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ATA Airlines

ATA Airlines, Inc. – formerly known as American Trans Air and commonly referred to as ATA – was an American low-cost scheduled service and charter airline based in Indianapolis, Indiana.[1] ATA operated scheduled passenger flights throughout the U.S. mainland and Hawaii, Puerto Rico and Portugal as well as military and commercial charter flights around the world. In its early days the airline flew charters on a worldwide basis and had bases in Chicago, Detroit, New York, Indianapolis, Oakland and Milwaukee. Later when it entered scheduled service the airline maintained focus cities at Chicago Midway International Airport, Honolulu International Airport, and Oakland International Airport.

ATA Airlines
IATA ICAO Callsign
TZ AMT AMTRAN
FoundedFebruary 1973 (1973-02)
(as Ambassadair)
Ceased operationsApril 3, 2008 (2008-04-03)
HubsIndianapolis
Focus cities
Frequent-flyer programATA Travel Awards
Subsidiaries
Parent companyGlobal Aviation Holdings (2002—2008)
HeadquartersIndianapolis, Indiana, U.S.
Key peopleJ. George Mikelsons (founder)

The airline's parent company – New ATA Holdings, Inc. (the successor to ATA Holdings Inc., which was also once known as Amtran) – later changed its name to Global Aero Logistics, Inc. and purchased World Air Holdings, Inc. for $315 million in an all-cash transaction with the financial backing of the investment firm, MatlinPatterson. World Air Holdings, Inc. owned and operated North American Airlines and World Airways as two separate US-certified air carriers. ATA was North America's largest charter airline, and until its shutdown transported more troops for the United States military than any other commercial airline.

On April 2, 2008, ATA filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection.[2] ATA then announced it was ceasing all services, effective 4:00 am EDT, Thursday April 3, 2008,[3] citing the unexpected loss of a major contract for its military charter business, as a subcontractor of FedEx Express,[4] along with recent increases in jet fuel prices.[5] Red-eye flights in the air at the time of the announcement proceeded to their destinations. Flight 4586 from Honolulu to Phoenix was the last ATA flight, departing almost two hours late at 12:10 am (HST)[6] arriving April 3, 2008, at 8:48 am (MST).

Southwest Airlines owns and retains all ownership of the operating certificate and all assets held by ATA Airlines including trademarks, logos, etc. These were purchased for $7.5 million by Southwest while ATA was operating under bankruptcy protection.[7]

History

Early years

 
Logo of ATA Connection (2000–2001)

ATA was established in August 1973 as American Trans Air (ATA) to provide aircraft for Ambassadair Travel Club. Its first aircraft was a Boeing 720 named Miss Indy, with a second Boeing 720 (Spirit of Indiana) added in 1978. ATA received its common-air carrier certificate in March 1981. Operations started as a charter carrier in 1981, with a fleet of eight Boeing 707s based in Indianapolis, Indiana. In 1983, American Trans Air introduced its first McDonnell Douglas DC-10, a series -10, followed in 1984 by a long range series -40. Amtran, Inc., was founded by owner J. George Mikelsons in 1984, as the holding company for Ambassadair, ATA and any future subsidiaries. The airline replaced the 707s with Boeing 727-100 trijets in 1984, and added Rolls-Royce powered Lockheed L-1011 TriStar wide body jetliners (most of which were ex-Delta Air Lines and TWA) in 1985, and Boeing 757-200s in 1989. ATA was an all charter airline flying to destinations all over the world. American Trans Air started its first scheduled service in 1986 between Indianapolis, Indiana (Indianapolis International Airport), and Fort Myers, Florida (Southwest Florida International Airport).

Expansion

In 1990, ATA began scheduled nonstop service from New York JFK Airport to Belfast, Northern Ireland, in the United Kingdom with continuing direct one stop service to Riga, Latvia, with Boeing 757-200 aircraft.[8] The founder of ATA is of Latvian ancestry. The Latvia service was unprofitable and was discontinued after a few years.

ATA performed services for the United States Department of Defense and US military during the 1991 Gulf War, transporting 108,000 military personnel on 494 missions for Operation Desert Storm and yet again during Iraqi Freedom and Enduring Freedom with the activation of the Civil Reserve Air Fleet ("CRAF"). During these periodic activations, ATA flight crews often and routinely spent as many as 19 hours aboard ATA aircraft in support of U.S. troops and the overall national defense missions. ATA's L-1011 aircraft were also chartered by the Department of Defense to fly personnel and their families between Philadelphia International Airport and Lajes Field, Naval Air Station Sigonella, Aviano Air Base and Incirlik Air Base (called "Freedom Flights" by personnel returning to the U.S. from these overseas installations).

In February 1991, ATA won a contract for daily 727-100 shuttle operations between Nellis Air Force Base and Tonopah Test Range in Nevada. This particular contract, formerly operated by defunct Key Airlines, was awarded to ATA and ended in late 1992 when Tonopah F-117 Stealth Fighter operations ceased. The 727-100s were replaced with Boeing 727-200s in 1993. Also in 1993, according to the Official Airline Guide (OAG), ATA was operating scheduled passenger service between New York JFK Airport and Lagos, Nigeria via a stop at Santa Maria Island in the Azores with a Lockheed L-1011 TriStar wide body jetliner.[9]

By the mid-1990s, ATA began focusing on increasing its domestic scheduled services including Hawaii as well as international routes to Mexico and the Caribbean (based on leisure travel) and began using the slogan, "On ATA, You're on Vacation."[10] The airline began operating a sizable hub at Chicago Midway International Airport, and offered scheduled services throughout the United States, as well as flights to Hawaii, Mexico and the Caribbean while continuing extensive military and government contract air charter flights.

ATA also began a twice weekly charter service from Orlando to both London Gatwick Airport and Manchester in the UK. All services operated via Gander in eastern Canada where the aircraft would refuel. Most seats were reserved by UK tour operator Travel City Direct who specialized in Florida fly-drive vacations. Travel City boasted higher luggage allowances, complimentary meals and snacks plus leather seats. Remaining seats were often filled by American military staff.

Services to the UK ceased in 2002 when Travel City switched to another airline; Air Atlanta Europe.

In 2000, ATA placed a large order for 39 new Boeing 737-800 aircraft and 12 Boeing 757-300 aircraft to expand its fleet for additional flights from Midway. That year, the airline also began scheduled flights to Mexico and was designated as a major carrier by the United States Department of Transportation.

In June 2001, ATA received the delivery of their first new aircraft, Boeing 737-800 registered as "N301TZ". In August of that same year, the airline received the delivery of another new type of aircraft, the Boeing 757-300; whom ATA became the North American Launch customer of this particular type.[11] ATA's first 757-300 was registered "N550TZ" and the airline also introduced a new logo on these new airplanes, replacing ATA as a "vacation airline" and putting more emphasis on ATA as a "business airline."

After 2001 the 737-800 with their ETOPS capabilities became the fleet's mainstay of ATA's medium haul operations from the west coast to and from Hawaii and Mexico.

Chicago Express / ATA Connection

In 2000, ATA and Chicago Express Airlines launched ATA Connection, a regional affiliate of ATA Airlines that would link regional mid-western cities with ATA's Chicago hub and Indianapolis focus city. Chicago Express was purchased for $1.9 million on June 1, 1999, and operated as a separate subsidiary. After ATA entered bankruptcy in late 2004, a decision was made to end ATA's regional airline service and terminate Chicago Express/ATA Connection resulting in the permanent layoff of its entire staff. Chicago Express' assets were auctioned off, ATA terminated its ATA Connection turboprop service and Chicago Express ceased all operations on March 28, 2005.

American Trans Air

The similarity of the American Trans Air and AirTran Airways names to those of other airlines caused confusion among customers and the general public. The airline had been known informally as ATA from early in its history, and from the mid-1990s on had been advertised as such, so in 2002 the name of the holding company was changed to ATA Holdings Corp. In 2003, the name of the airline itself was changed to ATA Airlines, Inc. In 2007, ATA Holdings changed names again; this time to Global Aero Logistics, Inc., immediately after the acquisition of World Air Holdings.

First bankruptcy

After the economic upheaval caused by the 9/11 attacks upon the airline industry of the United States, ATA and its then parent company AMTRAN suffered substantial financial hardships. Among the small group of airlines to receive ATSB backing from the US Government, this alone proved not enough for American Trans Air to remain out of reorganization caused from the hardships and ill-timing of the refleeting to 737-800s just prior to the terrorism attacks.

On October 26, 2004, ATA Holdings and its subsidiaries filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. Eventually, shareholders of ATA Holdings stock lost all their money and received no shares.[12] The stock, previously traded on the Nasdaq stock exchange as "ATAH", was delisted.

In 2004, AirTran Airways agreed to pay $90 million for ATA's 14 gates at Chicago-Midway. Southwest made a higher bid and AirTran's deal fell apart.

In December 2004, ATA entered into an agreement with Southwest Airlines to transfer six gates at Chicago Midway International Airport and 27% of non-voting stock in exchange for a cash influx and codeshare agreement.

In the beginning of 2005, the airline drastically reduced flights at its Indianapolis hub to only three destinations and centered scheduled flights at Chicago Midway International Airport in order to complement Southwest Airlines codeshare flights. ATA also focused on serving markets that were business oriented and did not have Southwest service, such as San Francisco, Dallas/Fort Worth, and New York–LaGuardia. Additionally, ATA began offering point-to-point service not connecting to its Midway Hub, as to benefit other Southwest Airlines focus cities, such as Las Vegas, Orlando, and Phoenix, with connections to non-Southwest destinations such as Denver and Hawaii. Southwest CEO Gary Kelly said that revenues were up nearly 20% due to the new codesharing agreement.

On March 28, 2005, ATA shut down its commuter airline service, ATA Connection operated by Chicago Express Airlines via a codeshare agreement, and later sold the assets to a private buyer. ATA Connection had initially operated British Aerospace Jetstream 31 turboprops which were then replaced with Saab 340B turboprops and was providing passenger feed for ATA at Chicago Midway Airport via a code sharing agreement. In attempt to reduce operating costs, the airline also downsized its fleet by returning twenty Boeing 737-800 and eight Boeing 757-300 aircraft, along with numerous Boeing 757-200 aircraft. The eight 757-300 airframes were subsequently refurbished by Boeing, the lessor, and then leased to Continental Airlines.

In mid-2005, ATA entered an agreement to lease three ex-United Airlines Boeing 737-300 aircraft. Three 737-300s entered service with ATA in late November 2005. Due to high lease rates, the three 737-300s were taken out of service in November 2007, and returned to their owners.

In September 2005, ATA outsourced all its Heavy Maintenance Checks to overseas and domestic contractors. Also planned was an agreement with Continental Airlines to trade ATA's remaining four 757-300 aircraft for four 737-700 aircraft. In early October 2005, ATA terminated these negotiations due to the Boeing machinists strike, which would delay the delivery of the aircraft.

On October 13, 2005, ATA announced major service reductions, ending flights to Boston, Minneapolis/St. Paul, and Newark. In addition, the planned addition of flights to Miami and Sarasota, Florida was canceled. This ended Southwest codeshare service to Minneapolis and Newark. Later that year, on November 1, 2005, a second round of flight cuts were announced, including the suspension of scheduled service to Denver, San Juan, and their headquarters and former hub Indianapolis.

On November 17, 2005, ATA Airlines received court approval to sell its Ambassadair Travel Club division to Grueninger Cruises and Tours.

In a third round of cuts announced on December 6, 2005, ATA announced that it would discontinue service to three additional cities. ATA would suspend flights from Chicago Midway International Airport to San Francisco, Orlando, and Fort Myers in late April 2006. Following these cancellations, ATA would have only 18 daily scheduled departures from its former Chicago hub and 52 scheduled departures company-wide. Moreover, the company would be left with only 1 gate at Midway, down from its previous total of 14, surrendering the balance to Southwest or the city.

On December 15, 2005, ATA announced an expansion of its codeshare agreement with Southwest Airlines. ATA Airlines would expand codesharing with Southwest Airlines between Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport and cities in the Southwest system that connect via Chicago Midway International Airport.

In January 2006, MatlinPatterson and certain pre-bankruptcy creditors invested over $100 million in ATA and took the company private, also taking over ATA Holdings, Inc. Following the transaction, on February 28, 2006, ATA Airlines emerged from Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. However, the airline was still shrinking. ATA continued to return more aircraft, including the 1,500th Boeing 737 Next Generation produced, N333TZ, which was delivered new to ATA on May 14, 2004.[13]

Final years

Following its first emergence from Chapter 11 protection ATA made several efforts to return to profitability, but due to the rising cost of fuel and negative pressures on ticket price ATA was unable to recover and ended operations on April 2, 2008. These late efforts included:

2006

2007

2008

  • In March 2008, Subodh Karnik resigned as CEO and former CEO and chairman of the board John G. Denison served as acting CEO until ATA's demise. No public reason was given for Karnik's departure, but the airline's financial problems coupled with the poor execution of the purchase of several DC-10s for use as military charters was rumored to have been a factor.

2010

  • A federal jury for the U.S. District Court in Indianapolis says FedEx must pay $66 million to now-defunct ATA Airlines, saying the package delivery company broke a contract that ultimately pushed ATA into bankruptcy. $22 million for lost profit in 2008 and $44 million for lost profit in 2009. However, in December 2011, a Federal appellate court in Chicago reversed the $66 million judgment against FedEx.[16]

Second bankruptcy and demise

 
Flight crew of the last ATA Airlines revenue flight, AMT4586, after completing a segment from Honolulu to Phoenix. Captain Mark Groover and First Officer Philip Collier.

On April 2, 2008, ATA declared bankruptcy and ceased all operations. This sudden end came about after FedEx abruptly canceled ATA's longstanding military charter contract. Combined with a significant increase in the price of jet fuel, ATA did not have enough capital to stay in business. It was the third of four U.S. airlines to announce a complete shut down in the week of March 30, 2008, after Aloha Airlines did so on March 30, Minnesota-based charter Champion Air did so March 31, and Skybus Airlines terminated service on April 5. The shutdown of ATA took effect at 4:00 am EDT, Thursday April 3, 2008,[17] although some flights were airborne at the time and continued to their destinations, with the final arrival being ATA flight 4586 from Honolulu to Phoenix, which landed at 8:46 am, MST, or seven hours and 46 minutes after the announced shutdown.[18] At the time of the shutdown ATA employed around 2,300 people, all of whom were permanently laid off. According to press reports, up to 10,000 passengers were affected and many of them had to scramble for help on several airlines. Most of them, however, had to pay for new tickets.

On November 19, 2008, Southwest Airlines announced their intent to acquire the remaining assets of ATA Airlines. The $7.5 million bid includes the rights to 14 slots at LaGuardia Airport that belonged to ATA, as well as various other assets such as trademarks and logos. Southwest specifically stated their bid "doesn't include any aircraft, facilities or employees of ATA."[19]

Destinations

At the time of its shutdown, ATA Airlines served 13 destinations throughout Mexico and the United States. All routes were discontinued on April 2, 2008, due to ATA's bankruptcy filing, with the exception of some en route red-eye flights, which arrived on April 3.[20] With ATA's additions of Kona and Lihue, Hawaii in June 2007, the airline was serving more Hawaiian destinations nonstop from the mainland United States than any other airline in the world at the time.[21] Scheduled passenger service to a number of destinations listed below was discontinued prior to ATA's bankruptcy.[22] At its peak, ATA served 35 destinations worldwide. Some destination information has been taken from ATA route maps from 1994 to 2003.[23]

Albania

Caribbean (excluding U.S. territories)

Ireland

Latvia

Mexico

Nigeria

Northern Ireland, UK

United States

U.S. insular areas in the Caribbean:

ATA also flew charter flights to London Gatwick Airport, London Stansted Airport and Manchester, UK via technical stops in Gander, Newfoundland in Canada.

ATA Connection destinations

Commuter air carrier Chicago Express Airlines operating as the ATA Connection served the following destinations with British Aerospace BAe Jetstream 31 and/or Saab 340B commuter turboprop aircraft from Chicago Midway Airport which was an ATA hub:[24]

USALatin Sky

On March 15, 2008, ATA was supposed to resume service to Miami International Airport, and fly scheduled flights to Central America for the first time with the addition of flights to Guatemala City and San José, Costa Rica.[25] USALatin Sky was to market the airline's flights to Central American destinations from Miami.[26] As part of the deal, ATA Airlines would have based a single Boeing 737-800 aircraft in Miami to fly the routes to Guatemala City and San José.[27] Due to problems with ATA and USALatin Sky, the service was canceled prior to commencing, and no flights under USALatin Sky ever operated.[28]

Fleet

At the time of its shut down, ATA had 29 aircraft (3 owned, 26 leased) in its fleet.[29] At its largest in October 2004, the company operated a fleet of 82 short, medium, and long-haul aircraft.[30]

ATA Airlines fleet
Aircraft Total Passengers Routes Notes
J Y Total
Boeing 737-800 12 12
148
175
160
175
Medium-long haul and charters Fleet contained the 1500th Boeing 737 Next Generation.[31]
Boeing 757-200 6 12
173
200
185
200
Long haul and charters
Boeing 757-300 4 247 247 Long haul and charters North American launch customer
Aircraft subsequently acquired by Continental Airlines and then United Airlines after Continental merged in 2012.
Lockheed L-1011-500 TriStar 3 0 283 283 Military charters
McDonnell Douglas DC-10-30 4 0 318 318 Military charters

As of August 2009, ATA's average fleet age was 13.5 years old.[32]

ATA's Boeing customer number was 3N.

Fleet details at time of shutdown

The aircraft registration and tail numbers of the ATA fleet include the following significant aircraft.

  • ATA received delivery of their first 737-800 (N301TZ) on June 4, 2001.
  • ATA received delivery of their first 757-200 (N757AT) on November 16, 1989.
  • ATA received delivery of their first 757-300 (N550TZ) on August 4, 2001.
  • ATA received delivery of their first L-1011-500 (N163AT) on July 28, 1998.
  • ATA received delivery of their first DC-10-30 (N701TZ Freedom Bird) on December 29, 2006.
  • ATA L-1011-100 (N194AT), crewed by FAs out of DFW, was the last ATA aircraft to feature a lower galley.[33]

Previously retired fleet

ATA Airlines retired fleet
Aircraft Year retired Replacement Notes
Boeing 737-300 2007 None
Saab 340B 2005 None Operated as ATA Connection by Chicago Express Airlines via a code sharing agreement
BAe Jetstream 31 2001 None Operated as ATA Connection by Chicago Express Airlines via a code sharing agreement
Boeing 727-200 2001 Boeing 737-800
Boeing 757-300
Lockheed L-1011-1 1998 Lockheed L-1011-500 Tristar The L-1011 was used for service to Hawaii as well as on other domestic routes in the U.S.
Boeing 727-100 1993 Boeing 727-200
Boeing 757-200
McDonnell Douglas DC-10-40 1986 Lockheed L-1011-1 DC-10 written off after being destroyed by a ground fire at
O'Hare International Airport in 1986
McDonnell Douglas DC-10-10 1986 Lockheed L-1011-1
Boeing 707 1984 Boeing 727-100
Boeing 720 1981 Boeing 707 Operated for Ambassadair

ATA ExecuJet, a Part 135 air taxi subsidiary of ATA Holdings, the parent company of ATA Airline, also retired the following aircraft in 2001:[34]

Affinity programs

ATA Travel Awards

Launched in 2003, ATA's frequent flyer program, ATA Travel Awards, offered one of the lowest thresholds for earning travel, with the added benefit of allowing reward redemption free of blackout date restrictions. After three roundtrips booked on the company's website, customers earned a coach companion ticket on any flight operated by ATA Airlines throughout the contiguous United States. All tickets booked online received double credit toward that particular trip versus purchasing through a telephone or travel agent. While award availability to Hawaii was very limited, travelers did earn twice the normal number of credits when they purchased airfare on Hawaii-bound flights. With the shutdown of operations, ATA's frequent flyer programs were suspended and all earned points voided.

As a result of the recent enhancements in ATA's codeshare agreement with Southwest Airlines, those purchasing flights directly from ATA reservations and ata.com were given the option of earning points toward either ATA Travel Awards, or Southwest's Rapid Rewards. When ATA ceased operations, the relationship with Southwest Airlines was effectively terminated.

ATA Airlines FlightBank

Launched in 2006, ATA created a unique program called FlightBank,[35] a rewards program for the frequent traveler between the U.S. mainland and the Hawaiian Islands.[36] For a set "fee", the "bank" provided the traveler with a flexible number of flight credits that could be used over the course of a year, at vastly reduced savings and with no blackout dates for advance bookings. (The Flightbank program was preceded by the airpass program which was run informally by Pleasant Hawaiian Holidays from 2000 to 2006.) With the shutdown of operations, ATA's FlightBank program was also suspended.

Service

Although ATA Airlines was marketed and advertised as a "low-cost carrier", it maintained many of the features which marked this airline as full service, at least by the standards American and European travelers have become accustomed to. Unlike many discount airline carriers in Europe, ATA offered complimentary features such as reclining airline seats on all of its airplanes, leather seats on most of its airplanes, adjustable head rest "wings" on many of its planes, limited AVOD audio visual on demand systems, complimentary assigned seating, complimentary checked luggage, complimentary soft drinks and non-alcoholic beverage, complimentary bookings via website reservations, complimentary inter-airline baggage connection transfers, and frequent flyer programs.

ATA sold snacks and snack packs under the label Skyway Café. Upon military and most charter flights, ATA provided fully complimentary airline meals or depending upon flight length, snacks. On some flights it provided in-flight entertainment such as documentaries, comedies, "classic television," music videos, and music. ATA aircraft included up to eight audio channels. Some flights over five hours included films.[37]

Codeshare agreements

At the time of its shutdown, ATA Airlines had a codeshare agreement with Southwest Airlines. As far back as 2001, ATA explored a passenger sharing agreement, with a now defunct airline called Access Air which also had midwestern United States flight operations. This agreement was short lived due to the tedious economic condition of this post deregulation "start up" carrier.[38][39][40][41] The ATA Connection service flown by commuter air carrier Chicago Express Airlines was also operated on a codeshare basis.

ATA was not involved in an alliance.

Southwest Airlines

ATA Airlines, one of Southwest Airlines' main competitors in the Chicago market, historically operated out of Midway Airport alongside Southwest. After ATA declared bankruptcy in 2004, Southwest injected capital into ATA that (among other things) would have resulted in Southwest's 27.5% ownership stake in ATA upon their exit from Chapter 11 bankruptcy proceedings.

In a departure from its traditional "go it alone" strategy,[citation needed] Southwest entered into its first domestic codesharing arrangement with ATA, which enabled Southwest Airlines to serve ATA markets in Hawaii, Washington D.C., and New York City. Some years earlier, Southwest had a short-lived traditional codeshare arrangement with Icelandair at Baltimore/Washington International Airport.

In late 2005, ATA secured $100 million in committed financing from the firm of MatlinPatterson, and Southwest's original deal with ATA was modified such that Southwest no longer retained the 27.5% stake (or any other financial interest), in ATA. The codeshare arrangement was expanded, with some internal controversy, to include all of ATA's domestic destinations and more than 60 of Southwest's 63 destinations. In 2006, Southwest's pilot union approved a codeshare sideletter to their contract with limitations on the growth of this and other codeshare agreements. While these restrictions today are minor, outsourcing remains a growing concern in the unions' current contract negotiations.

In 2006, Southwest Airlines (Flight Code WN) began marketing ATA's two-letter TZ Coded Flights. ATA's dependence on the Southwest network continued to grow in 2006 to where ATA offered over 70 flights a week to Hawaii from Southwest's focus cities in PHX, LAS, LAX, and OAK. Additional connecting service was available to many other cities across the United States. Plans had been announced for ATA to offer exclusive international service for Southwest by 2010. In 2006, ATA announced its intention to purchase nine widebody DC-10 aircraft from Northwest Airlines. Southwest took over all ground operations for ATA at MDW, OAK, PHX, LAX, and LAS. These contracts provided that Southwest ramp personnel would now handle all ground operations for ATA (loading of aircraft, ground servicing, etc.). The details of these contracts were not made public, but represented Southwest's and ATA's growing codeshare relationship.

In February 2005, after J. George Mikelsons stepped down as CEO of ATA Airlines, John Denison, Southwest's former Chief Financial Officer took over. Effective January 1, 2007, Denison turned things over to Subodh Karnik, who became president and chief executive officer. Denison remained Chairman of Global Aero Logistics Inc., and was renamed as interim President and CEO when Subodh Karnik stepped down in March 2008.[42][43][44]

Livery

In ATA Airlines' 35-year history, the airline had three different mainline liveries and two special liveries.

Mainline liveries and logos

Final (flag)

ATA's last livery, known as the "Flag Livery", was introduced when the airline announced rapid expansion in 2001. It is primarily white with "ATA" painted on both sides of the aircraft. The company logo was also slanted upward on the aircraft tail resembling a flag. There was a gold stripe that spanned across the outward side of the engines and nacelles, and the winglets (on the 737-800s) were blue on the outside and unpainted on the inside. This livery was first introduced on ATA's new 737-800 and 757-300 aircraft and while it has been integrated onto some of ATA's 757-200s, it was never painted on any of ATA's 727s which were retired in late 2001.

Vacation / Holiday (palm tree)

At the time of ATA's demise, many 757-200s and some Lockheed L-1011s still carried the airline's previous livery. The "Palm Tree Livery", which was introduced in 1996, was also primarily white with "ATA" painted on both sides of the aircraft; the letters were painted in a "bubble-like" fashion. There was a palm tree and a sun on the tail, as well as "ATA" in small letters. The engine nacelles were painted blue, with the outboard side of each nacelle displaying a stylized sun. This livery, introduced to emphasize ATA as a "vacation airline", was synonymous with the phrase "On ATA, You're on Vacation".

Original (runway)

ATA's original livery, known as the "Runway Livery", was introduced when the airline began passenger service in 1981. Because ATA's first aircraft were ex-American Airlines aircraft, ATA's original livery was based on American's livery. The livery featured three stripes running the length of the aircraft in the following order: gold, white, and blue. The words "American Trans Air" followed by ATA's "runway logo" were painted above the gold stripe on the fuselage. The aircraft tail also featured gold, white, and blue stripes along the bottom with a bigger ATA runway logo in the center. All of ATA's Boeing 707s, and a majority of the airline's 727s, 757-200s, and Lockheed L-1011s wore this livery at some point. This livery was painted on every ATA aircraft until 1996, making this ATA's longest lasting livery at 15 years.

Special liveries

 
ATA Airlines Boeing 757-200 (N520AT) and Boeing 727-200 (N772AT) in the 25th anniversary livery at MDW

Throughout ATA Airlines' history, the company had two dedicated paint schemes. In addition to these, ATA's first Boeing 737-800 had the words "American Dream" inscribed alongside the nose of the aircraft; it was the only aircraft in ATA's fleet to have those words written on it. Other schemes were used to celebrate the company's 25th anniversary, as well as a marketing deal with Hawaiian tour operator, Pleasant Hawaiian Holidays.

25th Anniversary

In 1998, ATA Airlines celebrated its 25th anniversary. The airline decided to commemorate the anniversary in a big way. In addition to a year-long celebration, two separate aircraft, N772AT (a Boeing 727-200) and N520AT (a Boeing 757-200), were given a special livery which was commonly referred to as the "25th Anniversary Scheme". The design featured the entire airplane painted blue with "25th Anniversary" painted in large gold writing near the front of the aircraft fuselage. The aircraft tail featured "ATA" in gold lettering with pieces of confetti scattered around the ATA logo. Red, orange, pink, and yellow streamers adorned the sides of the fuselage, as well as the engines.

Pleasant Hawaiian Holidays

In 1994, ATA partnered with tour operator Pleasant Hawaiian Holidays, which was the largest tour operator flying to Hawaii. To promote the alliance, several L-1011s were adorned in a "Hawaiian livery". The "Pleasant Hawaiian Holidays" livery has appeared only on two types of ATA's aircraft: the Lockheed L-1011, and later, the Boeing 757-300. The livery had two different forms; the more extravagant was painted on the Lockheed L-1011s. The livery was primarily white and featured "ATA" in big bubble letters near the front of the aircraft, and "Pleasant Hawaiian Holidays" spelled out after "ATA" near the top of the fuselage. Like the mainline livery, the engines were painted with a sun. The livery basically resembled the "Palm Tree Livery" that mainline aircraft adorned at the time. There was one big difference. "Hawaii" was spelled out in large letters horizontally across the aircraft tail. After the L-1011s were removed from scheduled service in 2002, two Boeing 757-300s were painted in the Pleasant Hawaiian Holidays livery; the elaborate TriStar livery was replaced with a toned-down livery. The new livery was ATA's current livery with the words "Pleasant Holidays" painted in small letters near the front of the fuselage. This livery and ATA's partnership with Pleasant Hawaiian Holidays was terminated in 2005 when Pleasant Hawaiian Holidays signed a larger network deal with United Airlines.

Incidents and accidents

On May 12, 1996, a Boeing 727-290, N775AT, operated as American Trans Air flight 406, experienced a decompression at 33,000 feet. The flight, which was bound for St. Petersburg, Florida, made an emergency landing at the Indianapolis International Airport, Indianapolis, Indiana.[45]

On August 10, 1986, an ATA DC-10-40 parked at the ramp at Chicago O'Hare International Airport was destroyed by fire due to a mishandled loose oxygen canister. There were no fatalities.

Gallery

See also

References

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  5. ^ (Press release). ATA Airlines. April 3, 2008. Archived from the original on May 16, 2008. Retrieved April 4, 2008.
  6. ^ Ohira, Rod (April 3, 2008). "Shocked Honolulu workers got last ATA flight out". USA Today. Retrieved April 25, 2010.
  7. ^ . AVStop.com. Archived from the original on July 31, 2014. Retrieved March 2, 2014.
  8. ^ Published: July 29, 1990 (July 29, 1990). "ATA begins flights to Latvia (1990)". New York Times. Retrieved August 9, 2013.
  9. ^ October 1, 1993, OAG Desktop Flight Guide, International Edition, New York JFK & Lagos flight schedules
  10. ^ http://www.departedflights.com, 1994-2004 American Trans Air - ATA route maps
  11. ^ [1][dead link]
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  13. ^ "TZ receives 1,500th 737NG". Airliners.net. April 5, 2008. Retrieved August 9, 2013.
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  15. ^ (PDF). Ata.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on December 3, 2007. Retrieved August 9, 2013.
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External links

airlines, this, article, about, defunct, american, airline, present, iranian, airline, iran, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged,. This article is about the defunct American airline For the present day Iranian airline see ATA Airlines Iran This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources ATA Airlines news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message ATA Airlines Inc formerly known as American Trans Air and commonly referred to as ATA was an American low cost scheduled service and charter airline based in Indianapolis Indiana 1 ATA operated scheduled passenger flights throughout the U S mainland and Hawaii Puerto Rico and Portugal as well as military and commercial charter flights around the world In its early days the airline flew charters on a worldwide basis and had bases in Chicago Detroit New York Indianapolis Oakland and Milwaukee Later when it entered scheduled service the airline maintained focus cities at Chicago Midway International Airport Honolulu International Airport and Oakland International Airport ATA AirlinesIATA ICAO CallsignTZ AMT AMTRANFoundedFebruary 1973 1973 02 as Ambassadair Ceased operationsApril 3 2008 2008 04 03 HubsIndianapolisFocus citiesChicago MidwayHonoluluOaklandFrequent flyer programATA Travel AwardsSubsidiariesATA Connection 1993 2008 Chicago Express Airlines 1993 2005 Parent companyGlobal Aviation Holdings 2002 2008 HeadquartersIndianapolis Indiana U S Key peopleJ George Mikelsons founder The airline s parent company New ATA Holdings Inc the successor to ATA Holdings Inc which was also once known as Amtran later changed its name to Global Aero Logistics Inc and purchased World Air Holdings Inc for 315 million in an all cash transaction with the financial backing of the investment firm MatlinPatterson World Air Holdings Inc owned and operated North American Airlines and World Airways as two separate US certified air carriers ATA was North America s largest charter airline and until its shutdown transported more troops for the United States military than any other commercial airline On April 2 2008 ATA filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection 2 ATA then announced it was ceasing all services effective 4 00 am EDT Thursday April 3 2008 3 citing the unexpected loss of a major contract for its military charter business as a subcontractor of FedEx Express 4 along with recent increases in jet fuel prices 5 Red eye flights in the air at the time of the announcement proceeded to their destinations Flight 4586 from Honolulu to Phoenix was the last ATA flight departing almost two hours late at 12 10 am HST 6 arriving April 3 2008 at 8 48 am MST Southwest Airlines owns and retains all ownership of the operating certificate and all assets held by ATA Airlines including trademarks logos etc These were purchased for 7 5 million by Southwest while ATA was operating under bankruptcy protection 7 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early years 1 2 Expansion 1 2 1 Chicago Express ATA Connection 1 2 2 American Trans Air 1 3 First bankruptcy 1 4 Final years 1 4 1 2006 1 4 2 2007 1 4 3 2008 1 4 4 2010 1 5 Second bankruptcy and demise 2 Destinations 3 ATA Connection destinations 3 1 USALatin Sky 4 Fleet 4 1 Fleet details at time of shutdown 4 2 Previously retired fleet 5 Affinity programs 5 1 ATA Travel Awards 5 2 ATA Airlines FlightBank 6 Service 7 Codeshare agreements 7 1 Southwest Airlines 8 Livery 8 1 Mainline liveries and logos 8 1 1 Final flag 8 1 2 Vacation Holiday palm tree 8 1 3 Original runway 8 2 Special liveries 8 2 1 25th Anniversary 8 2 2 Pleasant Hawaiian Holidays 9 Incidents and accidents 10 Gallery 11 See also 12 References 13 External linksHistory EditEarly years Edit Logo of ATA Connection 2000 2001 ATA was established in August 1973 as American Trans Air ATA to provide aircraft for Ambassadair Travel Club Its first aircraft was a Boeing 720 named Miss Indy with a second Boeing 720 Spirit of Indiana added in 1978 ATA received its common air carrier certificate in March 1981 Operations started as a charter carrier in 1981 with a fleet of eight Boeing 707s based in Indianapolis Indiana In 1983 American Trans Air introduced its first McDonnell Douglas DC 10 a series 10 followed in 1984 by a long range series 40 Amtran Inc was founded by owner J George Mikelsons in 1984 as the holding company for Ambassadair ATA and any future subsidiaries The airline replaced the 707s with Boeing 727 100 trijets in 1984 and added Rolls Royce powered Lockheed L 1011 TriStar wide body jetliners most of which were ex Delta Air Lines and TWA in 1985 and Boeing 757 200s in 1989 ATA was an all charter airline flying to destinations all over the world American Trans Air started its first scheduled service in 1986 between Indianapolis Indiana Indianapolis International Airport and Fort Myers Florida Southwest Florida International Airport Expansion Edit In 1990 ATA began scheduled nonstop service from New York JFK Airport to Belfast Northern Ireland in the United Kingdom with continuing direct one stop service to Riga Latvia with Boeing 757 200 aircraft 8 The founder of ATA is of Latvian ancestry The Latvia service was unprofitable and was discontinued after a few years ATA performed services for the United States Department of Defense and US military during the 1991 Gulf War transporting 108 000 military personnel on 494 missions for Operation Desert Storm and yet again during Iraqi Freedom and Enduring Freedom with the activation of the Civil Reserve Air Fleet CRAF During these periodic activations ATA flight crews often and routinely spent as many as 19 hours aboard ATA aircraft in support of U S troops and the overall national defense missions ATA s L 1011 aircraft were also chartered by the Department of Defense to fly personnel and their families between Philadelphia International Airport and Lajes Field Naval Air Station Sigonella Aviano Air Base and Incirlik Air Base called Freedom Flights by personnel returning to the U S from these overseas installations In February 1991 ATA won a contract for daily 727 100 shuttle operations between Nellis Air Force Base and Tonopah Test Range in Nevada This particular contract formerly operated by defunct Key Airlines was awarded to ATA and ended in late 1992 when Tonopah F 117 Stealth Fighter operations ceased The 727 100s were replaced with Boeing 727 200s in 1993 Also in 1993 according to the Official Airline Guide OAG ATA was operating scheduled passenger service between New York JFK Airport and Lagos Nigeria via a stop at Santa Maria Island in the Azores with a Lockheed L 1011 TriStar wide body jetliner 9 By the mid 1990s ATA began focusing on increasing its domestic scheduled services including Hawaii as well as international routes to Mexico and the Caribbean based on leisure travel and began using the slogan On ATA You re on Vacation 10 The airline began operating a sizable hub at Chicago Midway International Airport and offered scheduled services throughout the United States as well as flights to Hawaii Mexico and the Caribbean while continuing extensive military and government contract air charter flights ATA also began a twice weekly charter service from Orlando to both London Gatwick Airport and Manchester in the UK All services operated via Gander in eastern Canada where the aircraft would refuel Most seats were reserved by UK tour operator Travel City Direct who specialized in Florida fly drive vacations Travel City boasted higher luggage allowances complimentary meals and snacks plus leather seats Remaining seats were often filled by American military staff Services to the UK ceased in 2002 when Travel City switched to another airline Air Atlanta Europe In 2000 ATA placed a large order for 39 new Boeing 737 800 aircraft and 12 Boeing 757 300 aircraft to expand its fleet for additional flights from Midway That year the airline also began scheduled flights to Mexico and was designated as a major carrier by the United States Department of Transportation In June 2001 ATA received the delivery of their first new aircraft Boeing 737 800 registered as N301TZ In August of that same year the airline received the delivery of another new type of aircraft the Boeing 757 300 whom ATA became the North American Launch customer of this particular type 11 ATA s first 757 300 was registered N550TZ and the airline also introduced a new logo on these new airplanes replacing ATA as a vacation airline and putting more emphasis on ATA as a business airline After 2001 the 737 800 with their ETOPS capabilities became the fleet s mainstay of ATA s medium haul operations from the west coast to and from Hawaii and Mexico Chicago Express ATA Connection Edit In 2000 ATA and Chicago Express Airlines launched ATA Connection a regional affiliate of ATA Airlines that would link regional mid western cities with ATA s Chicago hub and Indianapolis focus city Chicago Express was purchased for 1 9 million on June 1 1999 and operated as a separate subsidiary After ATA entered bankruptcy in late 2004 a decision was made to end ATA s regional airline service and terminate Chicago Express ATA Connection resulting in the permanent layoff of its entire staff Chicago Express assets were auctioned off ATA terminated its ATA Connection turboprop service and Chicago Express ceased all operations on March 28 2005 American Trans Air Edit The similarity of the American Trans Air and AirTran Airways names to those of other airlines caused confusion among customers and the general public The airline had been known informally as ATA from early in its history and from the mid 1990s on had been advertised as such so in 2002 the name of the holding company was changed to ATA Holdings Corp In 2003 the name of the airline itself was changed to ATA Airlines Inc In 2007 ATA Holdings changed names again this time to Global Aero Logistics Inc immediately after the acquisition of World Air Holdings First bankruptcy Edit After the economic upheaval caused by the 9 11 attacks upon the airline industry of the United States ATA and its then parent company AMTRAN suffered substantial financial hardships Among the small group of airlines to receive ATSB backing from the US Government this alone proved not enough for American Trans Air to remain out of reorganization caused from the hardships and ill timing of the refleeting to 737 800s just prior to the terrorism attacks On October 26 2004 ATA Holdings and its subsidiaries filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection Eventually shareholders of ATA Holdings stock lost all their money and received no shares 12 The stock previously traded on the Nasdaq stock exchange as ATAH was delisted In 2004 AirTran Airways agreed to pay 90 million for ATA s 14 gates at Chicago Midway Southwest made a higher bid and AirTran s deal fell apart In December 2004 ATA entered into an agreement with Southwest Airlines to transfer six gates at Chicago Midway International Airport and 27 of non voting stock in exchange for a cash influx and codeshare agreement In the beginning of 2005 the airline drastically reduced flights at its Indianapolis hub to only three destinations and centered scheduled flights at Chicago Midway International Airport in order to complement Southwest Airlines codeshare flights ATA also focused on serving markets that were business oriented and did not have Southwest service such as San Francisco Dallas Fort Worth and New York LaGuardia Additionally ATA began offering point to point service not connecting to its Midway Hub as to benefit other Southwest Airlines focus cities such as Las Vegas Orlando and Phoenix with connections to non Southwest destinations such as Denver and Hawaii Southwest CEO Gary Kelly said that revenues were up nearly 20 due to the new codesharing agreement On March 28 2005 ATA shut down its commuter airline service ATA Connection operated by Chicago Express Airlines via a codeshare agreement and later sold the assets to a private buyer ATA Connection had initially operated British Aerospace Jetstream 31 turboprops which were then replaced with Saab 340B turboprops and was providing passenger feed for ATA at Chicago Midway Airport via a code sharing agreement In attempt to reduce operating costs the airline also downsized its fleet by returning twenty Boeing 737 800 and eight Boeing 757 300 aircraft along with numerous Boeing 757 200 aircraft The eight 757 300 airframes were subsequently refurbished by Boeing the lessor and then leased to Continental Airlines In mid 2005 ATA entered an agreement to lease three ex United Airlines Boeing 737 300 aircraft Three 737 300s entered service with ATA in late November 2005 Due to high lease rates the three 737 300s were taken out of service in November 2007 and returned to their owners In September 2005 ATA outsourced all its Heavy Maintenance Checks to overseas and domestic contractors Also planned was an agreement with Continental Airlines to trade ATA s remaining four 757 300 aircraft for four 737 700 aircraft In early October 2005 ATA terminated these negotiations due to the Boeing machinists strike which would delay the delivery of the aircraft On October 13 2005 ATA announced major service reductions ending flights to Boston Minneapolis St Paul and Newark In addition the planned addition of flights to Miami and Sarasota Florida was canceled This ended Southwest codeshare service to Minneapolis and Newark Later that year on November 1 2005 a second round of flight cuts were announced including the suspension of scheduled service to Denver San Juan and their headquarters and former hub Indianapolis On November 17 2005 ATA Airlines received court approval to sell its Ambassadair Travel Club division to Grueninger Cruises and Tours In a third round of cuts announced on December 6 2005 ATA announced that it would discontinue service to three additional cities ATA would suspend flights from Chicago Midway International Airport to San Francisco Orlando and Fort Myers in late April 2006 Following these cancellations ATA would have only 18 daily scheduled departures from its former Chicago hub and 52 scheduled departures company wide Moreover the company would be left with only 1 gate at Midway down from its previous total of 14 surrendering the balance to Southwest or the city On December 15 2005 ATA announced an expansion of its codeshare agreement with Southwest Airlines ATA Airlines would expand codesharing with Southwest Airlines between Dallas Fort Worth International Airport and cities in the Southwest system that connect via Chicago Midway International Airport In January 2006 MatlinPatterson and certain pre bankruptcy creditors invested over 100 million in ATA and took the company private also taking over ATA Holdings Inc Following the transaction on February 28 2006 ATA Airlines emerged from Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection However the airline was still shrinking ATA continued to return more aircraft including the 1 500th Boeing 737 Next Generation produced N333TZ which was delivered new to ATA on May 14 2004 13 Final years Edit This section is in list format but may read better as prose You can help by converting this section if appropriate Editing help is available July 2012 Following its first emergence from Chapter 11 protection ATA made several efforts to return to profitability but due to the rising cost of fuel and negative pressures on ticket price ATA was unable to recover and ended operations on April 2 2008 These late efforts included 2006 Edit ATA commenced service between Houston s William P Hobby Airport HOU and New York s LaGuardia Airport LGA ATA initiated new flights out of Oakland California Ontario California and Hilo Hawaii on April 28 2006 In support of its codeshare agreement with Southwest Airlines ATA moved its operations in the greater San Francisco area from San Francisco International Airport to Oakland International Airport ATA introduced several new flights from the West Coast of the United States to and from Hawaii including the only nonstop service between Hilo Hawaii and the mainland United States ATA announced they would purchase nine of Northwest Airlines remaining DC 10 30s These aircraft were to be used on military troop charters replacing ATA s aging L1011 500 fleet ATA planned to enter seven of the planes into service mothballing the remainder for parts 2007 Edit ATA Airlines announced that Subodh Karnik would become ATA s new president and chief executive officer CEO replacing John G Denison who continued as ATA s chairman of the board of directors ATA for the first time in three years added several flights to and from its Chicago MDW hub ATA s parent company ATA Holdings announced on April 5 2007 that it would change its name to Global Aero Logistics Inc in a move that according to then CEO Subodh Karnik better reflects the company s diverse worldwide operations 14 That same day Global Aero Logistics Inc announced an agreement to acquire World Air Holdings Inc and its subsidiaries World Airways and North American Airlines for 315 million in cash Each airline as stated in the official announcement was to keep operating independently 15 With the acquisition of World Airways and the holding companies organizational name change to Global Aero Logistics it was decided that three of the planned nine DC 10s acquired by ATA would be transferred directly to World Airways operating certificate resulting in employee layoffs at ATA Starting in October 2007 ATA announced they would terminate service on several routes affecting Chicago IL Chicago Midway International Airport Washington D C Washington D C Reagan National Airport New York NY LaGuardia Airport and Ontario CA LA Ontario International Airport These service cuts left ATA operating to four destinations from its former Chicago hub 2008 Edit In March 2008 Subodh Karnik resigned as CEO and former CEO and chairman of the board John G Denison served as acting CEO until ATA s demise No public reason was given for Karnik s departure but the airline s financial problems coupled with the poor execution of the purchase of several DC 10s for use as military charters was rumored to have been a factor 2010 Edit A federal jury for the U S District Court in Indianapolis says FedEx must pay 66 million to now defunct ATA Airlines saying the package delivery company broke a contract that ultimately pushed ATA into bankruptcy 22 million for lost profit in 2008 and 44 million for lost profit in 2009 However in December 2011 a Federal appellate court in Chicago reversed the 66 million judgment against FedEx 16 Second bankruptcy and demise Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message Flight crew of the last ATA Airlines revenue flight AMT4586 after completing a segment from Honolulu to Phoenix Captain Mark Groover and First Officer Philip Collier On April 2 2008 ATA declared bankruptcy and ceased all operations This sudden end came about after FedEx abruptly canceled ATA s longstanding military charter contract Combined with a significant increase in the price of jet fuel ATA did not have enough capital to stay in business It was the third of four U S airlines to announce a complete shut down in the week of March 30 2008 after Aloha Airlines did so on March 30 Minnesota based charter Champion Air did so March 31 and Skybus Airlines terminated service on April 5 The shutdown of ATA took effect at 4 00 am EDT Thursday April 3 2008 17 although some flights were airborne at the time and continued to their destinations with the final arrival being ATA flight 4586 from Honolulu to Phoenix which landed at 8 46 am MST or seven hours and 46 minutes after the announced shutdown 18 At the time of the shutdown ATA employed around 2 300 people all of whom were permanently laid off According to press reports up to 10 000 passengers were affected and many of them had to scramble for help on several airlines Most of them however had to pay for new tickets On November 19 2008 Southwest Airlines announced their intent to acquire the remaining assets of ATA Airlines The 7 5 million bid includes the rights to 14 slots at LaGuardia Airport that belonged to ATA as well as various other assets such as trademarks and logos Southwest specifically stated their bid doesn t include any aircraft facilities or employees of ATA 19 Destinations EditAt the time of its shutdown ATA Airlines served 13 destinations throughout Mexico and the United States All routes were discontinued on April 2 2008 due to ATA s bankruptcy filing with the exception of some en route red eye flights which arrived on April 3 20 With ATA s additions of Kona and Lihue Hawaii in June 2007 the airline was serving more Hawaiian destinations nonstop from the mainland United States than any other airline in the world at the time 21 Scheduled passenger service to a number of destinations listed below was discontinued prior to ATA s bankruptcy 22 At its peak ATA served 35 destinations worldwide Some destination information has been taken from ATA route maps from 1994 to 2003 23 Albania Tirana Tirana International Airport Nene Tereza service ended for unknown reasonsCaribbean excluding U S territories Aruba Queen Beatrix International Airport service ended prior to bankruptcy Grand Cayman Owen Roberts International Airport service ended prior to bankruptcy Montego Bay Jamaica Sangster International Airport service ended prior to bankruptcy Nassau Bahamas Lynden Pindling International Airport service ended prior to bankruptcy Punta Cana Dominican Republic Punta Cana International Airport service ended prior to bankruptcyIreland Dublin Dublin Airport service ended prior to bankruptcy Shannon Shannon Airport service ended prior to bankruptcyLatvia Riga Riga International Airport service ended prior to bankruptcyMexico Cancun Cancun International Airport service originally scheduled to end June 7 2008 Guadalajara Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla Guadalajara International Airport service originally scheduled to end June 7 2008 Ixtapa Ixtapa Zihuatanejo International Airport service ended prior to bankruptcy Puerto Vallarta Lic Gustavo Diaz Ordaz International Airport service ended prior to bankruptcy Leon Guanajuato Bajio International Airport 1999 shuttle service for GM Silao plant launchNigeria Lagos Murtala Muhammed International Airport service ended prior to bankruptcyNorthern Ireland UK Belfast Belfast International Airport service ended prior to bankruptcyUnited States Boston Logan International Airport service ended prior to bankruptcy Charlotte North Carolina Charlotte Douglas International Airport service ended prior to bankruptcy Chicago Chicago Midway International Airport hub service originally scheduled to end June 7 2008 Dallas Fort Worth Dallas Fort Worth International Airport service originally scheduled to end April 14 2008 Denver Denver International Airport service ended prior to bankruptcy Ft Lauderdale Florida Fort Lauderdale Hollywood International Airport service ended prior to bankruptcy Fort Myers Florida Southwest Florida International Airport service ended prior to bankruptcy Hilo Hawaii Hilo International Airport Honolulu Hawaii Honolulu International Airport focus city Houston Texas George Bush Intercontinental Airport service ended prior to bankruptcy Houston Texas William P Hobby Airport Indianapolis Indianapolis International Airport hub service ended prior to bankruptcy ATA was also headquartered in Indianapolis Kahului Hawaii Kahului Airport focus city Kailua Hawaii Kona International Airport Las Vegas McCarran International Airport Lihue Hawaii Lihu e Airport Los Angeles Los Angeles International Airport Miami Florida Miami International Airport Milwaukee General Mitchell International Airport service ended prior to bankruptcy Minneapolis Minneapolis Saint Paul International Airport service ended prior to bankruptcy Newark New Jersey Newark Liberty International Airport service ended prior to bankruptcy New York City John F Kennedy International Airport service ended prior to bankruptcy New York City LaGuardia Airport Oakland California Oakland International Airport focus city Ontario California Ontario International Airport service ended prior to bankruptcy Orlando Orlando International Airport Philadelphia Philadelphia International Airport service ended prior to bankruptcy Phoenix Arizona Sky Harbor International Airport Pittsburgh Pittsburgh International Airport service ended prior to bankruptcy Portland Oregon Portland International Airport service ended prior to bankruptcy St Louis Missouri St Louis Lambert International Airport service ended prior to bankruptcy St Petersburg Clearwater Florida St Petersburg Clearwater International Airport service ended prior to bankruptcy Salt Lake City Utah Salt Lake City International Airport service ended prior to bankruptcy San Diego California San Diego International Airport San Francisco San Francisco International Airport San Jose California San Jose International Airport Sarasota Florida Sarasota Bradenton International Airport service ended prior to bankruptcy Seattle SeaTac International Airport Tampa Florida Tampa International Airport service ended prior to bankruptcy Washington DC Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport West Palm Beach Florida Palm Beach International Airport service ended prior to bankruptcyU S insular areas in the Caribbean St Croix U S Virgin Islands Henry E Rohlsen Airport service ended prior to bankruptcy St Thomas U S Virgin Islands Cyril E King International Airport service ended prior to bankruptcy San Juan Puerto Rico Luis Munoz Marin International Airport service ended prior to bankruptcyATA also flew charter flights to London Gatwick Airport London Stansted Airport and Manchester UK via technical stops in Gander Newfoundland in Canada ATA Connection destinations EditCommuter air carrier Chicago Express Airlines operating as the ATA Connection served the following destinations with British Aerospace BAe Jetstream 31 and or Saab 340B commuter turboprop aircraft from Chicago Midway Airport which was an ATA hub 24 Cedar Rapids Iowa Chicago Midway Airport hub Dayton Ohio Des Moines Iowa Evansville Indiana Flint Michigan Grand Rapids MI Green Bay Indianapolis Lansing MI Lexington KY Madison WI Milwaukee WI Moline IL South Bend Indiana Springfield IL Toledo Ohio Fort Wayne Indiana Gary Indiana slated to open in 2005 however the cessation of operations prevented this new serviceUSALatin Sky Edit On March 15 2008 ATA was supposed to resume service to Miami International Airport and fly scheduled flights to Central America for the first time with the addition of flights to Guatemala City and San Jose Costa Rica 25 USALatin Sky was to market the airline s flights to Central American destinations from Miami 26 As part of the deal ATA Airlines would have based a single Boeing 737 800 aircraft in Miami to fly the routes to Guatemala City and San Jose 27 Due to problems with ATA and USALatin Sky the service was canceled prior to commencing and no flights under USALatin Sky ever operated 28 Fleet EditAt the time of its shut down ATA had 29 aircraft 3 owned 26 leased in its fleet 29 At its largest in October 2004 the company operated a fleet of 82 short medium and long haul aircraft 30 ATA Airlines fleet Aircraft Total Passengers Routes NotesJ Y TotalBoeing 737 800 12 12 148175 160175 Medium long haul and charters Fleet contained the 1500th Boeing 737 Next Generation 31 Boeing 757 200 6 12 173200 185200 Long haul and chartersBoeing 757 300 4 247 247 Long haul and charters North American launch customer Aircraft subsequently acquired by Continental Airlines and then United Airlines after Continental merged in 2012 Lockheed L 1011 500 TriStar 3 0 283 283 Military chartersMcDonnell Douglas DC 10 30 4 0 318 318 Military chartersAs of August 2009 ATA s average fleet age was 13 5 years old 32 ATA s Boeing customer number was 3N Fleet details at time of shutdown Edit An ATA Lockheed L 1011 1 The aircraft registration and tail numbers of the ATA fleet include the following significant aircraft ATA received delivery of their first 737 800 N301TZ on June 4 2001 ATA received delivery of their first 757 200 N757AT on November 16 1989 ATA received delivery of their first 757 300 N550TZ on August 4 2001 ATA received delivery of their first L 1011 500 N163AT on July 28 1998 ATA received delivery of their first DC 10 30 N701TZ Freedom Bird on December 29 2006 ATA L 1011 100 N194AT crewed by FAs out of DFW was the last ATA aircraft to feature a lower galley 33 Previously retired fleet Edit ATA Airlines retired fleet Aircraft Year retired Replacement NotesBoeing 737 300 2007 NoneSaab 340B 2005 None Operated as ATA Connection by Chicago Express Airlines via a code sharing agreementBAe Jetstream 31 2001 None Operated as ATA Connection by Chicago Express Airlines via a code sharing agreementBoeing 727 200 2001 Boeing 737 800Boeing 757 300Lockheed L 1011 1 1998 Lockheed L 1011 500 Tristar The L 1011 was used for service to Hawaii as well as on other domestic routes in the U S Boeing 727 100 1993 Boeing 727 200Boeing 757 200McDonnell Douglas DC 10 40 1986 Lockheed L 1011 1 DC 10 written off after being destroyed by a ground fire atO Hare International Airport in 1986McDonnell Douglas DC 10 10 1986 Lockheed L 1011 1Boeing 707 1984 Boeing 727 100Boeing 720 1981 Boeing 707 Operated for AmbassadairATA ExecuJet a Part 135 air taxi subsidiary of ATA Holdings the parent company of ATA Airline also retired the following aircraft in 2001 34 Bell 206L Long Ranger owned by ATA s founder J George Mikelsons Cessna Citation II Grumman Gulfstream I Learjet 35Affinity programs EditATA Travel Awards Edit Launched in 2003 ATA s frequent flyer program ATA Travel Awards offered one of the lowest thresholds for earning travel with the added benefit of allowing reward redemption free of blackout date restrictions After three roundtrips booked on the company s website customers earned a coach companion ticket on any flight operated by ATA Airlines throughout the contiguous United States All tickets booked online received double credit toward that particular trip versus purchasing through a telephone or travel agent While award availability to Hawaii was very limited travelers did earn twice the normal number of credits when they purchased airfare on Hawaii bound flights With the shutdown of operations ATA s frequent flyer programs were suspended and all earned points voided As a result of the recent enhancements in ATA s codeshare agreement with Southwest Airlines those purchasing flights directly from ATA reservations and ata com were given the option of earning points toward either ATA Travel Awards or Southwest s Rapid Rewards When ATA ceased operations the relationship with Southwest Airlines was effectively terminated ATA Airlines FlightBank Edit Launched in 2006 ATA created a unique program called FlightBank 35 a rewards program for the frequent traveler between the U S mainland and the Hawaiian Islands 36 For a set fee the bank provided the traveler with a flexible number of flight credits that could be used over the course of a year at vastly reduced savings and with no blackout dates for advance bookings The Flightbank program was preceded by the airpass program which was run informally by Pleasant Hawaiian Holidays from 2000 to 2006 With the shutdown of operations ATA s FlightBank program was also suspended Service EditAlthough ATA Airlines was marketed and advertised as a low cost carrier it maintained many of the features which marked this airline as full service at least by the standards American and European travelers have become accustomed to Unlike many discount airline carriers in Europe ATA offered complimentary features such as reclining airline seats on all of its airplanes leather seats on most of its airplanes adjustable head rest wings on many of its planes limited AVOD audio visual on demand systems complimentary assigned seating complimentary checked luggage complimentary soft drinks and non alcoholic beverage complimentary bookings via website reservations complimentary inter airline baggage connection transfers and frequent flyer programs ATA sold snacks and snack packs under the label Skyway Cafe Upon military and most charter flights ATA provided fully complimentary airline meals or depending upon flight length snacks On some flights it provided in flight entertainment such as documentaries comedies classic television music videos and music ATA aircraft included up to eight audio channels Some flights over five hours included films 37 Codeshare agreements EditAt the time of its shutdown ATA Airlines had a codeshare agreement with Southwest Airlines As far back as 2001 ATA explored a passenger sharing agreement with a now defunct airline called Access Air which also had midwestern United States flight operations This agreement was short lived due to the tedious economic condition of this post deregulation start up carrier 38 39 40 41 The ATA Connection service flown by commuter air carrier Chicago Express Airlines was also operated on a codeshare basis ATA was not involved in an alliance Southwest Airlines Edit ATA Airlines one of Southwest Airlines main competitors in the Chicago market historically operated out of Midway Airport alongside Southwest After ATA declared bankruptcy in 2004 Southwest injected capital into ATA that among other things would have resulted in Southwest s 27 5 ownership stake in ATA upon their exit from Chapter 11 bankruptcy proceedings In a departure from its traditional go it alone strategy citation needed Southwest entered into its first domestic codesharing arrangement with ATA which enabled Southwest Airlines to serve ATA markets in Hawaii Washington D C and New York City Some years earlier Southwest had a short lived traditional codeshare arrangement with Icelandair at Baltimore Washington International Airport In late 2005 ATA secured 100 million in committed financing from the firm of MatlinPatterson and Southwest s original deal with ATA was modified such that Southwest no longer retained the 27 5 stake or any other financial interest in ATA The codeshare arrangement was expanded with some internal controversy to include all of ATA s domestic destinations and more than 60 of Southwest s 63 destinations In 2006 Southwest s pilot union approved a codeshare sideletter to their contract with limitations on the growth of this and other codeshare agreements While these restrictions today are minor outsourcing remains a growing concern in the unions current contract negotiations In 2006 Southwest Airlines Flight Code WN began marketing ATA s two letter TZ Coded Flights ATA s dependence on the Southwest network continued to grow in 2006 to where ATA offered over 70 flights a week to Hawaii from Southwest s focus cities in PHX LAS LAX and OAK Additional connecting service was available to many other cities across the United States Plans had been announced for ATA to offer exclusive international service for Southwest by 2010 In 2006 ATA announced its intention to purchase nine widebody DC 10 aircraft from Northwest Airlines Southwest took over all ground operations for ATA at MDW OAK PHX LAX and LAS These contracts provided that Southwest ramp personnel would now handle all ground operations for ATA loading of aircraft ground servicing etc The details of these contracts were not made public but represented Southwest s and ATA s growing codeshare relationship In February 2005 after J George Mikelsons stepped down as CEO of ATA Airlines John Denison Southwest s former Chief Financial Officer took over Effective January 1 2007 Denison turned things over to Subodh Karnik who became president and chief executive officer Denison remained Chairman of Global Aero Logistics Inc and was renamed as interim President and CEO when Subodh Karnik stepped down in March 2008 42 43 44 Livery EditIn ATA Airlines 35 year history the airline had three different mainline liveries and two special liveries Mainline liveries and logos Edit Final flag Edit ATA s last livery known as the Flag Livery was introduced when the airline announced rapid expansion in 2001 It is primarily white with ATA painted on both sides of the aircraft The company logo was also slanted upward on the aircraft tail resembling a flag There was a gold stripe that spanned across the outward side of the engines and nacelles and the winglets on the 737 800s were blue on the outside and unpainted on the inside This livery was first introduced on ATA s new 737 800 and 757 300 aircraft and while it has been integrated onto some of ATA s 757 200s it was never painted on any of ATA s 727s which were retired in late 2001 Vacation Holiday palm tree Edit At the time of ATA s demise many 757 200s and some Lockheed L 1011s still carried the airline s previous livery The Palm Tree Livery which was introduced in 1996 was also primarily white with ATA painted on both sides of the aircraft the letters were painted in a bubble like fashion There was a palm tree and a sun on the tail as well as ATA in small letters The engine nacelles were painted blue with the outboard side of each nacelle displaying a stylized sun This livery introduced to emphasize ATA as a vacation airline was synonymous with the phrase On ATA You re on Vacation Original runway Edit ATA s original livery known as the Runway Livery was introduced when the airline began passenger service in 1981 Because ATA s first aircraft were ex American Airlines aircraft ATA s original livery was based on American s livery The livery featured three stripes running the length of the aircraft in the following order gold white and blue The words American Trans Air followed by ATA s runway logo were painted above the gold stripe on the fuselage The aircraft tail also featured gold white and blue stripes along the bottom with a bigger ATA runway logo in the center All of ATA s Boeing 707s and a majority of the airline s 727s 757 200s and Lockheed L 1011s wore this livery at some point This livery was painted on every ATA aircraft until 1996 making this ATA s longest lasting livery at 15 years Special liveries Edit ATA Airlines Boeing 757 200 N520AT and Boeing 727 200 N772AT in the 25th anniversary livery at MDW Throughout ATA Airlines history the company had two dedicated paint schemes In addition to these ATA s first Boeing 737 800 had the words American Dream inscribed alongside the nose of the aircraft it was the only aircraft in ATA s fleet to have those words written on it Other schemes were used to celebrate the company s 25th anniversary as well as a marketing deal with Hawaiian tour operator Pleasant Hawaiian Holidays 25th Anniversary Edit In 1998 ATA Airlines celebrated its 25th anniversary The airline decided to commemorate the anniversary in a big way In addition to a year long celebration two separate aircraft N772AT a Boeing 727 200 and N520AT a Boeing 757 200 were given a special livery which was commonly referred to as the 25th Anniversary Scheme The design featured the entire airplane painted blue with 25th Anniversary painted in large gold writing near the front of the aircraft fuselage The aircraft tail featured ATA in gold lettering with pieces of confetti scattered around the ATA logo Red orange pink and yellow streamers adorned the sides of the fuselage as well as the engines Pleasant Hawaiian Holidays Edit In 1994 ATA partnered with tour operator Pleasant Hawaiian Holidays which was the largest tour operator flying to Hawaii To promote the alliance several L 1011s were adorned in a Hawaiian livery The Pleasant Hawaiian Holidays livery has appeared only on two types of ATA s aircraft the Lockheed L 1011 and later the Boeing 757 300 The livery had two different forms the more extravagant was painted on the Lockheed L 1011s The livery was primarily white and featured ATA in big bubble letters near the front of the aircraft and Pleasant Hawaiian Holidays spelled out after ATA near the top of the fuselage Like the mainline livery the engines were painted with a sun The livery basically resembled the Palm Tree Livery that mainline aircraft adorned at the time There was one big difference Hawaii was spelled out in large letters horizontally across the aircraft tail After the L 1011s were removed from scheduled service in 2002 two Boeing 757 300s were painted in the Pleasant Hawaiian Holidays livery the elaborate TriStar livery was replaced with a toned down livery The new livery was ATA s current livery with the words Pleasant Holidays painted in small letters near the front of the fuselage This livery and ATA s partnership with Pleasant Hawaiian Holidays was terminated in 2005 when Pleasant Hawaiian Holidays signed a larger network deal with United Airlines Incidents and accidents EditOn May 12 1996 a Boeing 727 290 N775AT operated as American Trans Air flight 406 experienced a decompression at 33 000 feet The flight which was bound for St Petersburg Florida made an emergency landing at the Indianapolis International Airport Indianapolis Indiana 45 On August 10 1986 an ATA DC 10 40 parked at the ramp at Chicago O Hare International Airport was destroyed by fire due to a mishandled loose oxygen canister There were no fatalities Gallery Edit ATA Airlines Boeing 757 300 N550TZ at MCO ATA Airlines Boeing 737 800 N312TZ at LAS ATA Airlines Lockheed L 1011 N163AT ATA Airlines Boeing 757 200 N512AT in PHX ATA postcard circa 1999 showing a Boeing 757 in Vacation liverySee also EditList of defunct airlines of the United StatesReferences Edit ATA Facts Archived from the original on January 5 2016 Retrieved August 14 2015 ATA Airlines Chapter 11 Petition PDF PacerMonitor PacerMonitor Retrieved June 9 2016 Matthews Jim ATA Airlines Shuts Down Aviation Week April 3 2008 Retrieved on 2008 04 04 Raine George DeBare Ilana Baker Ilana ATA bankruptcy strands many fliers in Oakland San Francisco Chronicle April 4 2008 Retrieved on 2008 04 04 ATA Airlines Files for Chapter 11 and Discontinues Operations Following Cancellation of Key Military Charter Agreement Press release ATA Airlines April 3 2008 Archived from the original on May 16 2008 Retrieved April 4 2008 Ohira Rod April 3 2008 Shocked Honolulu workers got last ATA flight out USA Today Retrieved April 25 2010 ATA Airlines Formerly Known As American Trans Air AVStop com Archived from the original on July 31 2014 Retrieved March 2 2014 Published July 29 1990 July 29 1990 ATA begins flights to Latvia 1990 New York Times Retrieved August 9 2013 October 1 1993 OAG Desktop Flight Guide International Edition New York JFK amp Lagos flight schedules http www departedflights com 1994 2004 American Trans Air ATA route maps 1 dead link InsideIndianaBusiness com Report ATA Moves Closer to Emerging From Bankruptcy Insideindianabusiness com Archived from the original on October 29 2014 Retrieved August 9 2013 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a author has generic name help TZ receives 1 500th 737NG Airliners net April 5 2008 Retrieved August 9 2013 ATA Holding changes its name PDF Ata com Archived from the original PDF on December 3 2007 Retrieved August 9 2013 Global Aero Logistics acquisition of World Air Holdings PDF Ata com Archived from the original PDF on December 3 2007 Retrieved August 9 2013 Nearly 66M verdict against FedEx in ATA suit is reversed Indianapolis Star indystar com December 28 2011 Retrieved August 14 2015 2 Archived March 22 2012 at the Wayback Machine ATA Flight 4586 Flightaware com April 3 2008 Retrieved August 9 2013 3 Archived April 28 2010 at the Wayback Machine ATA Route Map Tz flightlookup com Archived from the original on February 20 2012 Retrieved August 9 2013 ATA serves most Hawaiian cities nonstop PDF Ata com Retrieved August 9 2013 TZwinter2003 Departedflights com Retrieved August 9 2013 http www departedflights com ATA American Trans Air route maps 1994 2003 http www departedflights com July 1 1986 May 1 1999 June 1 2001 ATA ATA Connection route maps ATA to return to MIA to serve GUA and SJO Airliners net Retrieved August 9 2013 4 Archived April 7 2015 at the Wayback Machine Notice Denying Registration of Trade Name Regulations gov December 17 2007 Prensa Libre Edicion electronica Economia Archived from the original on November 22 2008 ATA Airlines Fleet Fact Sheet PDF Ata com Retrieved August 9 2013 ATA Holdings Corporation Company Profile Information Business Description History Background Information on ATA Holdings Corporation www referenceforbusiness com Photos Boeing 737 83N Aircraft Pictures Airliners net April 5 2008 Retrieved August 9 2013 ATA Airlines Fleet Age Airfleets net Retrieved August 9 2013 ATA Airlines L1011 100 lower galley memories 1 YouTube Archived from the original on December 11 2021 Retrieved September 13 2017 ATA Airlines L1011 100 lower galley memories 2 YouTube Archived from the original on December 11 2021 Retrieved September 13 2017 ATA ExecuJet s aircraft fleet June 2 2004 Archived from the original on August 7 2007 Retrieved August 14 2015 ATA FlightBank Homepage March 31 2007 Archived from the original on March 22 2008 Retrieved August 14 2015 5 Archived April 2 2015 at the Wayback Machine CheapOair Summer Flight Bargains Ata com Retrieved August 14 2015 6 dead link FEATURE Coast to Coast on Corporate Coach AccessAir Targets the Business Traveler with No Advance Purchase and Reasonable Fares Free Online Library Thefreelibrary com September 15 1999 Retrieved August 9 2013 Ruan Inc offers funding for AccessAir s return to passenger services Archived from the original on June 20 2007 Retrieved October 28 2007 lt meta HTTP equiv Content Type content text HTML charset iso 8859 1 gt NameBright Coming Soon Archived from the original on February 24 2021 Retrieved October 28 2007 Karnik steps down as CEO Denison named interim President CEO Globalaerologistics com Archived from the original on June 23 2008 Retrieved August 9 2013 7 Archived May 11 2008 at the Wayback Machine American Eagle to sell Executive Airlines November 6 2002 NTSB Identification CHI96IA157 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to ATA Airlines ATA Airlines at the Wayback Machine archive index ATA Cargo at the Wayback Machine archive index ATA Execujet at the Wayback Machine archive index ATA discontinues flights files for bankruptcy MSNBC April 3 2008 Photo gallery of ATA pilotPortals United States Indiana Companies Aviation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title ATA Airlines amp oldid 1152769529, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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