Durant had his own flight school, airplanes for sale, and a field, "Durant Field" in
Oakland, California in 1919. It was located between 80th Ave., 83rd Ave., and Snell Street. He also had Air Mail contracts for mail delivery with the government and his airport was the terminus for the first transcontinental air mail flight in August 1920. In 1921, Durant was a partner with Thomas O'Brian in the
Lebec Hotel in the Mountains north of Los Angeles near present-day
I-5. Durant had a large estate in
Roscommon, Michigan on the South Branch of the
Au Sable River, where "The Castle," a 54-room mansion, burned to the ground February 6, 1931. On the estate was his own private air strip, with several planes. On April 25, 1930, test pilot Herbert J. Fahy died two days after an airplane he had been showing Durant had crashed on takeoff at this airstrip. Fahy and his wife Claire, both prominent pilots, acted as sales agents for
Lockheed. Durant agreed to buy the airplane if the Fahys could prove that the
Sirius could land and take off safely from Durant's personal strip. Herb and Claire Fahy landed the plane without incident, but as they took off, one of the wheels hit a partially hidden stump, which flipped the plane over. Herb Fahy, at age 33, sustained a fractured skull and a severe concussion from which he never recovered. The community airport in Roscommon, Michigan, was named Durant Field in his honor on July 16, 1933. At various times in his career, Durant presided over the West Coast division of
Durant Motors, and had been vice president of sales for Chevrolet in Oakland, California. He left Chevrolet in 1921, after his father, W.C. "Billy" Durant, left
General Motors. Durant was an accomplished musician as well, playing the violin. He owned the
Guarneri del Gesu violin, and played the piano and trumpet. He was at one time the owner of one of the most prized collections of violins in the world. In addition to being a businessman, race car driver, aviator and musician, Durant was also a yachtsman who owned the sailing yacht "Aurora." == Death ==