This article examines the development of civil aviation in Southern Rhodesia from the 1910s to 1953, arguing that aviation emerged through institutional instability, financial constraint, and contested governance rather than through steady technological advance. It shows how shifting relationships between the colonial state, private operators, and imperial authorities produced a transport system characterised by subsidised monopolies, wartime requisitioning, and uneven postwar reconstruction. Drawing on extensive archival research in the National Archives of Zimbabwe, including government correspondence, policy reports, legislation, and cabinet minutes, and supplemented by contemporary newspapers, the article traces how aviation remained marginal within the colony's transport economy despite its symbolic and strategic importance. The findings highlight the limits of colonial transport ambitions and demonstrate how aviation policy was shaped less by commercial efficiency than by administrative capacity, fiscal restraint, and imperial priorities.
Mabhande et al. (Tue,) studied this question.