Little is known about the Hunt Aircraft Manufacturing Company of Fiskeville, R. I. Fiskeville, as a village in the southwest portion of the City of Cranston, and borders the town of Scituate and Coventry.
What is known comes from a newspaper article that appeared in the New York Times on May 30, 1930.
On the afternoon of May 29, 1930, Alfred Hunt, (35), of Warwick, Rhode Island, was at Roosevelt Air Field at Garden City, Long Island, N.Y., to qualify for a transport pilot’s license. While making a solo qualification flight in a Aeromarine Klemm monoplane, the aircraft was caught in a sudden gust of wind and crashed from an altitude of about 75 feet. The plane was wrecked but Hunt was not seriously injured.
It was reported that Hunt was to owner of the Hunt Aircraft Manufacturing Company in Fiskeville, R. I., which was allegedly connected with the Buttonwood Flying Service in Warwick. The plane was owned by the Buttonwood Flying Service.
No further information is known as of this writing, and its unknown if the Hunt Aircraft Company ever build any aircraft.
Source:
New York Times, “About To Take Test, Flier Hurt In Crash”, May 30, 1930.