Deeds and Kettering had previously worked together in several ventures. Deeds' DELCO produced automobile self-starters developed by Kettering. The two used DELCO's profits to form the Dayton Metal Products Company. Then they formed the Dayton Airplane Company in 1917, which was reorganized as the Dayton-Wright Company in April. When the war began, Deeds was commissioned and put in charge of procurement for the Aircraft Production Board. He divested himself of his financial interest in Dayton-Wright but awarded the company two contracts to produce more than 4,000 DH-4 and Standard SJ-1 aircraft. Given the company's inexperience, the size of its contract led to charges of favoritism. A
United States Senate committee corroborated these allegations, and U.S. President
Woodrow Wilson appointed a commission headed by future
Supreme Court of the United States Chief Justice
Charles Evans Hughes to investigate. Although mismanagement and favoritism were documented, charges were not brought, and the company survived the scandal. It went on to produce the
XPS-1, the first airplane held by the U.S. Army with retractable landing gear. In 1919, Dayton-Wright built a limousine version of the DH-4, the single-seat
Messenger, and a three-seater. In 1920, Milton C. Baumann designed the
RB-1 racer, with solid
balsa wood wing, enclosed cockpit, and retractable landing gear linked to rod-operated leading and trailing-edge camber-changing flaps. In 1923 the Dayton-Wright Company had just started producing side-by-side TW-3 aircraft, powered with World War I surplus
Wright E engines (American-built 180 hp Hispano-Suiza) when it was closed down by the parent company
General Motors, which had purchased it in 1919. Its design rights, chief designer (Colonel
Virginius E. Clark), and the TW-3 contract, were acquired by the newly formed
Consolidated Aircraft Corporation of
Buffalo, New York in 1923. Subsequent TW-3 aircraft were delivered as
Consolidated TW-3s. ==Products==