraft, the firm he created near Clover Field in Santa Monica in 1921. 
(Clover Field was later renamed Santa Monica Municipal Airport.)

Born in Brooklyn, New York, on April 6, 1892, Douglas was entranced with 
aviation from its earliest days. He dropped out of the U.S. Naval Academy in 
Annapolis in 1912 to pursue aeronautical engineering at the Massachusetts 
Institute of Technology.

Just two years later, he became the first person at the school to earn a 
bachelor of science degree in aeronautical engineering. While still in his 
early 20s, he designed aircraft, including a U.S. Navy dirigible, for several 
different firms.

He formed his first company, the Davis-Douglas Company, in July 1920 with 
investor David Davis. Its mission was to develop the first manned aircraft to 
make a nonstop flight across the United States.
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The Davis-Douglas airplane, the Cloudster, was brought down by engine troubles 
during its June 1921 attempt, leading to the dissolution of the company. Davis 
pulled out of the venture, and Douglas carried on under the Douglas Aircraft 
Co. name at Clover Field in Santa Monica. (John Macready and Oakley Kelley made 
the first successful U.S. transcontinental flight in May 1923.)
   
   
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1 of 6SBD-5 Dauntless dive bombers on the assembly line at Douglas Aircraft 
Company’s El Segundo plant in 1943. (U.S. Navy photo)
A few miles south, aviation activity had begun ramping up at Mines Field north 
of the newly incorporated city of El Segundo, especially after the airfield, 
with its crude-oiled, dirt runways was selected as the official site of Los 
Angeles Municipal Airport in 1928.

The small Moreland Aircraft Co. opened on land south of Imperial Highway at the 
airfield’s southern border in 1928, and the company built small training planes 
there from 1928 to 1931. In 1932, Douglas Aircraft bought Moreland and renamed 
it the Northrop Division of Douglas Aircraft after Douglas brought in another 
future aviation legend, Jack Northrop, who was then working for him, to run it.

Northrop designed two successful monoplanes at the El Segundo plant, the Gamma 
and the Delta. He left to form his own company in nearby Hawthorne in 1937, 
confusingly also named the Northrop Co. The El Segundo plant was then renamed 
the El Segundo Division of Douglas Aircraft.

During the 1930s, the streets on the east and west sides of the El Segundo 
plant were renamed Aviation Boulevard and Douglas Street, respectively.

Back in Santa Monica, the flagship Douglas plant had broken through with the 
production of the DC-3 commercial aircraft, introduced in 1935. It was a huge 
success both commercially and militarily as the repurposed C-47 during World 
War II. The company continued producing DC commercial jets for decades 
following the war.

The onset of the war sent the Douglas plants into overdrive. The company opened 
a third plant in Long Beach, which initially specialized in C-47 transport 
production, and later became one of three plants turning out the workhorse B-17 
bomber.

The El Segundo Douglas plant was retooled to produce fighter planes for the 
U.S. Navy. These were propeller-driven monoplanes capable of being launched 
from aircraft carrier decks. The most famous of these: the SBD Dauntless dive 
bomber.

The “SBD” stands for “Scout Bomber Douglas,” and the majority of them were 
produced at the Douglas El Segundo plant beginning in the mid-1930s. The 
Dauntless dive bomber, an extremely slow-flying plane by modern standards, is 
credited with greatly influencing the outcome of the war in the Pacific theater.

Four squadrons of Dauntless planes attacked the Japanese fleet at the Battle of 
Midway on June 6, 1942, sinking all four of the Japanese warships present, 
taking down three of them within six minutes. This naval victory essentially 
stopped the Japanese advance across the Pacific in its tracks, and gave the 
Allied forces their first major naval victory of the war.

Following World War II, Douglas Aircraft laid off about 100,000 of its 
wartime-peak 160,000 employees. But the business of aviation and aerospace 
research, and production continued.

The company moved into jet aircraft, missile production and aerospace 
technology. Its A-6 Skyhawk fighter jet became a key weapon in the arsenal of 
the U.S. Navy and the U.S. Marine Corps during the 1950s and 1960s.

Commercial aircraft in the DC series resumed, with propeller-driven airliners 
giving way to jets, beginning with the introduction of the DC-8 in 1958 to 
compete with the Boeing 707 jetliner.

Thirty years of Douglas Aircraft production in El Segundo ended when the plant 
ceased its manufacturing operations in 1962. Its former site now contains a 
Northrop-Grumman plant on its north end, and the Los Angeles Air Force Base on 
its south end that fronts El Segundo Blvd.

In 1967, Douglas Aircraft merged with the McDonnell corporation to form 
McDonnell Douglas. Douglas Aircraft shuttered its Santa Monica plant in 1968. 
McDonnell Douglas merged with Boeing in 1997, retiring the final vestige of the 
Douglas name in the industry.

Donald Douglas died at the age of 88 on Feb. 1, 1981. The final former Douglas 
Aircraft plant in Long Beach closed in 2015.
keady
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