| |||||||
Founded | 24 September 1949 incorporated in Texas as American Flyers, Inc. | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ceased operations | 27 May 1971 merged into Universal Airlines | ||||||
Operating bases | Harrisburg, Pennsylvania Ardmore, Oklahoma | ||||||
Parent company | The Hillman Company (1967–1971) | ||||||
Headquarters | Harrisburg, Pennsylvania Ft Worth, Texas, United States | ||||||
Founder | Reed Pigman (owner/president until 1966) | ||||||
Notes | |||||||
(1) IATA, ICAO codes were the same until the 1980s |
American Flyers Airline Corporation (AFA) was a United States airline that operated from 1949 to 1971, certificated as a supplemental air carrier (also known as an irregular air carrier) by the Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB), the now defunct Federal agency that, at the time, regulated almost all commercial air transportation in the United States. AFA was owned and operated by aviator Reed Pigman until his death in an AFA accident in 1966. In 1967, ownership passed to a Pennsylvania company, and in 1971, AFA merged into Universal Airlines, another supplemental airline.
The airline was an offshoot of a pilot training enterprise which remains in business as of 2024 as American Flyers. [2]
Reed Pigman was a pilot for the U.S. Weather Bureau from 1935 to 1939, then an executive pilot for an oil company from 1939 to 1941. American Flyers was a dba for the aviation activities of Reed Pigman starting January 1941, in particular flight training. [3] By 1947 American Flyers had a Douglas DC-3. [4] On 31 August 1949, order E-3225 of the CAB approved the transfer of Pigman's Letter of Registration (what irregular air carriers had in lieu of a certificate) to a corporate entity, American Flyers, Inc. [5] However, that entity was only incorporated in Texas on 24 September 1949. [6] In July 1950 the CAB approved the split of the operation into airline and flight instruction arms, with the existing corporation renamed to American Flyers Airline Corporation, and a new corporation taking on the old name and taking over the flight school. [7]
The Reed Pigman era came to an abrupt end 22 April 1966 when, because of a medical condition he kept hidden that would have disqualified him as a commercial airline pilot, Pigman, flying as captain, crashed an AFA Electra at Ardmore causing the deaths of himself and 82 other people. See "Accidents" below. In 1966, the airline had revenues of $8.7 million, [14] or over $80 million in 2024 terms, a substantial increase over the 1963 number given above. Lucian J. Hunt, a former American Airlines vice-president, became president. [15]
On 31 July 1967, Virginia Pigman, widow of Reed, sold 80% of AFA to First Grant Corporation, a subsidiary of Pittsburgh Coke & Chemical, itself then a subsidiary of The Hillman Company, [16] [14] the investment vehicle of Henry Hillman, a prominent Pittsburgh investor.
On April 15, 1970, The Hillman Company agreed to sell AFA to Universal Airlines, [23] based on poor financial results and the unwillingness of The Hillman Company to keep funding AFA. [24] Universal was interested in AFA's transatlantic passenger charter rights, something Universal did not have. [25] The two businesses were arguably complementary, with Universal being historically freight-focused, whereas AFA was purely passenger. [26] The merger agreement called for eliminating AFA's 727s and Electras. [27] Indeed, Universal saw transatlantic passenger charters as a lifeline, given the headwinds it was seeing in its other businesses. [28]
The CAB took a year to approve the merger, [29] which closed May 27, 1971. [30]
Unfortunately, Universal collapsed within a year of acquiring AFA. Saturn Airways took over the leases for the Lockheed Electra freighters and the Zantop brothers quickly established Zantop International Airlines to take over Universal's autoparts transport business.
It was determined that Reed Pigman had hidden a long history of heart disease and more recent history of diabetes from the doctors who certified him as fit to fly as a commercial airline pilot and that, while flying an AFA Lockheed Electra (N183H) military charter flight enroute from Monterey Regional Airport in California to Columbus Airport in Georgia on approach to Ardmore airport on April 22, 1966, he suffered a "coronary insufficiency" leading to the crash of the aircraft and the death of all five crew, one non-paying passenger (an AFA employee) and 77 (out of 92) passengers. [32] There is a memorial at the Ardmore Municipal Airport for the crew and passengers that were involved in this accident. [33]
Arizona Airways was an Arizona intrastate airline that operated 1946–1948, making substantial losses. About the time it ceased operations, it was federally certificated as a local service carrier to fly smaller routes in Arizona, New Mexico and Texas by the Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB), the now-defunct US federal agency that at the time tightly regulated almost all air transportation in the United States. However, the company was unable to resume service and ultimately, as a non-operating airline, contributed its routes and other assets to a 1 June 1950 three-way merger with Monarch Air Lines and Challenger Airlines to create the original Frontier Airlines.
The Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB) was an agency of the federal government of the United States, formed in 1938 and abolished in 1985, that regulated aviation services and conducted air accident investigations. The agency was headquartered in Washington, D.C.
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Air New England (ANE) was a US regional airline in New England during the 1970s and early 1980s. It was headquartered at Logan International Airport in the East Boston area of Boston, Massachusetts. ANE was noneconomic for most of its existence. From 1975 through its last year, 1981, ANE depended heavily on government subsidies. Depending on the year, these accounted for 17 to 25% of operating revenues, despite which the airline was generally unprofitable. ANE collapsed in the early years of US airline deregulation.
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AAXICO Airlines was an airline based in the United States. AAXICO is an acronym for American Air Export and Import Company. Initially founded as a non-scheduled airline or irregular air carrier, AAXICO was awarded certification as a scheduled air cargo airline in 1955 by the Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB), the now-defunct Federal agency that, at the time, tightly regulated almost all US air transport. However, in 1962 AAXICO reverted to a supplemental air carrier. In 1965, it was nominally bought by Saturn Airways, another supplemental airline, but AAXICO was the surviving management and ownership.
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