Pan Am Express was a brand name for a code sharing passenger feed service operated by other airlines on behalf of Pan American World Airways (Pan Am). It was founded in the early 1980s, and lasted until the demise of Pan Am in 1991.[1]
| |||||||
Commenced operations | 1981 | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ceased operations | December 4, 1991 | ||||||
Hubs | |||||||
Focus cities | Detroit | ||||||
Fleet size | See Fleet below | ||||||
Destinations | See Route network below | ||||||
Parent company | Pan American World Airways |
History
editThis section needs additional citations for verification. (February 2013) |
In 1980, Pan American World Airways acquired National Airlines, thus obtaining a domestic route network in the U.S. for the first time in its history. In order to provide connecting passenger service to smaller destinations, the creation of a feeder network soon became necessary.
For this task, a number of airlines flying narrow body jet equipment and/or turboprop aircraft were contracted via code sharing agreements:
- Air Atlanta (from 1984 to 1987)
- Emerald Air (from 1981 until 1985)
- Empire Airlines (until 1985)
- Pacific Express
- Presidential Airways (only during 1987)[2]
- Republic Airlines (until 1986)
The focus of the Pan Am Express network was put on feeding into Pan Am's hub at John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFK). The northeastern U.S. was particularly well covered, but there were also feeder service flights operated in Arizona, California, Florida and Texas as well as the midwestern and southern U.S.
In 1987, Pan Am acquired Ransome Airlines, which was subsequently renamed Pan Am Express and began operating under the banner and aircraft livery of Pan Am.[3][4] It fully concentrated on serving the JFK hub and also operated a second feeder network in Europe, offering regional flights out of Berlin Tegel Airport.[5] Pan Am Express also operated flights between Los Angeles (LAX) and San Diego (SAN) which were not linked to any other smaller destinations in the regional network. When Pan Am declared bankruptcy in early 1991 and was forced to sell its New York hub to Delta Air Lines, Pan Am Express continued to operate the northeast regional system and the Miami system for Pan Am until the brand was shut down together with its parent on December 4, 1991. On that date, Ransome / Pan Am Express was sold to Trans World Airlines and began operating the same system for TWA from December 5, 1991 until November 1995 when TWA shut down this operation.
Route network
editBetween 1983 and 1991, the Pan Am Express branding was used on flights to the following destinations in the United States, Canada and the Bahamas:[6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13][14][15]
In Europe, the following destinations were served:
Location | Country | Airport | Start | End |
---|---|---|---|---|
Innsbruck | Austria | Innsbruck Airport | 1988
|
1988
|
Salzburg | Austria | Salzburg Airport | 1988
|
1988
|
Vienna | Austria | Vienna International Airport | 1988
|
1988
|
Copenhagen | Denmark | Copenhagen Airport | 1990
|
1991
|
Strasbourg | France | Strasbourg International Airport | 1988
|
1989
|
(West) Berlin | (West) Germany | Berlin Tegel Airport (hub) | 1988
|
1991
|
Bremen | (West) Germany | Bremen Airport | 1989
|
1990
|
Dortmund | (West) Germany | Dortmund Airport | 1988
|
1988
|
Düsseldorf | (West) Germany | Düsseldorf Airport | 1988
|
1988
|
Hamburg | (West) Germany | Hamburg Airport | 1991
|
1991
|
Hanover | (West) Germany | Langenhagen Airport | 1988
|
1991
|
Kiel | (West) Germany | Kiel Airport | 1988
|
1990
|
Westerland | (West) Germany | Sylt Airport | 1989
|
1991
|
Oslo | Norway | Fornebu Airport | 1990
|
1991
|
Stockholm | Sweden | Stockholm Arlanda Airport | 1989
|
1989
|
Basel | Switzerland | EuroAirport Basel-Mulhouse-Freiburg | 1988
|
1989
|
Fleet
editThe following aircraft types were used on Pan Am Express flights:
Aircraft | Airline |
---|---|
ATR 42 - turboprop | Pan Am Express |
BAe 146-100 - whisper jet | Pan Am Express |
Boeing 727 - jet | Air Atlanta, Republic Airlines |
Convair CV-580 - turboprop | Republic Airlines |
de Havilland Canada DHC-7 Dash 7 - turboprop | Pan Am Express |
Fairchild Hiller FH-227 - turboprop | Emerald Airlines |
Fokker F28 Fellowship - jet | Empire Airlines |
McDonnell Douglas DC-9 - jet | Emerald Airlines, Republic Airlines |
Jetstream 31 - turboprop | Pan Am Express |
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Pan Am to Eliminate 2,500 Jobs," The New York Times
- ^ The Philadelphia Inquirer [bare URL]
- ^ "BUSINESS PEOPLE; Planner for Pan Am Heads Commuter Unit," The New York Times
- ^ Flight International: The new world of Pan American. Published on August 23, 1986. Online: [1][2][3][4]
- ^ Flight Global: Berlin's commuter market grows. Published on April 2, 1988. Online:[5][6]
- ^ Pan American World Airways 1983 domestic route map, at departedflights.com
- ^ Pan American World Airways 1984 domestic route map, at departedflights.com
- ^ Pan American World Airways 1985 route map, at airchive.com
- ^ Pan American World Airways 1986 domestic route map, at departedflights.com
- ^ Pan American World Airways 1987 domestic route map, at departedflights.com
- ^ Pan American World Airways 1988 route map, at departedflights.com
- ^ Pan American World Airways 1989 route map, at departedflights.com
- ^ Pan American World Airways 1990 route map, at departedflights.com
- ^ Pan American World Airways May 1991 route map, at airchive.com
- ^ Pan American World Airways October 1991 route map, at departedflights.com