When Tata was in tour, he was inspired by his friend's father, aviation pioneer
Louis Blériot, the first man to fly across the English Channel, and took to flying. On 10 February 1929, Tata obtained the first license issued in India. He later came to be known as the "Father of Indian
civil aviation". He founded India's first commercial airline, Tata Airlines in 1932, which became
Air India in 1946, now India's national airline. He and
Nevill Vintcent worked together in building
Tata Airlines. They were also good friends. In 1929, JRD became one of the first Indians to be granted a
commercial pilot licence. In 1932 Tata Aviation Service, the forerunner to Tata Airline and Air India, took to the skies. That same year he flew the first commercial mail flight to
Juhu, in a
de Havilland Puss Moth. He piloted India’s first scheduled commercial air transport service in 1932. It lifted off from
Drigh in
Karachi to
Madras with JRD at the controls of a Puss on 15 October 1932. JRD nourished and nurtured his airline baby through to 1953, when the government of
Jawaharlal Nehru nationalised Air India along with several other private Airlines and appointed JRD as its first Chairman. JRD continued as chairman for 25 years before being removed by
Morarji Desai in 1978. He joined Tata Sons as an unpaid apprentice in 1925. In 1938, at the age of 34, Tata was elected Chairman of Tata Sons making him the head of the largest industrial group in India. He took over as Chairman of
Tata Sons from his second cousin
Nowroji Saklatwala. For decades, he directed the huge Tata Group of companies, with major interests in steel, engineering, power, chemicals and hospitality. He was famous for succeeding in business while maintaining high
ethical standards – refusing to bribe politicians or use the
black market. Under his chairmanship, the assets of the Tata Group grew from US$100 million to over US$5 billion. He started with 14 enterprises under his leadership and half a century later on 26 July 1988, when he left, Tata Sons was a conglomerate of 95 enterprises which they either started or in which they had controlling interest. He was the trustee of the Sir Dorabji Tata Trust from its inception in 1932 for over half a century. Under his guidance, this Trust established Asia's first cancer facility, the Tata Memorial Centre for Cancer, Research and Treatment, Bombay in 1941. He also founded the Tata Institute of Social Sciences (
TISS, 1936), the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research (
TIFR, 1945), and the National Center for Performing Arts. In 1945, he founded
Tata Motors. In 1948, Tata launched Air India International as India's first international airline. In 1953, the Indian Government appointed Tata as Chairman of
Air India and a director on the Board of
Indian Airlines – a position he retained for 25 years. For his crowning achievements in aviation, he was bestowed with the title of Honorary Air Commodore of India. Tata cared greatly for his workers. In 1956, he initiated a programme of closer 'employee association with management' to give workers a stronger voice in the affairs of the company. He firmly believed in employee welfare and espoused the principles of an eight-hour working day, free medical aid, workers' provident scheme, and workmen's accident compensation schemes, which were later, adopted as statutory requirements in India. He was also a founding member of the first Governing Body of NCAER, the National Council of Applied Economic Research in New Delhi, India's first independent economic policy institute established in 1956. In 1968, he founded
Tata Consultancy Services as Tata Computer Centre. In 1979,
Tata Steel instituted a new practice: a worker being deemed to be "at work" from the moment he leaves home for work until he returns home from work. This made the company financially liable to the worker for any mishap on the way to and from work. In 1987, he founded
Titan Industries.
Jamshedpur was also selected as a UN Global Compact City because of the quality of life, conditions of sanitation, roads and welfare that were offered by Tata Steel.
Support of emergency powers in 1975 Tata was also supportive of the declaration of
emergency powers by Prime Minister
Indira Gandhi, in 1975. He is quoted to have told a reporter of the
Times, "things had gone too far. You can't imagine what we've been through here—strikes, boycotts, demonstrations. Why, there were days I couldn't walk out of my house into the streets. The parliamentary system is not suited to our needs." == Awards and honours ==