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Democratic Illinois Governor JB Pritzker speaks about a Democratic "Project 2029" in which members of the current Trump administration, along with federal agents, will be criminally and civilly prosecuted. "Whatever it is that we can do. It may be that you cannot criminally prosecute somebody, but you can go after them civilly." Follow: @AFpost








⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Olive Ann Mellor was born in Kansas in 1903. At age 18, she was working as a secretary at Travel Air Manufacturing Company in Wichita-the heart of America's growing aviation industry. This was 1925, when airplanes were still novelties, when the industry was full of daredevil pilots and ambitious dreamers. Olive Ann was interested in something more powerful: the business behind the flying. She met Walter Beech, Travel Air's president and a legendary pilot who was brilliant at designing aircraft. She was brilliant at managing money. They married in 1930, but this wasn't a traditional marriage where the wife stayed home. Olive Ann kept working, kept learning, kept positioning herself at the center of the aviation business. In 1932, the Great Depression was crushing American businesses. Travel Air had been sold. Walter wanted to build a new company focused on high-quality private aircraft. On April 23, 1932, they founded Beech Aircraft Corporation. Walter would design the planes. Olive Ann would run the business. From day one, she controlled the finances, managed operations, and made the strategic decisions that kept the company alive. She understood something Walter didn't: brilliant engineering means nothing if you can't pay your workers. In 1937, Beechcraft introduced the Model 18, a twin-engine aircraft that became legendary. While competitors chased volume, she focused on quality and profitability. By the late 1930s, Beechcraft was profitable and respected, building some of the finest private aircraft in America. Then came 1940, Walter Beech collapsed. Seriously ill, unable to work. Everyone expected Beechcraft to struggle and fail. Olive Ann walked into the factory and took control. She simply started running the company. Within months, America entered World War II. The government needed training aircraft, transport planes, reconnaissance aircraft-and they needed thousands of them, fast. Olive Ann said yes. She had to: Secure massive loans (millions of dollars, in 1940s money) Expand factory facilities from one building to multiple campuses Hire and train thousands of workers. Retool production lines for military specifications Maintain quality while increasing speed Navigate military bureaucracy and contracts. Military officials doubted she could deliver. Beechcraft's workforce exploded from about 200 employees in 1939 to over 10,000 by 1943. She built an entirely new factory complex. She established training programs for workers who'd never built an aircraft before. And she maintained Beechcraft's reputation for quality and exacting standards. Between 1940 and 1945, Beech Aircraft produced over 7,400 military aircraft. The AT-7 and AT-11 navigational trainers. The C-45 transport. The SNB for the Navy. These planes trained thousands of pilots, transported crucial supplies, and supported military operations around the world. The U.S. Army and Navy awarded Beechcraft five Army-Navy "E" awards for excellence in wartime production who exceeded expectations for quality, efficiency, and output. Walter recovered enough to return in the late 1940s and on November 29, 1950, Walter Beech died suddenly of a heart attack at age 59. Olive Ann was 47. The board of directors immediately appointed her president and chairwoman. She became the first woman to lead a major aircraft manufacturer in American history. From 1950 to 1982, Olive Ann Beech led Beechcraft through massive industry changes. In the 1960s, she pushed Beechcraft into the space program. The company developed cryogenic tanks and systems for NASA, contributing to the technology that would put Americans on the moon. In 1964, Beechcraft introduced the King Air-a turboprop aircraft that became one of the most successful business aircraft in history. Beechcraft's annual sales tripled, from tens of millions to hundreds of millions of dollars. She finally stepped down in 1982, after 50 years at Beechcraft. She died in 1993 at 90 🙏🙏



🚨BREAKING: The White House and the Executive Office of the President has registered the websites alien.gov and aliens.gov Disclosure day coming? 👽
























