Sydney Hugh ("Syd") de Kantzow (9 November 1914 – 21 November 1957) [1][2] was the Australian co-founder of Cathay Pacific Airways with American Roy Farrell.
Although initially based in Shanghai, the two men moved to Hong Kong to found Cathay Pacific Airways. They named it "Cathay" because that was the medieval name given to China derived from "Khitan", and "Pacific" because Farrell speculated that they would one day fly across the Pacific. The Chinese name for the company comes from a Chinese idiom meaning "Grand and Peaceful State".
As the business developed, Farrell focused more on the shipping aspects of the company and de Kantzow focused more on flying the aircraft. The early Cathay Pacific pilots were referred to as "Syd's Pirates".[7]
De Kantzow resigned from Cathay Pacific in 1951 and died in a high-speed car accident in 1957.[1][3][5] He and his wife Angela Mary (1924 – 2005) had son Peter,[5] a director and co-founder of Waterfront Air of Hong Kong.