Abstract
The Hughes Electronics Corporation Records (1935-2021) contain the files and publications of the corporate communications department and records donated by Robert K. Roney, a leading engineer at Hughes. These records document the growth of the company in Southern California, from building experimental aircraft for Howard Hughes, to developing and manufacturing radar and guided missile systems for the United States military and NATO forces, to developing and manufacturing communication satellites and space probes for NASA, and becoming the largest manufacturer of communication satellites and provider of satellite TV. The collection contains press releases, executive biographies, executive speeches, annual reports, corporate directories, organizational charts, correspondence files, technical reports and notes, promotional materials, as well as articles and publications detailing the history of the company. The collection also includes audiovisual materials and photographs. The audiovisual series details the history of the company through news footage and documentaries about Howard Hughes, aviation, corporate mergers, interviews with executives and promotional videos.
Finding Aid PDF
Date
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Related People/Corporations
Scope and Contents Note
The Hughes Electronics Corporation Records (1935-2021) contains the files and publications of the corporate communications department, which collected materials created by Hughes Aircraft Company, General Motors Corporation, GM Hughes Electronics Corporation, Hughes Electronics Corporation, DirecTV Global, PanAmSat, and DirectTV. The collection also contains records donated by Robert K. Roney, a leading engineer at Hughes. The collection documents the growth of the company in Southern California from a maker of experimental aircraft for Howard Hughes, to developing and manufacturing radar and guided missile systems for the United States military and NATO forces, to a developing and manufacturing communication satellites and space probes for NASA, and finally becoming the largest manufacturer of communication satellites and provider of satellite TV.
The collection contains press releases, executive biographies, executive speeches, annual reports, corporate directories, organizational charts, correspondence files, technical reports and notes, promotional materials, as well as articles and publications detailing the history of the company. The collection also includes a sizeable number of digital and analog audiovisual materials and photographs. The audiovisual collection details the history of the company through news footage and documentaries about Howard Hughes, aviation, corporate mergers, interviews with executives and promotional videos. In the collection, the primary formats for audio visual materials are VHS, Umatic, Betacam, and Betacam SP cassettes, and some reels of magnetic tape. There are a significant number of photographs of executives, experimental aircraft like the H-1 (Hughes Racer) and the H-4 (Spruce Goose), radar and guided missiles systems, and satellites in production and being launched, as well as images taken from space of the earth, lunar surface, and planets. The collection also includes an archived version of
Access Note
Collection is open for research. Where use copies do not exist, production of use copies is required before access will be granted; this may delay research requests. Arrangements must be made in advance to access digital files; please contact UNLV Special Collections and Archives for additional information.
Publication Rights
Materials in this collection may be protected by copyrights and other rights. See Reproductions and Use on the UNLV Special Collections and Archives website for more information about reproductions and permissions to publish.
Arrangement
These records are organized into seven series:
Series I. Subject files and photographs, 1935-2003;
Series II. Corporate communications, 1954-2001;
Series III. Publications and reports, 1949-2003;
Series IV. Audiovisual, 1984-2003;
Series V. Corporate executive biographies with photographs, 1944-2003;
Series VI. Robert K. Roney files, 1950-1991;
Series VII. 2021 addition, approximately 1954-2021.
Biographical / Historical Note
Howard Hughes formed Hughes Aircraft as a division of Hughes Tool Company in 1932. During World War II, Hughes Aircraft obtained defense contracts to develop high speed pursuit and reconnaissance aircraft as well as radar and communication systems. The most famous of these prototypes was the H-4 Hercules, better known as the Spruce Goose that only flew one time in 1947. In that same year, Hughes Aircraft formally renamed the Radio Department the Electronics Department.
In 1953, Hughes Aircraft Company was incorporated as a separate business entity with sole ownership held by the newly founded Howard Hughes Medical Institute. Although Howard Hughes remained the titular president of Hughes Aircraft company, in 1954 Lawrence A. “Pat” Hyland, Vice-President and General Manager, took control of the company. Under Hyland's direction, Hughes Aircraft established itself as a leader in avionics, radar, guided missiles, and missile and weapons guidance systems.
Some major weapon systems developed by Hughes Electronics during this period were the Falcon missile system (air-to-air missile), the Tube-launched, Optically-sighted, Wire-Guided (TOW) missile, and the Maverick (air-to-ground) missile. The launch of the Syncom series of satellites between 1961 and 1964 is notable in the development of geosynchronous communication satellites. The five Surveyor Series space probes (1966-1968) that were sent to the moon to photograph the lunar surface and analyzed soil prior to the lunar landing are a significant example of Hughes engineering capabilities during this period.
After Howard Hughes' death in 1976, Hyland became the company's president and CEO. In 1977, the management team consisted of Pat Hyland (Chairman and Chief Executive Officer), Allen Puckett (President), and John Richardson (Executive Vice-President). In 1979, Hyland retired from the Chairmanship. Puckett then assumed the Chairmanship and Richardson was named president of Hughes Aircraft Company.
In 1985, Hughes Aircraft was sold to General Motors. Following the purchase, General Motors merged its Delco Electronics Unit with Hughes Aircraft to create GM Hughes Electronics Corporation, a wholly owned subsidiary of General Motors. General Motors also put in place a new management team with Malcolm Currie as Chairman. GM Hughes Electronics Corporation became the focus of a federal investigation, "Operation Uncover," which resulted in the company having to pay a 3.7 million dollar fine for trafficking in classified Pentagon planning documents.
Hughes Electronics launched DirecTV in Jacksonville, Mississippi, in 1994 and later DirecTV Global was formed to oversee operations in Latin America and Japan. During this period GM Hughes Electronics changed its name to Hughes Electronics and it became the leading manufacturer of commercial satellites. It also entered into an agreement with PanAmSat to merge their satellite services with Hughes Electronics as the majority shareholder. Other notable projects during this period include the development of the Galileo Probe.
Michael T. Smith was named Chairman and CEO of Hughes Electronics Corporation in 1997. Following this change, various Hughes companies were realigned, reorganized, merged and spun-off. The Aerospace and Defense Division were merged with Raytheon. The Space and Communications division was sold to Boeing, and Hughes Helicopter was sold to McDonnell–Douglas. Hughes Electronics focused on consumer satellite services under DirecTV, DirectPC, and Spaceway, a broadband satellite system. General Motors, in a counter move, tried to sell Hughes Electronics to DirecTV's rival Echo Star, but the sale was blocked by federal regulators. However, in April 2003 Rupert Murdoch succeeded in acquiring Hughes Electronics, and renamed it DirecTV, which become a division of Fox Entertainment Group.
Sources:
Amir, Amir R. and Stanley I. Weiss, “Hughes Electronics Corporation,” Britannica.com, accessed January 24, 2018, https://www.britannica.com/topic/Hughes-Electronics-Corporation#ref754190.
“C. Michael Armstrong 1938–,” Reference for Business, accessed January 24, 2018, http://www. Reference forbusiness.com/biography/A-E/Armstrong-C-Michael-1938.html.
Hughes Aircraft Company. The History, culture, and organization of the Hughes Aircraft Company. Culver City, CA: Carl Byoir & Associates, Inc., 1986.
Hughes Aircraft Company. Hughes Aircraft Company: What it is; What it does;. Culver City, CA: Carl Byoir & Associates, Inc., 1965.
Ostrow, Ronald J., “Hughes Chief Surfaces in Defense Investigation: Aerospace: The statute of limitations bars pursuit of Malcolm Currie, sources say, amid a sweeping probe of trafficking in classified Pentagon planning documents,” Los Angeles Times (Los Angeles, CA), July 07, 1990, http://articles .latimes.com/1990-07-07/business/fi-270_1_hughes-aircraft.
“PanAmSat Corporation,” Company-Histories.com, accessed January 24, 2018,
http://www.company-histories.com/PanAmSat-Corporation-Company-History.html
- 1932
- Hughes Aircraft founded as a division of Hughes Tool Company
- 1947
- Radio Department of Hughes Aircraft formally renamed the Electronics Department
- 1953
- Ownership of Hughes Aircraft Company transferred to Howard Hughes Medical Institute
- 1976 April 05
- Death of Howard Hughes
- 1985
- Howard Hughes Medical Institute sold Hughes Aircraft Company (HAC) to General Motors (GM). HAC is merged with Delco Electronics unit to become GM-Hughes Electronics Corporation
- 1994
- DirecTV is launched
- 1995
- GM-Hughes Electronics Corporation name is changed to Hughes Electronics Corporation, Hughes Aircraft remains as a business segment
- 1996
- Hughes Electronics became majority shareholder of PanAmSat
- 1997
- Aerospace and Defense divisions of Hughes Electronics merged with Raytheon;
- Raytheon acquired half of Hughes Research Laboratories division
- 2000
- Hughes Space and Communications division sold to Boeing
- 2003
- DirecTV purchased by Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation
Preferred Citation
Hughes Electronics Corporation Records, 1935-2021. MS-00485. Special Collections and Archives, University Libraries, University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Las Vegas, Nevada.
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Acquisition Note
Materials were received in multiple donations: in 2004 from Hughes Electronics; accession number 2004-010, in 2012 from the family of Robert K. Roney; accession number 2012-21, in 2012 from Dan Rey; accession number 2012-26, and in 2021 from Stephen Roney and Jack Fisher; accession numbers 2021-077, 2021-087, and 2021-093.
Processing Note
Peter Michel processed the collection in 2004. In 2018, as part of an archival backlog elimination project, Brooks Whittaker and Chris Bruce rehoused and arranged the materials, and revised the collection description to bring it into compliance with current professional standards. In 2021, Tammi Kim accessioned the 2021 additions and updated the finding aid.
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Storage Location
Some materials are stored in the Lied Automated Storage and Retrieval Unit (LASR). Advanced notice may be required to access these materials.
Separated Materials
Publications of
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