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Northwest Airlines

Northwest Airlines Corp. (NWA) was a major American airline founded in 1926 and absorbed into Delta Air Lines by a merger that was approved in 2008. Northwest continued to operate under its own name and brand until the integration of the carriers was completed in 2010.[1] The merger made Delta the largest airline in the world until the American Airlines–US Airways merger in 2013.[2][3]

Northwest Airlines
IATA ICAO Callsign
NW NWA NORTHWEST
FoundedSeptember 1, 1926 (1926-09-01)
(as Northwest Airways)
Commenced operations
  • 1934 (1934)
    (as Northwest Airlines)
  • 1947 (1947)
    (as Northwest Orient Airlines)
  • September 30, 1986 (1986-09-30)
    (as Northwest Airlines)
Ceased operationsJanuary 31, 2010 (2010-01-31)
(merged into Delta Air Lines)
Hubs
Frequent-flyer programWorldPerks
Alliance
SubsidiariesNorthwest Airlink (1984–2009)
Fleet size320 incl. cargo
(at time of merger)
Parent companyDelta Air Lines, Inc. (2009–2010)
HeadquartersEagan, Minnesota
Key peopleRichard Anderson
(President & CEO)
Websitewww.nwa.com(Redirect URL)
2010-01-05 at the Wayback Machine

Northwest was headquartered in Eagan, Minnesota, near Minneapolis–Saint Paul International Airport. After World War II it became dominant in the trans-Pacific market with a hub in Tokyo, Japan (initially Haneda Airport, later Narita International Airport). In response to United Airlines' 1985 acquisition of Pan Am's Pacific routes, Northwest paid $884 million to purchase Republic Airlines and then established fortress hubs at Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport and Memphis International Airport. With this merger, NWA established the domestic network necessary to feed its well established Pacific routes. Lacking a significant presence in Europe, in 1993 it began a strategic alliance with KLM and a jointly coordinated European hub at Amsterdam Airport Schiphol.

Prior to its merger with Delta, Northwest was the world's sixth largest airline in terms of domestic and international scheduled passenger miles flown and the US's sixth largest airline in terms of domestic passenger miles flown.[4] In addition to operating one of the largest domestic route networks in the U.S., Northwest carried more passengers across the Pacific Ocean (5.1 million in 2004) than any other U.S. carrier, and carried more domestic air cargo than any other American passenger airline.[5]

Regional and commuter airline flights for Northwest were operated under the name Northwest Airlink by Big Sky Airlines, Eugene Aviation Services, Express Airlines I/II, Fischer Brothers Aviation, Mesaba Airlines, Northeast Express Regional Airlines, Pacific Island Aviation, Pinnacle Airlines, Precision Airlines, Simmons Airlines and Compass Airlines via respective code sharing agreements.[6] Northwest Airlines was also a minority owner of Midwest Airlines, holding a 40% stake in the company.[7]

History Edit

Beginnings Edit

Northwest Airlines was founded on September 1, 1926, by Colonel Lewis Brittin, under the name Northwest Airways,[8] a reference to the historical name for the Midwestern United States that derived from the Northwest Territory.[citation needed] Like other early airlines, Northwest's focus was not in hauling passengers, but in flying mail for the U.S. Post Office Department.[9] The airline was originally based in Detroit, Michigan.[8] The fledgling airline established a mail route between Minneapolis and Chicago, using open-cockpit biplanes such as the Curtiss Oriole and the Waco JYM. From 1928 the enclosed cabin six-passenger Hamilton H-45 and H-47 were used.

 
1920s roundel logo
 
Northwest Airlines passenger ticket from 1951
 
1929 Northwest Airways Waco JYM used on the Minneapolis-Chicago mail route
 
Rebuilt 1929 Hamilton H-47 wearing Northwest Airways markings in 2010
 
Northwest Douglas DC-3

Northwest Airlines began carrying passengers in 1927; in 1928 Northwest started its first international route with service to Winnipeg. In 1929, a group headed by Richard Lilly, a businessman from St. Paul, Minnesota, purchased the airline.[8]

In 1933 Northwest was selected to fly the "Northern Transcontinental Route" to Seattle, Washington. It adopted the name Northwest Airlines the following year after the Air Mail scandal.[10][11] Northwest Airways, Inc. changed its name to Northwest Airlines, Inc.[12] and the airline was incorporated under its new name in the State of Minnesota.[8]

In 1939 Northwest had five daily flights from Chicago to Minneapolis; three continued west to Seattle through North Dakota and Montana. Northwest also served Winnipeg, Manitoba, and Portland, Oregon, by spurs from its transcontinental route.[13] By the spring of 1948, Northwest was operating three different aircraft types: the 44-passenger seat Douglas DC-4, the 21-passenger seat Douglas DC-3 and the 36-passenger seat Martin 2-0-2.[14]

Transpacific network development Edit

In 1931 Northwest sponsored Charles and Anne Lindbergh on a pioneering test flight to Japan via Alaska, scouting what would become known as the Northwest Airlines' Great Circle route that could save 2,000 miles (3,000 km) on a New York to Tokyo flight. Northwest began to bolster the infrastructure on the domestic leg of this route during World War II when it flew soldiers and supplies from the Northwestern United States to Alaska. It was at this point that Northwest began painting its airliners' tails bright red as a visual aid in the often harsh weather conditions. The airline's experience with the sub-arctic climate led the U.S. government to designate Northwest as the main airline over the North Pacific following the war.

In the spring of 1947, Northwest began stationing employees at Haneda Airport in Tokyo, flying them from the United States via Alaska on its Great Circle route. On July 15, 1947, Northwest was the first airline to begin direct service between the United States and Japan,[15] using a Douglas DC-4 airliner named The Manila. (All pre-war airline service to the Orient had been via Hawaii and the Philippines.) The flight to Japan originated at Wold-Chamberlain Field in Minneapolis and stopped at Blatchford Field in Edmonton, Elmendorf AFB in Anchorage, and Shemya AAF in the western Aleutian Islands. The flight continued from Tokyo to Lunghwa Airport in Shanghai and then to Nichols Field at Manila.[16]

A flight between Tokyo and Seoul (Gimpo Airport) began on October 20, 1947, and Naha Airport in Okinawa began to be a stop on the Tokyo to Manila route on November 16, 1947. Northwest service to Shanghai was suspended in May 1949 because of the civil war in China, with the Republic of China nearly ready to collapse, and its government evacuated to the island of Formosa (Taiwan). Northwest Airlines added Songshan Airport in Taipei, the new capital city of the Republic of China, as a stop on the Tokyo-Okinawa-Manila route on June 3, 1950, with ongoing interchange service to Hong Kong operated by Hong Kong Airways.

Northwest Orient Airlines Edit

 
Northwest Orient McDonnell-Douglas DC-10 at Detroit Metropolitan Airport in 1985.

With transpacific flights established, Northwest began branding as Northwest Orient Airlines,[when?][17][18][19] although its registered corporate name remained "Northwest Airlines."

NWA continuously upgraded equipment on the transpacific routes. On June 22, 1949, Northwest received its first double-decker Boeing 377 "Stratocruiser", enabling more comfortable accommodations and faster transpacific flights. The Stratocruiser began flying from the West Coast to Honolulu in 1950 and to Tokyo via Alaska on September 27, 1952. 

In 1954 Northwest Orient purchased Douglas DC-6Bs and started flying them to Tokyo and Manila. In January 1960, Northwest was operating transcontinental Lockheed L-188 Electra turboprop service nonstop between New York City and Seattle with these flights being part of the airline's service between New York City and Asia with Douglas DC-7C aircraft being operated on the transpacific legs from Seattle and was also operating Electra propjet flights between Minneapolis/St. Paul, Milwaukee and Chicago Midway Airport in the north and several destinations in Florida in the south including Miami, Fort Lauderdale and Tampa.[20]

 
Boeing 707-351B at San Francisco International Airport in 1970

On July 8, 1960, Northwest placed the Douglas DC-8 into service, offering the shortest flight times to East Asia, but within a year the airline was negotiating the sale of the five DC-8s. Northwest retired the last of its Boeing 377 Stratocruisers that September. The airline purchased several Boeing 720Bs in 1961, and in 1963 several new Boeing 707-320Bs; for a time it adopted the slogan "Northwest Orient: The Fan-Jet Airline". Nonstop transpacific flights became feasible with the introduction of the 707-320B/C. Northwest bought its first Boeing 747s in 1970 and soon began retiring its smaller 707s. In addition to operating the 747's on transpacific flights, Northwest briefly flew them on its busiest domestic routes as well.

For years Northwest was the largest foreign airline serving Japan. In 1951 Northwest became involved with the founding of Japan Air Lines (JAL) by leasing airliners and crewmembers to the new airline. In 1952 United States and Japan ratified a regional bilateral aviation treaty, under which Northwest and Pan American World Airways became the two U.S. airlines at Tokyo. These carriers also received fifth freedom rights to carry passengers from and via Tokyo to other Asian destinations such as Seoul, Busan, Taipei, Kaohsiung, Manila, Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, Hong Kong, Bangkok, Kuala Lumpur and Singapore. Northwest also flew passenger routes from Japan to Guam and Saipan, U.S. possessions in Micronesia.

Northwest's meteorologists, led by Dan Sowa, pioneered the first clear-air turbulence forecasting system in 1957, important since the airline flew many northern routes over turbulence-prone mountain areas. Northwest remained a leader in turbulence prediction, providing TPAWS (turbulence prediction and warning services) to other airlines.[21]

Revenue passenger traffic, in millions of passenger-miles (scheduled flights only, domestic plus international)[22]
Year Pax-Miles
1951 602
1955 1017
1960 1654
1965 3304
1970 4506
1975 9471

Transatlantic and domestic expansion Edit

 
Boeing 727-200 at Miami Airport in February 1971
 
Boeing 747 at London Gatwick Airport in 1983, in pre-merger Northwest Orient livery
 
Boeing 747-100 at Osaka Itami Airport ca. 1990, in post-merger Northwest livery

During the regulated era, Northwest's domestic network was mainly along the northern transcontinental route through Chicago, Minneapolis, and Seattle; New York and Detroit were added in 1945. Northwest also served Hawaii from the West Coast, and, starting in 1958–59, Georgia and Florida from Chicago.[23] On June 1, 1959, Northwest accepted its first turboprop, the L-188 Electra, from the Lockheed Corporation. Northwest Airlines started flying the three-engine Boeing 727-100 in November 1964;[24] many stretched B727-251s followed.

After airline deregulation in 1978 Northwest began nonstop flights to other Asian cities, returned to China in 1984 after a 34-year hiatus, and strengthened its presence in the southwestern United States. It also began flying to the United Kingdom, Ireland, Germany, and Scandinavia. On May 21, 1984, shareholders in Northwest approved the creation of NWA Inc., a Delaware corporation that became the holding company of Northwest.[25]

On October 1, 1986, Northwest merged with Republic Airlines, also based in Minneapolis-St. Paul. It was the largest airline merger at the time and caused operational issues which led the combined carrier to have an on-time performance of just 42 percent in its early days.[26] Through the merger, NWA adopted Republic's three-hub domestic network centered around Detroit, Memphis, and Minneapolis-St. Paul. The combined airline became particularly strong in the first two cities, with a market share of over 80% in each.[27] After the merger, the airline dropped Orient from its branding.[28] One major reason for the merger was that Northwest's unique position as a domestic and transpacific carrier had been challenged in 1985 when United Airlines acquired the Pacific Division of Pan Am.[29]

 
Northwest was one of the last passenger airlines to fly the DC-10 when its last one was retired on January 8, 2007
 
Northwest was also the last major US passenger airline to fly the original series Boeing 747 (pre-400 models)

Northwest continued to use the pre-merger Northwest Orient livery (minus the word "Orient") until a new livery and identity (designed by Landor Associates) were adopted in 1989. The new livery, nicknamed the "bowling shoe" by employees, featured colors of red, white, gray, and very dark blue.

Also in 1989, Northwest became the launch customer of the Boeing 747-400 and became one of only two airlines in the United States to operate it until its merger with Delta in 2009. The first aircraft it purchased was the first 747-400 to be built; it was later involved in a loss-of-control incident in 2002 and placed on display at the Delta Flight Museum following its retirement by Delta in 2015.

Northwest was purchased in a 1989 leveraged buyout by an investment group headed by Al Checchi, Fred Malek and Gary Wilson, with KLM, and many others. To pay off the debt incurred, the new management sold many of the airline's aircraft to leasing companies, and sold property around the world, including land in central Tokyo. The expense of the buyout was so great that in 1993, following several years of losses due to industry overcapacity and a traffic downturn following the Gulf War, Northwest threatened bankruptcy unless its employee groups agreed to three years of wage cuts. After signing the concessionary agreements, Northwest made its first profit since 1989.

 
This Northwest DC-10, Registration N237NW, was painted in a hybrid Northwest-KLM livery to advertise the alliance between the two airlines

Also in 1993, Northwest began its strategic alliance with KLM, which was the largest airline partnership at that time. This partnership eventually became the Wings Alliance, but the alliance never grew beyond the two airlines. Northwest gradually pulled out of its minor European destinations and focused on domestic and Asian markets.

On May 1, 1996, Northwest inaugurated the first-ever nonstop service from North America to China, DetroitBeijing.[30] Nonstop Detroit–Shanghai service followed in April 2000. Later, these nonstop services were suspended in 2002 due to the outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS).[citation needed] Northwest then served these routes via Tokyo. The airline sought government approval to restore nonstop Detroit–Shanghai service in March 2007 but lost its bid to United's Washington–Beijing route; however, before their merger with Delta Air Lines, Northwest received tentative authority to restart nonstop Detroit–Shanghai service starting March 25, 2009.

Through the late 1990s and early 2000s (decade), Northwest enjoyed profits and focused on improving technology to increase convenience and reduce costs. The airline offered airport self-service check-in kiosks starting in 1997 and had more than any other airline. Northwest was the first large U.S. airline to offer passengers internet check-in, with service from December 2000. During the early 2000s (decade), Northwest acquired a reputation of refusing to adopt industry-wide fare increases that had been accepted by other airlines. This changed in March 2005, when Northwest adopted fare hikes in response to rising oil prices.

 
NWA logo, 1989–2003
 
757-351 in the "Bowling Shoe" livery, used from 1989 until 2003.[31]

Due to competition from low-cost carriers such as Southwest Airlines and increased labor costs resulting from a new contract with employees represented by the Aircraft Mechanics Fraternal Association (AMFA) labor union, Northwest began to make cutbacks in early 2001. Two small rounds of employee layoffs and other cutbacks were implemented in the months prior to the September 11 terrorist attacks. Following the attacks, Northwest was forced to make dramatic changes to its business structure through major employee layoffs and other cost-cutting measures. The retirement of costly and aging aircraft such as the Boeing 727 and McDonnell Douglas DC-10-40 were accelerated as new aircraft went into service. In addition, the airline pursued options to reduce costs across the board, including removing pillows, peanuts, pretzels, in-flight entertainment on domestic flights, and newspapers and magazines. Over 50 McDonnell Douglas DC-9, Boeing 757, Boeing 747, and Airbus A320 family aircraft were withdrawn from use in an attempt to lower overall capacity and save money. Some of these aircraft were returned to service.[citation needed]

Following many years of a pioneering and close partnership with KLM Royal Dutch Airlines, Northwest, along with partners KLM and Continental Airlines joined SkyTeam, an airline alliance of ten airlines from around the world, on September 15, 2004. This was partially a result of Air France merging with KLM, forming the Air France-KLM group. The airline continued to hemorrhage money, however.

Bankruptcy filing Edit

Despite far-reaching money saving initiatives, Northwest was forced to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection for the first time in its 79-year history. The filing took place in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York on September 14, 2005.[32] With Northwest's filing, four of the six largest U.S. carriers were operating under bankruptcy protection. Northwest joined Delta Air Lines (which filed just minutes before), United Airlines, and US Airways in bankruptcy. All four carriers subsequently emerged from bankruptcy protection. Northwest common stock shares dropped more than 50% for the second time in three days following the news, largely because the stock is generally canceled as part of the bankruptcy process. In the following weeks, Northwest Airlink carriers Mesaba Airlines and Pinnacle Airlines both announced that Northwest Airlines had missed payments to them for their Airlink flying. Northwest also announced plans to shrink its Airlink fleet by over 45 aircraft. Mesaba Aviation filed for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy on October 13, 2005.[33]

 
A320-212 at San Jose in Northwest's final livery (2004-2010) before its closure.

Northwest announced on May 18, 2007, that shares of the company would begin to trade on the NYSE under the ticker NWA. Initial trading on a "when-issued" basis began on May 21, 2007, and regular trading began on May 31, 2007. Also on May 18, 2007, Northwest Airlines was cleared by a federal bankruptcy judge to emerge from Chapter 11 Bankruptcy protection on May 31, 2007, ending Northwest's 20 months of difficulty trying to slash costs.[34]

On July 16, 2007, Northwest Airlines applied to the United States Department of Transportation for nonstop service between its WorldGateway hub at Detroit to Shanghai (beginning in 2007 on Boeing 747-400s) and to Beijing (beginning in 2010 on Boeing 787 Dreamliners). The airline faced off against Delta Air Lines (which proposed Atlanta to Shanghai and Beijing), American Airlines (Chicago/O'Hare–Beijing), Continental Airlines (Newark–Shanghai), US Airways (Philadelphia–Beijing), United Airlines (Los Angeles–Shanghai and San Francisco–Guangzhou), and MAXjet (Seattle–Shanghai) in the route competition.[citation needed]

On August 12, 2007, Northwest Airlines became a passive investor in the purchase of Midwest Airlines by TPG Capital. The airline stated that while it was an investor, it would not participate in any management or control of Midwest Airlines.[35] However, on August 14, 2007, AirTran Airways raised their offer for Midwest to $16.25 a share, 25 cents more than the TPG offer.[36] But soon after on August 17, 2007, TPG Capital raised their offer to $17.00 a share which sealed the deal. Northwest Airlines became a minority owner of Midwest Airlines in the fourth quarter of 2007.[7]

On September 25, 2007, Northwest Airlines received DOT approval to begin service to Shanghai from its Detroit hub beginning March 25, 2009. American, Continental, Delta, and US Airways also received new or additional China route authority to Shanghai or Beijing, and United received authority to serve Guangzhou.[37]

Merger with Delta Air Lines Edit

 
Most common symbol for the merger

On April 14, 2008, Northwest Airlines announced that it would be merging with Delta Air Lines to form the world's largest airline. The merger was approved on October 29, 2008. The CEO during the merger of Delta and Northwest was Richard Anderson who was Northwest Airlines CEO from 2001 to 2004. The combined airline uses the Delta name and branding. On October 1, 2009, Northwest WorldPerks merged into SkyMiles. On January 31, 2010, Delta completed the merge of the reservation systems and discontinued using the Northwest name for flights. The official last flight was Northwest Airlines Flight 2470 from Los Angeles, California to Las Vegas, Nevada.[38][39]

NWA Cargo Edit

As of 2006, Northwest Airlines Cargo was the largest cargo carrier among U.S. combination passenger and cargo airlines. NWA Cargo's fleet of dedicated Boeing 747 freighter aircraft flew from some key cities in the United States and East Asia, as well as Amsterdam, connecting with the carrier's cargo hub in Anchorage, Alaska (Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport), facilitating the quick transfer of cargo between large cities on both sides of the Pacific. NWA Cargo also transports freight aboard the passenger fleet of Northwest Airlines to more than 250 cities worldwide. Delta announced that the NWA Cargo hub will be shut down by the end of 2009. As of early 2008, NWA's largest cargo client was DHL International. In December 2007, NWA announced that DHL International would terminate its cargo agreement with the airline effective late 2008. According to NWA Chief Financial Officer Dave Davis, the loss of its largest cargo client would bring significant changes to the division. Further changes to the NWA Cargo division continued into 2009 as it was merged into the Delta Cargo service. NWA Cargo ended all operations on December 28, 2009. On July 30, 2010, Northwest pleaded guilty to one count of felony price fixing for fixing prices for cargo shipping via NWA Cargo.[40]

 
Northwest Cargo Boeing 747

Corporate affairs and identity Edit

Headquarters Edit

 
Entrance sign to Northwest Airlines headquarters in Eagan

Immediately before Northwest ceased being an independent airline, its headquarters was in Building A,[41] a facility in Eagan, Minnesota,[42][43] near Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport and the intersection of I-35E and Interstate 494.[44] The 266,899-square-foot (24,795.7 m2) building in the complex, which housed about 1,000 Northwest employees, was built in 1985.[44] The building had a large "N" painted on the roof.[41]

After Delta and Northwest merged, Delta moved the Eagan headquarters employees to other offices in the Minneapolis–Saint Paul area. In October 2009 Delta Air Lines hired a real estate broker to put the 108-acre (44 ha) former Northwest Airlines headquarters complex for sale or for lease. During that month the facility had a taxable value of $13.7 million. The airline marketed 36 acres (15 ha) of the former NWA facility that is located along Interstate 494 separately from the main part of the property, as the airline considered the property to be excess. Terry Kingston, the executive director of the real estate brokerage firm Cushman & Wakefield, stated that there had been some interest in the Northwest Airlines property from other parties.[44] Northwest was the only occupant of the four-story headquarters building.[45] Employees remaining in the Minneapolis area were moved to Building C,[41] the former Republic Airlines headquarters building,[46] located on the property of Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport, as well as Building J located in Eagan.[47]

Before the headquarters were in Eagan, they were on the grounds of Minneapolis–St. Paul International Airport.[48][49]

Labor relations Edit

A recurring issue in Northwest's history was its troubled labor relations. In 1998, Northwest walked away from the bargaining table, locked out its pilots (represented by the Air Line Pilots Association, International) and shut down the airline for more than two weeks. The airline sustained heavy losses as a result, and ended 1998 in the red, after being profitable since 1993.[50][51][52]

On January 5, 2000, Northwest Airlines filed a federal lawsuit against the flight attendants' union and a number of rank-and-file employees.[53] Along with its January 5 complaint, Northwest Airlines filed a motion for discovery, requesting searches of the hard drives of the office and home computers of union officials. Additionally, Northwest requested searches of the home computers of rank-and-file employees, including Kevin Griffin and Frank Reed. On February 8, Minnesota District Court Judge Boylan approved the request and issued the discovery order. The order required all 43 named defendants, officers and rank-and-file members to turn over both home and office computer equipment to the accounting company Ernst & Young for "purposes of examining and copying information and communications contained on the computer hard drives." The order permitted the discovery of all data, including e-mail communications. After conducting discovery, Northwest Airlines fired over a dozen employees in early March, stating that they had engaged in a sickout. The Union filed grievances claiming none of the employees' sick calls were false. The effect on intra-airline email use was marked: postings critical of Northwest Airlines by employees dwindled, and the majority of messages after the search were posted anonymously.

 
A Northwest Airlines 757-351

On August 20, 2005, after months of negotiations, an impasse declared by the NMB and a 30-day cooling off period, the over 4,750 Northwest aircraft mechanics, janitors, and aircraft cleaners represented by AMFA went on strike against the company. After numerous negotiation sessions, no agreement was reached, and the company began hiring permanent replacement workers. In mid-October, after permanently hiring about 500 non-union workers, Northwest made a final offer to the union. The offer would have saved 500 union jobs and offered four weeks of severance pay to terminated employees. This offer was worse than the original declined by the union, which would have saved over 2,000 jobs and offered 16 weeks of severance pay. On October 20, 2005, AMFA announced that it would not allow its members to vote on the offer, citing that parts of the contract would violate the union's commitment to its members. Finally, in late December 2005, Northwest made what it termed its "final offer" to the union. The agreement would have terminated all striking workers and given them rights to unemployment compensation. The union voted down the offer. On October 9, 2006, AMFA leadership and Northwest reached an agreement.[54] Under the settlement, all AMFA workers still on strike as of that date will be converted to lay-off status with 5 weeks of severance pay (10 weeks if they resign from Northwest). However, these employees will have a right of recall to their old jobs. Approval of the settlement was[55] on November 6, 2006.

On May 30, 2007, it was announced that the flight attendants narrowly agreed to concessions and became the last major workgroup at Northwest to agree to new contract terms. The deal was approved by a vote of 2,966 to 2,862. Union leaders said that 90.5 percent of eligible voters cast ballots. The new contract would provide Northwest with $1957 million in annual cuts through 2011.[56][57][58][59]

Negotiations with attendants had been ongoing and contentious for several years. The flight attendants were unable to strike during negotiations because of a court injunction and the refusal of the mediation board to release them from bargaining which would have allowed the setting of a strike deadline. The attendants had been working under imposed pay cuts and work rules since July 2006 when a previous tentative agreement was rejected by 55 percent of the voting members.[60][61][62][63]

Prior to the May 2007 agreement, union leaders had expressed concern that its defeat could prompt the National Mediation Board to recess talks indefinitely, resulting in the loss of a $182 million bankruptcy claim the attendants had against Northwest. With the new agreement, the $182 million claim was to eventually be sold for cash with an estimated pre-tax value of $15,000 to $18,000 per flight attendant. Other labor unions at Northwest received similar claims as part of their concessionary agreements.[citation needed]

Previous to the recent agreements, Northwest provided employees with stock in exchange for concessions. For example, In 1993 Northwest's pilots, ground workers and flight attendants received stock and seats on the board of directors in exchange for pay cuts. As part of the agreement, Northwest was supposed to buy back these preferred shares in 2003 but refused to do so citing financial distress. Flight attendants, ground workers and mechanics still holding those preferred shares received shares of new Northwest stock (estimated at a combined value of $277 million).[citation needed]

In the summer of 2007, Northwest was engaged in a labor conflict with its pilots over a large number of end of the month flight cancellations. The pilots claimed that Northwest did not have sufficient pilots to fly its schedule; Northwest accused the pilots of calling in sick to create the problem. The dispute was resolved with a new agreement with ALPA in August 2007 in which pilots would be compensated for overtime. Northwest also began hiring new pilots to alleviate the pilot shortages they faced throughout the summer of 2007.[citation needed]

Destinations Edit

 
A Northwest Airbus A330-323X landing at London Gatwick Airport

Following the Republic merger in 1986, Northwest primarily operated on a hub and spoke route system with hubs in Detroit, Memphis, Minneapolis/St. Paul, and Tokyo. Under the KLM joint venture started in 1993, the two carriers established an Amsterdam hub where transatlantic routes operated by Northwest linked with European, African, and Asian routes operated by KLM. Northwest also operated a few routes outside this hub system, such as flights from the west coast to Honolulu.

In the mid-1980s, Northwest operated the only U.S. flag carrier service to Glasgow, Oslo, and Stockholm, as well as service to Copenhagen (the latter three cities are due to Minneapolis's large Nordic population). However, this was later withdrawn after several years. From April 2000, Northwest operated non-stop flights from Detroit to Milan and Rome, both were later withdrawn (from 2003 to 2005 Rome was served only during the summer season). In 2009 under the banner of Delta, service to Rome was then resumed for the summer season.

In 1991, Northwest began service to Australia, after United and Qantas began non-stop flights to the continental U.S. using the newly introduced, long-range 747-400. Northwest routed its Sydney–New York flight through Osaka, which raised Japanese protest because less than 30% of passengers on the Australia–Japan segment were originating in the U.S.[64]

On May 1, 1996, Northwest began the first-ever non-stop service from North America to mainland China, from Detroit to Beijing, three times a week.[30] From 1996 until 2002, Northwest operated nonstop flights from its Detroit hub to Beijing and Shanghai. Eventually, these routes were suspended. When that happened, Northwest operated these routes from Detroit with a connection at its Tokyo–Narita hub. However, on July 16, 2007, Northwest re-applied with the US Department of Transportation for nonstop service between Detroit and both Beijing and Shanghai.[65] On September 25, 2007, the US Department of Transportation tentatively awarded authority to Northwest for a new Detroit to Shanghai (Pudong) route effective March 25, 2009. The route was to be flown using the Boeing 747-400 until the Boeing 787 Dreamliner aircraft became available, however, the Detroit–Shanghai nonstop route was taken over by Delta on October 24, 2009, using its Boeing 777-200ER and Boeing 777-200LR aircraft after Delta ended nonstop service between Atlanta and Shanghai due to weak customer demand. The Detroit-Beijing nonstop route was later launched by the merged Delta using a Boeing 777-200ER on July 1, 2011.

In 2008, Northwest was one of several U.S. airlines to receive permission from the British government to fly into Heathrow Airport in London after previously having to use Gatwick Airport. Northwest began service to Heathrow from its hubs in Detroit and Minneapolis, as well as starting Seattle-London service. However, after being acquired by Delta in 2008, the Seattle route was dropped in January 2009 so the Heathrow landing slot and aircraft used could be redeployed to a more profitable route. In 2009, the Heathrow routes from the Detroit and Minneapolis hubs were taken over by Delta using its Boeing 767-400ER aircraft.

Northwest Airlines also served more Canadian cities than any other U.S. carrier including Calgary, Edmonton, Kitchener/Waterloo, London (ON), Montréal-Dorval, Ottawa, Quebec City, Regina, Saskatoon, Thunder Bay, Toronto-Pearson, Vancouver, and Winnipeg. Seasonal service was also offered to smaller Canadian cities.

Codeshare agreements Edit

Northwest Airlines had codeshare agreements with the following airlines as of March 2009:

Fleet Edit

 
A Northwest Airlines Airbus A320 landing at Vancouver International Airport

At the time of the merger with Delta Air Lines, Northwest had a total of 320 aircraft with seven on order. It was also the last U.S. passenger airline to have a dedicated cargo fleet and cargo-only routes. The Northwest fleet was integrated into Delta's fleet on December 31, 2009.

Northwest operated a mixed fleet of Boeing, McDonnell Douglas, and Airbus aircraft whereas Delta operated just Boeing and McDonnell Douglas aircraft. The Boeing 757 was the only type common to the pre-merger fleets of both Delta and Northwest.

As part of a major fleet renewal program, Northwest introduced a simplified new paint scheme and logo in 2003. The airline replaced its McDonnell Douglas DC-10 airliners with the Airbus A330. The first Airbus A330-300, used initially for European flights, arrived on August 6, 2003. Northwest Airlines also possessed the youngest trans-Atlantic fleet of any North American or European airline.[68] Northwest Airlines also began flying reconfigured Boeing 757-200 airliners on some of its European flights carrying fewer passengers. Northwest was one of only two passenger airlines in the United States to fly the Boeing 747-400, the other being United Airlines. A number of Boeing 747-400 aircraft formerly operated by Northwest were then also flown by Delta following the merger of the two air carriers including the first B747-400 ever built with this aircraft currently on public display at the Delta Flight Museum located at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport (ATL).[69]

Northwest was looking for manufacturers to discuss the replacement of their 100, 110 and 125 seat McDonnell Douglas DC-9 (DC-9-10, DC-9-30 and DC-9-50) aircraft, with an average age of 35 years.[70][71]

Cabin Edit

In March 1988, Northwest Airlines announced that it would ban smoking on all flights within North America, effective April 23, 1988, on the same day that a rule from the U.S. federal government prohibiting smoking on all domestic flights of a duration of two hours or fewer, would take into effect. Northwest was the first major U.S. airline to enact a smoking ban since the airline Muse Air had ended its four-year smoking ban in 1985.[72]

World Business Class Edit

World Business Class was Northwest Airlines' international business class product. It was offered on all widebody aircraft.[73] Seats had 60 inches of pitch and 176 degrees of recline. Passengers aboard this class received free meals and refreshments, including alcoholic beverages. All seats were equipped with Audio-Video-On-Demand (AVOD), universal power-ports, a moveable reading light, a folding work table, and a swivel cocktail table.

Domestic First Class Edit

 
Typical dinner served in Domestic First Class

First Class was offered on all narrowbody aircraft, as well as CRJ-900 Northwest Airlink flights operated by Mesaba Airlines and E175 flights operated by Compass Airlines. Seats ranged from 19.5 to 21.5 inches wide, and had between 34 and 37 inches of pitch. Passengers aboard this class received complimentary meals, refreshments, and alcoholic beverages.

International Economy Class Edit

Economy Class was offered on all widebody aircraft. Seats ranged from 17 to 17.5 inches wide, and had between 31 and 34 inches of pitch. Passengers aboard this class received free meals, snacks, and non-alcoholic beverages. Beer and wine were complimentary on international flights with complimentary meals, other alcoholic beverages could be purchased for a fee.

Passengers aboard Airbus A330 aircraft also had an Audio-Video-On-Demand (AVOD) system located in the seatback in front of them, and passengers seated in rows 10–23 (A330-200) or rows 10–28 (A330-300) had a universal power-port located below their seat.

Domestic Economy Class Edit

Economy Class was offered on all narrowbody aircraft. Seats ranged from 17 to 17.5 inches wide and had between 30 and 34 inches of pitch, the same as on international economy class. Passengers aboard this class received free refreshments. In latter years in lieu of complimentary prepared meals snack boxes, sandwiches (on select flights), and light snacks were available for purchase as part of a buy on board program.[74] Alcoholic beverages were also sold.

Before 2008, Northwest Airlines was the only major U.S. airline (aside from low-cost, short-haul Southwest Airlines, Allegiant Air and Spirit Airlines) to not offer any in-flight entertainment within North America (including Alaska). Although several of the airline's domestic aircraft were originally equipped with in-flight entertainment systems, these were removed in 2005 to cut costs. US Airways implemented a similar initiative in 2008. On flights between Honolulu International Airport and Minneapolis-Saint Paul International Airport, passengers experienced the same cabin as International Economy Class aboard Airbus A330 aircraft.

WorldPerks Edit

 

Northwest Airlines' frequent-flyer program, WorldPerks, offered regular travelers the ability to obtain free tickets, First Class upgrades on flights, discounted membership for its airport lounges (WorldClubs), or other types of rewards. Customers could accumulate miles from actual flight segments flown or through Northwest's partners, such as car rental companies, hotels, credit cards, and other vendors. WorldPerks' elite tiers were Silver Elite, Gold Elite, and Platinum elite which allowed for more mileage bonuses, priority waitlists and standby, and other benefits. Over the years, some details of the program changed, such as introducing capacity-controlled awards (only a certain number of seats allocated for free travel), expiration of account if no activity occurred in three years, a requirement of a Saturday-night stay for domestic coach awards, waiving of capacity controls for awards but requiring double the number of miles for redemption, and adding several partner airlines for mileage accumulation and award redemption.[75] The original name of the WorldPerks program was the Northwest Orient Airlines Free Flight Plan, which began in 1981.[76] The original program used paper coupons and gave credit for flight segments. Upon renaming the program to "WorldPerks" in 1986, a mileage-based system was used.

In addition to its Northwest Airlink and SkyTeam alliance partnerships, Northwest offered frequent flyer partnerships with the following airlines:[77]

Northwest also offered frequent flyer partnerships with the following car rental agencies:[78]

WorldClubs Edit

 

WorldClubs was Northwest's member lounge. Members had reciprocal access to a number of other clubs, including fellow SkyTeam carriers such as KLM, Delta Air Lines and Air France. Northwest also had partnerships with various other airline lounges on an airport-by-airport basis. Unlike some other airline lounges, WorldClubs offered free alcoholic beverages in domestic locations and Tokyo-Narita. Northwest also offered free Wi-Fi internet access worldwide.

Locations Edit

The following airports had Northwest Airlines WorldClub locations:

 
Northwest WorldClub Chicago O’Hare International Airport Terminal 2

Incidents and accidents Edit

Fatal accidents Edit

The following are major incidents and accidents that occurred on Northwest's mainline aircraft.

Northwest Airlines Reported Incidents
Flight Date Aircraft Location Description Casualties
Fatal Serious Minor Uninjured Ground
2 January 10, 1938 Lockheed
Model 14
Bozeman, Montana Crashed in the Bridger Mountains, 12 mi (19 km) northeast of Bozeman, Montana. This was the airline's first fatal crash. Three other Lockheed Model 14 aircraft belonging to Northwest crashed over the next thirteen months. 10
5 October 30, 1941 Douglas DC-3 Moorhead, Minnesota The plane crashed in fog and mist due to icing on the wings. Fourteen of the fifteen passengers were killed in the crash. The pilot, Clarence Bates, was thrown clear of the wreckage and was the lone survivor.[80] 14 1
4422 March 12, 1948 Douglas DC-4 Mount Sanford, Alaska Flight 4422 was a military charter en route back to the US from Shanghai, China, and had just refueled at Merrill Field, in Anchorage, Alaska, before continuing on toward LaGuardia Airport where the flight was to be concluded. The aircraft veered 23 miles off course and struck a mountain during a snowstorm. The snowstorms quickly buried the aircraft in a mountain glacier. 30
421[81] August 29, 1948 Martin 202 Winona, Minnesota Northwest 421 was flying a scheduled domestic route from Chicago-Minneapolis-St. Paul when it crashed about 4.1 mi (6.6 km) NW of Winona, Minnesota, after entering the leading edge of a thunderstorm. Pieces of the plane were seen falling, and the plane was found on a bluff on the east side of the Mississippi River. The cause of the crash was the fatigue of the left-wing, causing it to separate from the plane and precipitating the plunge. 37
6427[82] October 27, 1948 Douglas DC-4 Edmonton, Alberta Flight 6427 was on a special cargo trip flying Minneapolis-St. PaulEdmontonAnchorage (Merrill Field)–Tokyo when it crashed into a wooded area 34.4 mi (55.4 km) N of Edmonton soon after takeoff. The investigation revealed that the captain had feathered the propellers in simulation to instruct the copilot on emergency procedures. This was determined to be the primary cause of the crash. 2 3
307[83] March 7, 1950 Martin 202 Minneapolis, Minnesota Flight 307 was operating a domestically scheduled passenger flight routing Washington, DC–DetroitMadisonRochesterMinneapolis-St. PaulWinnipeg crashed just before landing at Minneapolis, after deciding not to land at Rochester due to weather. The plane struck a flagpole at the National Soldiers Cemetery. The plane continued flying for another 3.8 mi (6.1 km) when the left-wing separated and fell. The plane crashed into a house, and both were engulfed in flames. The cause of the crash was determined to be the loss of visual reference to the ground due to the snow falling at the time. 13 2
2501 June 23, 1950 Douglas DC-4 Lake Michigan Northwest 2501 was lost over Lake Michigan during a flight from New York's LaGuardia Airport to Seattle, WA. The aircraft went off radar and a widespread search was conducted. Some debris, upholstery, and human remains were found floating on the surface, but divers were unable to locate the plane's wreckage. 58
N/A[84] October 13, 1950 Martin 202 Almelund, Minnesota This flight was intended to be a training flight originating and ending at Minneapolis-St. Paul. The reversal of the right propeller during the flight caused the plane to spin out of control and crash, killing all on board. 6
115[85] November 7, 1950 Martin 202 Butte, Montana Flight 115 was flying a scheduled route of Chicago–Minneapolis/St. PaulBillingsGreat FallsHelenaButteSeattle when it crashed 3.1 mi (5.0 km) E of Butte while landing. The plane crashed into the eastern slope of a ridge. The cause of the crash was improperly followed approach procedures. 21
115[86] January 16, 1951 Martin 202 Reardan, Washington Flight 115 (which was the same designation as the previous accident) was on the scheduled route of Minneapolis-St. PaulBillingsKalispellSpokaneWenatcheeYakimaSeattle when it crashed about 11.9 mi (19.2 km) W of Reardan after the captain decided not to land at Wenatchee but proceed to Yakima due to weather. An emergency message from the plane was heard briefly 15 seconds after the clearance was given. The cause of the crash is not known. 10
324[87] January 19, 1952 Douglas C-54 Sandspit, British Columbia Flight 324 was flying a nonscheduled flight originating in Tokyo, ending at McChord Air Force Base with intermediate stops in Shemya and Anchorage (Elmendorf Air Force Base). While opposite Sitka, Alaska, the No. 1 propeller was feathered by the captain, who requested a diversion to Sandspit. As the plane was landing, it touched down about a third of the way down the runway; at around the midpoint, power was applied and the plane took off, but it stalled due to the steep climb and plunged into the water at the end of the runway. The cause of the crash was the icing that prevented the pilot from retracting the nose gear. 36 7
2 April 2, 1956 Boeing Stratocruiser Puget Sound, Washington Flight 2 crashed after takeoff from Seattle-Tacoma International Airport on a flight to Portland, Oregon, Chicago and New York City. The pilots ditched the aircraft into Puget Sound, 5.4 mi (8.7 km) off Seattle. 5 2 31
710 March 17, 1960 Lockheed L-188 Electra Cannelton, Indiana Flight 710 was en route to Miami from Chicago when the aircraft lost a wing at approximately 18,000 feet near Tell City, Indiana. 63
1–11[88] July 14, 1960 Douglas DC-7 Pacific Ocean near Manila, Philippines Northwest 1–11 was flying from New York City to Manila, Philippines, with stops in Seattle, Anchorage (Cold Bay), Tokyo, and Okinawa. The plane was on its final leg between Okinawa and Manila when the No. 2 engine experienced power loss. The propeller then separated from the plane and hit the fuselage, slashing a 15-inch hole. The pilot decided to ditch the plane in the Pacific Ocean about 77.5 mi (124.7 km) NE of Manila. Upon impact, the rear of the plane separated as well as the engines and right-wing. The majority of the survivors used the right-wing, which floated for three hours, as a life raft until rescue came. 1 58
104[89] October 28, 1960 Douglas C-54 Missoula, Montana Flight 104 was flying from Spokane to Missoula when it crashed about 20 miles (30 km) W of Missoula in the Clark Fork Valley. The plane was seen making a steep left banking turn with nose up; the plane continued rolling and crashed inverted. The crash was attributed to pilot error. 12
706[90] September 16, 1961 Lockheed L-188 Electra Chicago, Illinois Flight 706 was on a routine flight from Milwaukee to Miami, with stops in Chicago, Tampa, and Ft. Lauderdale. While departing from Chicago, the plane banked to the right and gradually descended until hitting the ground. The cause of the crash was mechanical failure of the ailerons. 37
705[91] February 12, 1963 Boeing 720 Florida Everglades Flight 705, flying from Miami to Chicago crashed in the Florida Everglades approximately 37 miles (60 km) SW of Miami International Airport while diverting to avoid bad weather. The cause of the crash was an unrecoverable loss of control due to severe turbulence. 43
293[92] June 3, 1963 Douglas DC-7 Pacific Ocean
near Annette Island, Alaska
Flight 293 was flying a Military Air Transport Service (MATS) flight from McChord Air Force Base outside Tacoma, Washington, to Elmendorf Air Force Base outside Anchorage, Alaska. While in flight, contact was lost. Floating debris from the plane was located 182.5 mi (293.7 km) WSW of Annette Island. The cause of the crash was never determined. 101
6231[93] December 1, 1974 Boeing 727 Stony Point, New York Flight 6231 was flying on a ferry flight from John F. Kennedy International Airport to Buffalo when it crashed in the vicinity of Stony Point. As the plane was cleared to climb, the airspeed and rate of climb increased, until the plane stalled and descended out of control into a wooded area. The cause of the crash was loss of control because "the flight crew failed to realize and correct the aircraft's high-angle-of-attack, low-speed stall and descending spiral". 3
608[94] January 20, 1983 Boeing 727 Portland, Oregon Flight 608 was en route from Seattle, Washington, to Portland, Oregon, when it was hijacked. The man informed a flight attendant that he had a bomb and demanded to be taken to Afghanistan. Landing in Portland to refuel, the hijacker negotiated with airport authorities. Federal agents stormed the aircraft. The hijacker threw the box he claimed had a bomb at the agents, who shot and killed him. The box contained no explosives. 1 40
255 August 16, 1987 McDonnell-Douglas MD-82 Romulus, Michigan Flight 255 crashed on takeoff from Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport. All but one aboard the MD-82 died. The cause of the crash was attempted takeoff with the wrong configuration due to pilot mismanagement of the aircraft. 154 1 2
1482[95] December 3, 1990 Douglas DC-9 Romulus, Michigan Flight 1482, a DC-9-14 departing for Pittsburgh collided with Flight 299, a Boeing 727-200, departing for Memphis at Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport near the intersection of runways 09/27 and 03C/21C in dense fog. The 727 had begun its takeoff roll, and the DC-9 had just taxied onto the active runway. None of the 146 passengers and 10 crew members aboard the 727 were injured, but the DC-9 sustained serious damage. 8 10 26
299[95] December 3, 1990 Boeing 727 Romulus, Michigan Involved in collision with Flight 1482 detailed in the previous line. 156
Total casualties Fatal Serious Minor Uninjured Ground
(20 incidents) 620 18 89 187 4

Non-fatal accidents and incidents Edit

  • October 22, 1962 (1962-10-22): A DC-7 with 7 crew and 95 passengers[96] made a successful water landing in Sitka Sound. The military charter flight was en route to Elmendorf Air Force Base from McChord Air Force Base and, prior to the ditching at just before 1 p.m. local time, the crew had been struggling with a propeller problem for about 45 minutes.[97] The plane stayed afloat for 24 minutes after coming to rest in the water, giving the occupants ample time to evacuate into life-rafts. Only 6 minor injuries were reported; all passengers and crew were quickly rescued by U.S. Coast Guard ships.[98] The accident report called the ditching "an outstanding feat," citing several key factors in this water landing's success: pilots' skill, ideal conditions (calm seas, favorable weather, daylight), time to prepare for the ditching and the military passengers' ease with following orders.[99] Pilots who flew over the scene also praised the Northwest crew, calling it the "...finest ditching they had ever seen..." .[98]
  • July 1, 1968 (1968-07-01): Northwest Airlines Flight 714 was hijacked to Cuba.[100]
  • January 22, 1971 (1971-01-22): Northwest Airlines Flight 433 was hijacked en route from Milwaukee to Detroit, Michigan. The hijacker demanded to be taken to Algeria but the plane landed in Cuba instead.[101]
  • November 24, 1971 (1971-11-24): Northwest Airlines Flight 305 en route from Portland International Airport to Seattle–Tacoma International Airport, was hijacked by D. B. Cooper. After receiving a $200,000 ransom payment and four parachutes in Seattle, he ordered the crew to fly to Mexico, and he jumped from the aft airstairs of the Boeing 727-051 while it was in flight over Washington. The aircraft later landed safely in Reno, Nevada, but Cooper's fate remains unknown.
  • May 8, 1977 (1977-05-08): Northwest Orient Airlines Flight 22 was hijacked after taking off from Haneda Airport, Japan. The hijacker demanded to be taken to the Soviet Union but was taken down.[102]
  • January 4, 1990 (1990-01-04): Northwest Airlines Flight 5, a flight from Miami to Minneapolis, one of the three engines of the Boeing 727 aircraft fell off.[103] The plane's crew, unaware that they had lost an engine, continued to fly for 25 minutes before making a safe landing in Tampa.[104]
  • March 8, 1990 (1990-03-08): a Northwest flight flew from Fargo, North Dakota, to Minneapolis with the entire cockpit crew legally drunk. All three pilots were subsequently fired and had their licenses revoked by the FAA.[105]
  • November 20, 1992. A 727 lost hydraulic power and made an emergency landing in Detroit with only engine power to steer the plane.[citation needed]
  • January 2, 1999 (1999-01-02): (-Jan 3) due to bad weather and blizzards passengers were stranded on aircraft at Detroit for periods up to 8½ hours. An official inquiry found "... [the delays] were serious and indicate that this event had important implications for passenger safety. Moreover, even if the well being of passengers had not been an issue, the review team believes that the stranding of passengers on aircraft queued on taxiways for up to 8½ hours invites more serious problems and is simply unacceptable. None of the other airlines serving Detroit experienced ground delays approaching the magnitude of Northwest's delays."[106] Subsequently, passengers brought various legal claims against the carrier including false imprisonment and negligence and obtained a $7.1 million settlement.[107]
  • March 17, 2001 (2001-03-17): An Airbus A320, registered as N357NW, Flight 985, had been forced to abort the landing when the A320's nose suddenly lifts up while at the airspeed of 110 knots, well before reaching v1 speed. The plane then overran through Runway 03C and came to rest at the muddy terrain near Detroit Metropolitan Airport. There were three minor injuries. The cause for a sudden takeoff was the incorrect setting for the plane's trim, which the trim was set at -1.7° up, and it was caused by the incorrect takeoff speed when using Runway 03C, as it was used by the flight crew, at v1-138 knots, which was below the correct minimum takeoff speed at v1-145 knots. The aircraft involved in the accident was repaired and went back into service. After the aircraft was being acquired by Delta Air Lines at the time when Northwest Airlines was merged on January 31, 2010, the accident aircraft, N357NW, still remains in service as of May 2023.[108]
  • October 9, 2002 (2002-10-09): Northwest Airlines Flight 85, a Boeing 747-400, experienced a lower rudder hardover during cruise. The crew declared an emergency and diverted the airplane to Ted Stevens International Airport in Anchorage, Alaska.[109]
  • June 19, 2004 (2004-06-19): pilots mistakenly landed at Ellsworth AFB instead of the nearby Rapid City airport. Passengers aboard were asked to close their window shades by US Air Force security personnel.[110]
  • May 10, 2005 (2005-05-10): a Northwest Airlines DC-9 collided on the ground with a Northwest Airlines Airbus A319 that had just pushed back from the gate at Minneapolis-Saint Paul International Airport. The DC-9 suffered a malfunction in one of its hydraulic systems in flight. After landing, the captain shut down one of the plane's engines, inadvertently disabling the remaining working hydraulic system. Six people were injured and both planes were substantially damaged.[111] The Airbus A319 was later repaired and is currently in service with Delta Air Lines as of December 2022.
  • June 19, 2005 (2005-06-19): at 0435 in the morning Tehran local time, Northwest Airlines Flight 41, Ship No. 1243, operating from Mumbai to Amsterdam made an emergency landing at the Mehrabad International Airport in Tehran, Iran. It was the first American air carrier to land in Iran in 26 years, since the Iranian Revolution in 1979.[112]
  • August 19, 2005 (2005-08-19): a Northwest Airlines 747-200, registration N627US, operating flight NW74 from Tokyo Narita Airport landed at Guam International Airport without its nose gear fully extended. The nose of aircraft made full contact with the runway. Smoke was reported on board and all passengers and crew were evacuated, with only two minor injuries reported.[113][114]
  • October 20, 2007 (2007-10-20): Northwest Airlines Flight 1432 executed an emergency landing at Hector International Airport in Fargo, North Dakota because the nose wheels had jammed in an abnormal position. There were no injuries on board.[115]
  • February 20, 2009 (2009-02-20): Northwest Airlines Flight 2, a Boeing 747-400 flying from Ninoy Aquino International Airport in Manila, Philippines, to Narita International Airport near Tokyo, Japan, experienced severe turbulence when descending to Narita. The aircraft, with 408 passengers and 14 crew members aboard, landed safely; however, 50 people were injured; around five were hospitalized.[116]
  • May 4, 2009 (2009-05-04): An Airbus A320-211, registration N311US, operated by Northwest Airlines as flight NW557, experienced a tailstrike resulting in substantial damage upon landing on runway 16L at Denver International Airport, Colorado (DEN). The flight was a regularly scheduled passenger flight which departed from Minneapolis-St. Paul Airport, Minnesota (MSP) at 11:39.[117]
  • October 21, 2009 (2009-10-21): Northwest Airlines Flight 188, an Airbus A320, flying from San Diego International Airport to Minneapolis-St Paul International Airport overflew the Minneapolis airport and continued to fly off course by 150 miles, leaving air traffic control to believe that the flight had been hijacked.[118][119] The pilots originally stated that they were in an argument regarding airline policy and did not notice that they had flown off course,[120] but later admitted to using their personal laptop computers at the time.[121] The pilots contacted air traffic control after they realized their mistake and the flight arrived safely in Minneapolis about one hour late. The pilots' commercial flying licenses were subsequently revoked by the FAA.[122]
  • December 25, 2009 (2009-12-25): a Nigerian al Qaeda member tried to detonate plastic explosives on Northwest Airlines Flight 253, an Airbus A330 from Amsterdam to Detroit, as the plane was landing in Detroit. The device failed to detonate properly, and the suspect suffered third degree burns. Two other passengers incurred minor injuries. The White House said it considered it an attempted terrorist attack.[123]

See also Edit

References Edit

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Bibliography Edit

  • Roach, J and Eastwood A.B., Jet Airliner Production List - Volume 1 - Boeing. 2003. The Aviation Hobby Shop. ISBN 0-907178-97-9.
  • Taylor, H. A. "Tony" (April–July 1982). "Stratocruiser... Ending an Airline Era". Air Enthusiast. No. 18. pp. 37–53. ISSN 0143-5450.

Further reading Edit

  • El-Hai, Jack. (2013) Non-stop: A Turbulent History of Northwest Airlines (University of Minnesota Press, 2013) 291 pp. Heavily illustrated.
  • Ruble, Kenneth D.; (1986). Flight to the Top: How a Hometown Airline Made History—and Keeps on Making It: The Absorbing Sixty-year Story of Northwest Airlines. New York: Viking Press.
  • "Pilots Who Flew Drunk are Sentenced to Prison". (October 27, 1990). St. Louis Post-Dispatch, p. 7A. Retrieved March 21, 2005, from LexisNexis.
  • .
  • "Order 2006-2-1[dead link]", Joint Application of Alitalia-Linee Aeree Italiane-S.p.A., Czech Airlines, Delta Air Lines, Inc., KLM Royal Dutch Airlines, Northwest Airlines, Inc. and Societe Air France for Approval of and Antitrust Immunity for Alliance Agreements, United States Department of Transportation, February 6, 2006.
  • Extensive archival records of Northwest Airlines are available for research use at the Minnesota Historical Society.

External links Edit

  • Northwest Airlines (Archive)
  • Former timetable and cost

northwest, airlines, confused, with, china, northwestern, nordwind, airlines, northwest, base, corp, major, american, airline, founded, 1926, absorbed, into, delta, lines, merger, that, approved, 2008, northwest, continued, operate, under, name, brand, until, . Not to be confused with China Northwest Airlines Northwestern Air Nordwind Airlines or Northwest Air Base Northwest Airlines Corp NWA was a major American airline founded in 1926 and absorbed into Delta Air Lines by a merger that was approved in 2008 Northwest continued to operate under its own name and brand until the integration of the carriers was completed in 2010 1 The merger made Delta the largest airline in the world until the American Airlines US Airways merger in 2013 2 3 Northwest AirlinesIATA ICAO CallsignNW NWA NORTHWESTFoundedSeptember 1 1926 1926 09 01 as Northwest Airways Commenced operations1934 1934 as Northwest Airlines 1947 1947 as Northwest Orient Airlines September 30 1986 1986 09 30 as Northwest Airlines Ceased operationsJanuary 31 2010 2010 01 31 merged into Delta Air Lines HubsAmsterdam 1993 2010 Anchorage 1947 2009 cargo Detroit 1986 2010 Memphis 1986 2010 Minneapolis St Paul 1926 2010 Tokyo Haneda 1947 1978 Tokyo Narita 1978 2010 Frequent flyer programWorldPerksAllianceSkyTeam 2004 2010 SkyTeam Cargo 2004 2010 SubsidiariesNorthwest Airlink 1984 2009 Fleet size320 incl cargo at time of merger Parent companyDelta Air Lines Inc 2009 2010 HeadquartersEagan MinnesotaKey peopleRichard Anderson President amp CEO Websitewww wbr nwa wbr com Redirect URL Archived 2010 01 05 at the Wayback MachineNorthwest was headquartered in Eagan Minnesota near Minneapolis Saint Paul International Airport After World War II it became dominant in the trans Pacific market with a hub in Tokyo Japan initially Haneda Airport later Narita International Airport In response to United Airlines 1985 acquisition of Pan Am s Pacific routes Northwest paid 884 million to purchase Republic Airlines and then established fortress hubs at Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport and Memphis International Airport With this merger NWA established the domestic network necessary to feed its well established Pacific routes Lacking a significant presence in Europe in 1993 it began a strategic alliance with KLM and a jointly coordinated European hub at Amsterdam Airport Schiphol Prior to its merger with Delta Northwest was the world s sixth largest airline in terms of domestic and international scheduled passenger miles flown and the US s sixth largest airline in terms of domestic passenger miles flown 4 In addition to operating one of the largest domestic route networks in the U S Northwest carried more passengers across the Pacific Ocean 5 1 million in 2004 than any other U S carrier and carried more domestic air cargo than any other American passenger airline 5 Regional and commuter airline flights for Northwest were operated under the name Northwest Airlink by Big Sky Airlines Eugene Aviation Services Express Airlines I II Fischer Brothers Aviation Mesaba Airlines Northeast Express Regional Airlines Pacific Island Aviation Pinnacle Airlines Precision Airlines Simmons Airlines and Compass Airlines via respective code sharing agreements 6 Northwest Airlines was also a minority owner of Midwest Airlines holding a 40 stake in the company 7 Contents 1 History 1 1 Beginnings 1 2 Transpacific network development 1 3 Northwest Orient Airlines 1 4 Transatlantic and domestic expansion 1 5 Bankruptcy filing 1 6 Merger with Delta Air Lines 1 7 NWA Cargo 2 Corporate affairs and identity 2 1 Headquarters 2 2 Labor relations 3 Destinations 3 1 Codeshare agreements 4 Fleet 5 Cabin 5 1 World Business Class 5 2 Domestic First Class 5 3 International Economy Class 5 4 Domestic Economy Class 6 WorldPerks 7 WorldClubs 7 1 Locations 8 Incidents and accidents 8 1 Fatal accidents 8 2 Non fatal accidents and incidents 9 See also 10 References 11 Bibliography 12 Further reading 13 External linksHistory EditBeginnings Edit Northwest Airlines was founded on September 1 1926 by Colonel Lewis Brittin under the name Northwest Airways 8 a reference to the historical name for the Midwestern United States that derived from the Northwest Territory citation needed Like other early airlines Northwest s focus was not in hauling passengers but in flying mail for the U S Post Office Department 9 The airline was originally based in Detroit Michigan 8 The fledgling airline established a mail route between Minneapolis and Chicago using open cockpit biplanes such as the Curtiss Oriole and the Waco JYM From 1928 the enclosed cabin six passenger Hamilton H 45 and H 47 were used nbsp 1920s roundel logo nbsp Northwest Airlines passenger ticket from 1951 nbsp 1929 Northwest Airways Waco JYM used on the Minneapolis Chicago mail route nbsp Rebuilt 1929 Hamilton H 47 wearing Northwest Airways markings in 2010 nbsp Northwest Douglas DC 3Northwest Airlines began carrying passengers in 1927 in 1928 Northwest started its first international route with service to Winnipeg In 1929 a group headed by Richard Lilly a businessman from St Paul Minnesota purchased the airline 8 In 1933 Northwest was selected to fly the Northern Transcontinental Route to Seattle Washington It adopted the name Northwest Airlines the following year after the Air Mail scandal 10 11 Northwest Airways Inc changed its name to Northwest Airlines Inc 12 and the airline was incorporated under its new name in the State of Minnesota 8 In 1939 Northwest had five daily flights from Chicago to Minneapolis three continued west to Seattle through North Dakota and Montana Northwest also served Winnipeg Manitoba and Portland Oregon by spurs from its transcontinental route 13 By the spring of 1948 Northwest was operating three different aircraft types the 44 passenger seat Douglas DC 4 the 21 passenger seat Douglas DC 3 and the 36 passenger seat Martin 2 0 2 14 Transpacific network development Edit In 1931 Northwest sponsored Charles and Anne Lindbergh on a pioneering test flight to Japan via Alaska scouting what would become known as the Northwest Airlines Great Circle route that could save 2 000 miles 3 000 km on a New York to Tokyo flight Northwest began to bolster the infrastructure on the domestic leg of this route during World War II when it flew soldiers and supplies from the Northwestern United States to Alaska It was at this point that Northwest began painting its airliners tails bright red as a visual aid in the often harsh weather conditions The airline s experience with the sub arctic climate led the U S government to designate Northwest as the main airline over the North Pacific following the war In the spring of 1947 Northwest began stationing employees at Haneda Airport in Tokyo flying them from the United States via Alaska on its Great Circle route On July 15 1947 Northwest was the first airline to begin direct service between the United States and Japan 15 using a Douglas DC 4 airliner named The Manila All pre war airline service to the Orient had been via Hawaii and the Philippines The flight to Japan originated at Wold Chamberlain Field in Minneapolis and stopped at Blatchford Field in Edmonton Elmendorf AFB in Anchorage and Shemya AAF in the western Aleutian Islands The flight continued from Tokyo to Lunghwa Airport in Shanghai and then to Nichols Field at Manila 16 A flight between Tokyo and Seoul Gimpo Airport began on October 20 1947 and Naha Airport in Okinawa began to be a stop on the Tokyo to Manila route on November 16 1947 Northwest service to Shanghai was suspended in May 1949 because of the civil war in China with the Republic of China nearly ready to collapse and its government evacuated to the island of Formosa Taiwan Northwest Airlines added Songshan Airport in Taipei the new capital city of the Republic of China as a stop on the Tokyo Okinawa Manila route on June 3 1950 with ongoing interchange service to Hong Kong operated by Hong Kong Airways Northwest Orient Airlines 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 August 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Northwest Orient McDonnell Douglas DC 10 at Detroit Metropolitan Airport in 1985 With transpacific flights established Northwest began branding as Northwest Orient Airlines when 17 18 19 although its registered corporate name remained Northwest Airlines NWA continuously upgraded equipment on the transpacific routes On June 22 1949 Northwest received its first double decker Boeing 377 Stratocruiser enabling more comfortable accommodations and faster transpacific flights The Stratocruiser began flying from the West Coast to Honolulu in 1950 and to Tokyo via Alaska on September 27 1952 In 1954 Northwest Orient purchased Douglas DC 6Bs and started flying them to Tokyo and Manila In January 1960 Northwest was operating transcontinental Lockheed L 188 Electra turboprop service nonstop between New York City and Seattle with these flights being part of the airline s service between New York City and Asia with Douglas DC 7C aircraft being operated on the transpacific legs from Seattle and was also operating Electra propjet flights between Minneapolis St Paul Milwaukee and Chicago Midway Airport in the north and several destinations in Florida in the south including Miami Fort Lauderdale and Tampa 20 nbsp Boeing 707 351B at San Francisco International Airport in 1970On July 8 1960 Northwest placed the Douglas DC 8 into service offering the shortest flight times to East Asia but within a year the airline was negotiating the sale of the five DC 8s Northwest retired the last of its Boeing 377 Stratocruisers that September The airline purchased several Boeing 720Bs in 1961 and in 1963 several new Boeing 707 320Bs for a time it adopted the slogan Northwest Orient The Fan Jet Airline Nonstop transpacific flights became feasible with the introduction of the 707 320B C Northwest bought its first Boeing 747s in 1970 and soon began retiring its smaller 707s In addition to operating the 747 s on transpacific flights Northwest briefly flew them on its busiest domestic routes as well For years Northwest was the largest foreign airline serving Japan In 1951 Northwest became involved with the founding of Japan Air Lines JAL by leasing airliners and crewmembers to the new airline In 1952 United States and Japan ratified a regional bilateral aviation treaty under which Northwest and Pan American World Airways became the two U S airlines at Tokyo These carriers also received fifth freedom rights to carry passengers from and via Tokyo to other Asian destinations such as Seoul Busan Taipei Kaohsiung Manila Beijing Shanghai Guangzhou Hong Kong Bangkok Kuala Lumpur and Singapore Northwest also flew passenger routes from Japan to Guam and Saipan U S possessions in Micronesia Northwest s meteorologists led by Dan Sowa pioneered the first clear air turbulence forecasting system in 1957 important since the airline flew many northern routes over turbulence prone mountain areas Northwest remained a leader in turbulence prediction providing TPAWS turbulence prediction and warning services to other airlines 21 Revenue passenger traffic in millions of passenger miles scheduled flights only domestic plus international 22 Year Pax Miles1951 6021955 10171960 16541965 33041970 45061975 9471 Transatlantic and domestic expansion Edit nbsp Boeing 727 200 at Miami Airport in February 1971 nbsp Boeing 747 at London Gatwick Airport in 1983 in pre merger Northwest Orient livery nbsp Boeing 747 100 at Osaka Itami Airport ca 1990 in post merger Northwest liveryDuring the regulated era Northwest s domestic network was mainly along the northern transcontinental route through Chicago Minneapolis and Seattle New York and Detroit were added in 1945 Northwest also served Hawaii from the West Coast and starting in 1958 59 Georgia and Florida from Chicago 23 On June 1 1959 Northwest accepted its first turboprop the L 188 Electra from the Lockheed Corporation Northwest Airlines started flying the three engine Boeing 727 100 in November 1964 24 many stretched B727 251s followed After airline deregulation in 1978 Northwest began nonstop flights to other Asian cities returned to China in 1984 after a 34 year hiatus and strengthened its presence in the southwestern United States It also began flying to the United Kingdom Ireland Germany and Scandinavia On May 21 1984 shareholders in Northwest approved the creation of NWA Inc a Delaware corporation that became the holding company of Northwest 25 On October 1 1986 Northwest merged with Republic Airlines also based in Minneapolis St Paul It was the largest airline merger at the time and caused operational issues which led the combined carrier to have an on time performance of just 42 percent in its early days 26 Through the merger NWA adopted Republic s three hub domestic network centered around Detroit Memphis and Minneapolis St Paul The combined airline became particularly strong in the first two cities with a market share of over 80 in each 27 After the merger the airline dropped Orient from its branding 28 One major reason for the merger was that Northwest s unique position as a domestic and transpacific carrier had been challenged in 1985 when United Airlines acquired the Pacific Division of Pan Am 29 nbsp Northwest was one of the last passenger airlines to fly the DC 10 when its last one was retired on January 8 2007 nbsp Northwest was also the last major US passenger airline to fly the original series Boeing 747 pre 400 models Northwest continued to use the pre merger Northwest Orient livery minus the word Orient until a new livery and identity designed by Landor Associates were adopted in 1989 The new livery nicknamed the bowling shoe by employees featured colors of red white gray and very dark blue Also in 1989 Northwest became the launch customer of the Boeing 747 400 and became one of only two airlines in the United States to operate it until its merger with Delta in 2009 The first aircraft it purchased was the first 747 400 to be built it was later involved in a loss of control incident in 2002 and placed on display at the Delta Flight Museum following its retirement by Delta in 2015 Northwest was purchased in a 1989 leveraged buyout by an investment group headed by Al Checchi Fred Malek and Gary Wilson with KLM and many others To pay off the debt incurred the new management sold many of the airline s aircraft to leasing companies and sold property around the world including land in central Tokyo The expense of the buyout was so great that in 1993 following several years of losses due to industry overcapacity and a traffic downturn following the Gulf War Northwest threatened bankruptcy unless its employee groups agreed to three years of wage cuts After signing the concessionary agreements Northwest made its first profit since 1989 nbsp This Northwest DC 10 Registration N237NW was painted in a hybrid Northwest KLM livery to advertise the alliance between the two airlinesAlso in 1993 Northwest began its strategic alliance with KLM which was the largest airline partnership at that time This partnership eventually became the Wings Alliance but the alliance never grew beyond the two airlines Northwest gradually pulled out of its minor European destinations and focused on domestic and Asian markets On May 1 1996 Northwest inaugurated the first ever nonstop service from North America to China Detroit Beijing 30 Nonstop Detroit Shanghai service followed in April 2000 Later these nonstop services were suspended in 2002 due to the outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome SARS citation needed Northwest then served these routes via Tokyo The airline sought government approval to restore nonstop Detroit Shanghai service in March 2007 but lost its bid to United s Washington Beijing route however before their merger with Delta Air Lines Northwest received tentative authority to restart nonstop Detroit Shanghai service starting March 25 2009 Through the late 1990s and early 2000s decade Northwest enjoyed profits and focused on improving technology to increase convenience and reduce costs The airline offered airport self service check in kiosks starting in 1997 and had more than any other airline Northwest was the first large U S airline to offer passengers internet check in with service from December 2000 During the early 2000s decade Northwest acquired a reputation of refusing to adopt industry wide fare increases that had been accepted by other airlines This changed in March 2005 when Northwest adopted fare hikes in response to rising oil prices nbsp NWA logo 1989 2003 nbsp 757 351 in the Bowling Shoe livery used from 1989 until 2003 31 Due to competition from low cost carriers such as Southwest Airlines and increased labor costs resulting from a new contract with employees represented by the Aircraft Mechanics Fraternal Association AMFA labor union Northwest began to make cutbacks in early 2001 Two small rounds of employee layoffs and other cutbacks were implemented in the months prior to the September 11 terrorist attacks Following the attacks Northwest was forced to make dramatic changes to its business structure through major employee layoffs and other cost cutting measures The retirement of costly and aging aircraft such as the Boeing 727 and McDonnell Douglas DC 10 40 were accelerated as new aircraft went into service In addition the airline pursued options to reduce costs across the board including removing pillows peanuts pretzels in flight entertainment on domestic flights and newspapers and magazines Over 50 McDonnell Douglas DC 9 Boeing 757 Boeing 747 and Airbus A320 family aircraft were withdrawn from use in an attempt to lower overall capacity and save money Some of these aircraft were returned to service citation needed Following many years of a pioneering and close partnership with KLM Royal Dutch Airlines Northwest along with partners KLM and Continental Airlines joined SkyTeam an airline alliance of ten airlines from around the world on September 15 2004 This was partially a result of Air France merging with KLM forming the Air France KLM group The airline continued to hemorrhage money however Bankruptcy filing Edit Despite far reaching money saving initiatives Northwest was forced to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection for the first time in its 79 year history The filing took place in the U S Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York on September 14 2005 32 With Northwest s filing four of the six largest U S carriers were operating under bankruptcy protection Northwest joined Delta Air Lines which filed just minutes before United Airlines and US Airways in bankruptcy All four carriers subsequently emerged from bankruptcy protection Northwest common stock shares dropped more than 50 for the second time in three days following the news largely because the stock is generally canceled as part of the bankruptcy process In the following weeks Northwest Airlink carriers Mesaba Airlines and Pinnacle Airlines both announced that Northwest Airlines had missed payments to them for their Airlink flying Northwest also announced plans to shrink its Airlink fleet by over 45 aircraft Mesaba Aviation filed for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy on October 13 2005 33 nbsp A320 212 at San Jose in Northwest s final livery 2004 2010 before its closure Northwest announced on May 18 2007 that shares of the company would begin to trade on the NYSE under the ticker NWA Initial trading on a when issued basis began on May 21 2007 and regular trading began on May 31 2007 Also on May 18 2007 Northwest Airlines was cleared by a federal bankruptcy judge to emerge from Chapter 11 Bankruptcy protection on May 31 2007 ending Northwest s 20 months of difficulty trying to slash costs 34 On July 16 2007 Northwest Airlines applied to the United States Department of Transportation for nonstop service between its WorldGateway hub at Detroit to Shanghai beginning in 2007 on Boeing 747 400s and to Beijing beginning in 2010 on Boeing 787 Dreamliners The airline faced off against Delta Air Lines which proposed Atlanta to Shanghai and Beijing American Airlines Chicago O Hare Beijing Continental Airlines Newark Shanghai US Airways Philadelphia Beijing United Airlines Los Angeles Shanghai and San Francisco Guangzhou and MAXjet Seattle Shanghai in the route competition citation needed On August 12 2007 Northwest Airlines became a passive investor in the purchase of Midwest Airlines by TPG Capital The airline stated that while it was an investor it would not participate in any management or control of Midwest Airlines 35 However on August 14 2007 AirTran Airways raised their offer for Midwest to 16 25 a share 25 cents more than the TPG offer 36 But soon after on August 17 2007 TPG Capital raised their offer to 17 00 a share which sealed the deal Northwest Airlines became a minority owner of Midwest Airlines in the fourth quarter of 2007 7 On September 25 2007 Northwest Airlines received DOT approval to begin service to Shanghai from its Detroit hub beginning March 25 2009 American Continental Delta and US Airways also received new or additional China route authority to Shanghai or Beijing and United received authority to serve Guangzhou 37 Merger with Delta Air Lines Edit Main article Delta Air Lines Northwest Airlines merger nbsp Most common symbol for the mergerOn April 14 2008 Northwest Airlines announced that it would be merging with Delta Air Lines to form the world s largest airline The merger was approved on October 29 2008 The CEO during the merger of Delta and Northwest was Richard Anderson who was Northwest Airlines CEO from 2001 to 2004 The combined airline uses the Delta name and branding On October 1 2009 Northwest WorldPerks merged into SkyMiles On January 31 2010 Delta completed the merge of the reservation systems and discontinued using the Northwest name for flights The official last flight was Northwest Airlines Flight 2470 from Los Angeles California to Las Vegas Nevada 38 39 NWA Cargo Edit As of 2006 Northwest Airlines Cargo was the largest cargo carrier among U S combination passenger and cargo airlines NWA Cargo s fleet of dedicated Boeing 747 freighter aircraft flew from some key cities in the United States and East Asia as well as Amsterdam connecting with the carrier s cargo hub in Anchorage Alaska Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport facilitating the quick transfer of cargo between large cities on both sides of the Pacific NWA Cargo also transports freight aboard the passenger fleet of Northwest Airlines to more than 250 cities worldwide Delta announced that the NWA Cargo hub will be shut down by the end of 2009 As of early 2008 NWA s largest cargo client was DHL International In December 2007 NWA announced that DHL International would terminate its cargo agreement with the airline effective late 2008 According to NWA Chief Financial Officer Dave Davis the loss of its largest cargo client would bring significant changes to the division Further changes to the NWA Cargo division continued into 2009 as it was merged into the Delta Cargo service NWA Cargo ended all operations on December 28 2009 On July 30 2010 Northwest pleaded guilty to one count of felony price fixing for fixing prices for cargo shipping via NWA Cargo 40 nbsp Northwest Cargo Boeing 747Corporate affairs and identity EditHeadquarters Edit nbsp Entrance sign to Northwest Airlines headquarters in EaganImmediately before Northwest ceased being an independent airline its headquarters was in Building A 41 a facility in Eagan Minnesota 42 43 near Minneapolis St Paul International Airport and the intersection of I 35E and Interstate 494 44 The 266 899 square foot 24 795 7 m2 building in the complex which housed about 1 000 Northwest employees was built in 1985 44 The building had a large N painted on the roof 41 After Delta and Northwest merged Delta moved the Eagan headquarters employees to other offices in the Minneapolis Saint Paul area In October 2009 Delta Air Lines hired a real estate broker to put the 108 acre 44 ha former Northwest Airlines headquarters complex for sale or for lease During that month the facility had a taxable value of 13 7 million The airline marketed 36 acres 15 ha of the former NWA facility that is located along Interstate 494 separately from the main part of the property as the airline considered the property to be excess Terry Kingston the executive director of the real estate brokerage firm Cushman amp Wakefield stated that there had been some interest in the Northwest Airlines property from other parties 44 Northwest was the only occupant of the four story headquarters building 45 Employees remaining in the Minneapolis area were moved to Building C 41 the former Republic Airlines headquarters building 46 located on the property of Minneapolis St Paul International Airport as well as Building J located in Eagan 47 Before the headquarters were in Eagan they were on the grounds of Minneapolis St Paul International Airport 48 49 Labor relations 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 May 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message A recurring issue in Northwest s history was its troubled labor relations In 1998 Northwest walked away from the bargaining table locked out its pilots represented by the Air Line Pilots Association International and shut down the airline for more than two weeks The airline sustained heavy losses as a result and ended 1998 in the red after being profitable since 1993 50 51 52 On January 5 2000 Northwest Airlines filed a federal lawsuit against the flight attendants union and a number of rank and file employees 53 Along with its January 5 complaint Northwest Airlines filed a motion for discovery requesting searches of the hard drives of the office and home computers of union officials Additionally Northwest requested searches of the home computers of rank and file employees including Kevin Griffin and Frank Reed On February 8 Minnesota District Court Judge Boylan approved the request and issued the discovery order The order required all 43 named defendants officers and rank and file members to turn over both home and office computer equipment to the accounting company Ernst amp Young for purposes of examining and copying information and communications contained on the computer hard drives The order permitted the discovery of all data including e mail communications After conducting discovery Northwest Airlines fired over a dozen employees in early March stating that they had engaged in a sickout The Union filed grievances claiming none of the employees sick calls were false The effect on intra airline email use was marked postings critical of Northwest Airlines by employees dwindled and the majority of messages after the search were posted anonymously nbsp A Northwest Airlines 757 351On August 20 2005 after months of negotiations an impasse declared by the NMB and a 30 day cooling off period the over 4 750 Northwest aircraft mechanics janitors and aircraft cleaners represented by AMFA went on strike against the company After numerous negotiation sessions no agreement was reached and the company began hiring permanent replacement workers In mid October after permanently hiring about 500 non union workers Northwest made a final offer to the union The offer would have saved 500 union jobs and offered four weeks of severance pay to terminated employees This offer was worse than the original declined by the union which would have saved over 2 000 jobs and offered 16 weeks of severance pay On October 20 2005 AMFA announced that it would not allow its members to vote on the offer citing that parts of the contract would violate the union s commitment to its members Finally in late December 2005 Northwest made what it termed its final offer to the union The agreement would have terminated all striking workers and given them rights to unemployment compensation The union voted down the offer On October 9 2006 AMFA leadership and Northwest reached an agreement 54 Under the settlement all AMFA workers still on strike as of that date will be converted to lay off status with 5 weeks of severance pay 10 weeks if they resign from Northwest However these employees will have a right of recall to their old jobs Approval of the settlement was 55 on November 6 2006 On May 30 2007 it was announced that the flight attendants narrowly agreed to concessions and became the last major workgroup at Northwest to agree to new contract terms The deal was approved by a vote of 2 966 to 2 862 Union leaders said that 90 5 percent of eligible voters cast ballots The new contract would provide Northwest with 1957 million in annual cuts through 2011 56 57 58 59 Negotiations with attendants had been ongoing and contentious for several years The flight attendants were unable to strike during negotiations because of a court injunction and the refusal of the mediation board to release them from bargaining which would have allowed the setting of a strike deadline The attendants had been working under imposed pay cuts and work rules since July 2006 when a previous tentative agreement was rejected by 55 percent of the voting members 60 61 62 63 Prior to the May 2007 agreement union leaders had expressed concern that its defeat could prompt the National Mediation Board to recess talks indefinitely resulting in the loss of a 182 million bankruptcy claim the attendants had against Northwest With the new agreement the 182 million claim was to eventually be sold for cash with an estimated pre tax value of 15 000 to 18 000 per flight attendant Other labor unions at Northwest received similar claims as part of their concessionary agreements citation needed Previous to the recent agreements Northwest provided employees with stock in exchange for concessions For example In 1993 Northwest s pilots ground workers and flight attendants received stock and seats on the board of directors in exchange for pay cuts As part of the agreement Northwest was supposed to buy back these preferred shares in 2003 but refused to do so citing financial distress Flight attendants ground workers and mechanics still holding those preferred shares received shares of new Northwest stock estimated at a combined value of 277 million citation needed In the summer of 2007 Northwest was engaged in a labor conflict with its pilots over a large number of end of the month flight cancellations The pilots claimed that Northwest did not have sufficient pilots to fly its schedule Northwest accused the pilots of calling in sick to create the problem The dispute was resolved with a new agreement with ALPA in August 2007 in which pilots would be compensated for overtime Northwest also began hiring new pilots to alleviate the pilot shortages they faced throughout the summer of 2007 citation needed Destinations Edit nbsp A Northwest Airbus A330 323X landing at London Gatwick AirportFollowing the Republic merger in 1986 Northwest primarily operated on a hub and spoke route system with hubs in Detroit Memphis Minneapolis St Paul and Tokyo Under the KLM joint venture started in 1993 the two carriers established an Amsterdam hub where transatlantic routes operated by Northwest linked with European African and Asian routes operated by KLM Northwest also operated a few routes outside this hub system such as flights from the west coast to Honolulu In the mid 1980s Northwest operated the only U S flag carrier service to Glasgow Oslo and Stockholm as well as service to Copenhagen the latter three cities are due to Minneapolis s large Nordic population However this was later withdrawn after several years From April 2000 Northwest operated non stop flights from Detroit to Milan and Rome both were later withdrawn from 2003 to 2005 Rome was served only during the summer season In 2009 under the banner of Delta service to Rome was then resumed for the summer season In 1991 Northwest began service to Australia after United and Qantas began non stop flights to the continental U S using the newly introduced long range 747 400 Northwest routed its Sydney New York flight through Osaka which raised Japanese protest because less than 30 of passengers on the Australia Japan segment were originating in the U S 64 On May 1 1996 Northwest began the first ever non stop service from North America to mainland China from Detroit to Beijing three times a week 30 From 1996 until 2002 Northwest operated nonstop flights from its Detroit hub to Beijing and Shanghai Eventually these routes were suspended When that happened Northwest operated these routes from Detroit with a connection at its Tokyo Narita hub However on July 16 2007 Northwest re applied with the US Department of Transportation for nonstop service between Detroit and both Beijing and Shanghai 65 On September 25 2007 the US Department of Transportation tentatively awarded authority to Northwest for a new Detroit to Shanghai Pudong route effective March 25 2009 The route was to be flown using the Boeing 747 400 until the Boeing 787 Dreamliner aircraft became available however the Detroit Shanghai nonstop route was taken over by Delta on October 24 2009 using its Boeing 777 200ER and Boeing 777 200LR aircraft after Delta ended nonstop service between Atlanta and Shanghai due to weak customer demand The Detroit Beijing nonstop route was later launched by the merged Delta using a Boeing 777 200ER on July 1 2011 In 2008 Northwest was one of several U S airlines to receive permission from the British government to fly into Heathrow Airport in London after previously having to use Gatwick Airport Northwest began service to Heathrow from its hubs in Detroit and Minneapolis as well as starting Seattle London service However after being acquired by Delta in 2008 the Seattle route was dropped in January 2009 so the Heathrow landing slot and aircraft used could be redeployed to a more profitable route In 2009 the Heathrow routes from the Detroit and Minneapolis hubs were taken over by Delta using its Boeing 767 400ER aircraft Northwest Airlines also served more Canadian cities than any other U S carrier including Calgary Edmonton Kitchener Waterloo London ON Montreal Dorval Ottawa Quebec City Regina Saskatoon Thunder Bay Toronto Pearson Vancouver and Winnipeg Seasonal service was also offered to smaller Canadian cities Codeshare agreements Edit Northwest Airlines had codeshare agreements with the following airlines as of March 2009 Air France Alaska Airlines Alitalia America West Airlines American Eagle China Airlines China Southern Airlines Continental Airlines 66 67 Czech Airlines Delta Air Lines merger partner Gulfstream International Airlines Hawaiian Airlines Horizon Air Japan Airlines Kenya Airways KLM KLM Cityhopper Korean Air Malev Hungarian Airlines Midwest Airlines Pinnacle AirlinesFleet EditMain article Northwest Airlines fleet nbsp A Northwest Airlines Airbus A320 landing at Vancouver International AirportAt the time of the merger with Delta Air Lines Northwest had a total of 320 aircraft with seven on order It was also the last U S passenger airline to have a dedicated cargo fleet and cargo only routes The Northwest fleet was integrated into Delta s fleet on December 31 2009 Northwest operated a mixed fleet of Boeing McDonnell Douglas and Airbus aircraft whereas Delta operated just Boeing and McDonnell Douglas aircraft The Boeing 757 was the only type common to the pre merger fleets of both Delta and Northwest As part of a major fleet renewal program Northwest introduced a simplified new paint scheme and logo in 2003 The airline replaced its McDonnell Douglas DC 10 airliners with the Airbus A330 The first Airbus A330 300 used initially for European flights arrived on August 6 2003 Northwest Airlines also possessed the youngest trans Atlantic fleet of any North American or European airline 68 Northwest Airlines also began flying reconfigured Boeing 757 200 airliners on some of its European flights carrying fewer passengers Northwest was one of only two passenger airlines in the United States to fly the Boeing 747 400 the other being United Airlines A number of Boeing 747 400 aircraft formerly operated by Northwest were then also flown by Delta following the merger of the two air carriers including the first B747 400 ever built with this aircraft currently on public display at the Delta Flight Museum located at Hartsfield Jackson Atlanta International Airport ATL 69 Northwest was looking for manufacturers to discuss the replacement of their 100 110 and 125 seat McDonnell Douglas DC 9 DC 9 10 DC 9 30 and DC 9 50 aircraft with an average age of 35 years 70 71 Cabin EditIn March 1988 Northwest Airlines announced that it would ban smoking on all flights within North America effective April 23 1988 on the same day that a rule from the U S federal government prohibiting smoking on all domestic flights of a duration of two hours or fewer would take into effect Northwest was the first major U S airline to enact a smoking ban since the airline Muse Air had ended its four year smoking ban in 1985 72 World Business Class Edit World Business Class was Northwest Airlines international business class product It was offered on all widebody aircraft 73 Seats had 60 inches of pitch and 176 degrees of recline Passengers aboard this class received free meals and refreshments including alcoholic beverages All seats were equipped with Audio Video On Demand AVOD universal power ports a moveable reading light a folding work table and a swivel cocktail table Domestic First Class Edit nbsp Typical dinner served in Domestic First ClassFirst Class was offered on all narrowbody aircraft as well as CRJ 900 Northwest Airlink flights operated by Mesaba Airlines and E175 flights operated by Compass Airlines Seats ranged from 19 5 to 21 5 inches wide and had between 34 and 37 inches of pitch Passengers aboard this class received complimentary meals refreshments and alcoholic beverages International Economy Class Edit Economy Class was offered on all widebody aircraft Seats ranged from 17 to 17 5 inches wide and had between 31 and 34 inches of pitch Passengers aboard this class received free meals snacks and non alcoholic beverages Beer and wine were complimentary on international flights with complimentary meals other alcoholic beverages could be purchased for a fee Passengers aboard Airbus A330 aircraft also had an Audio Video On Demand AVOD system located in the seatback in front of them and passengers seated in rows 10 23 A330 200 or rows 10 28 A330 300 had a universal power port located below their seat Domestic Economy Class Edit Economy Class was offered on all narrowbody aircraft Seats ranged from 17 to 17 5 inches wide and had between 30 and 34 inches of pitch the same as on international economy class Passengers aboard this class received free refreshments In latter years in lieu of complimentary prepared meals snack boxes sandwiches on select flights and light snacks were available for purchase as part of a buy on board program 74 Alcoholic beverages were also sold Before 2008 Northwest Airlines was the only major U S airline aside from low cost short haul Southwest Airlines Allegiant Air and Spirit Airlines to not offer any in flight entertainment within North America including Alaska Although several of the airline s domestic aircraft were originally equipped with in flight entertainment systems these were removed in 2005 to cut costs US Airways implemented a similar initiative in 2008 On flights between Honolulu International Airport and Minneapolis Saint Paul International Airport passengers experienced the same cabin as International Economy Class aboard Airbus A330 aircraft WorldPerks Edit nbsp Northwest Airlines frequent flyer program WorldPerks offered regular travelers the ability to obtain free tickets First Class upgrades on flights discounted membership for its airport lounges WorldClubs or other types of rewards Customers could accumulate miles from actual flight segments flown or through Northwest s partners such as car rental companies hotels credit cards and other vendors WorldPerks elite tiers were Silver Elite Gold Elite and Platinum elite which allowed for more mileage bonuses priority waitlists and standby and other benefits Over the years some details of the program changed such as introducing capacity controlled awards only a certain number of seats allocated for free travel expiration of account if no activity occurred in three years a requirement of a Saturday night stay for domestic coach awards waiving of capacity controls for awards but requiring double the number of miles for redemption and adding several partner airlines for mileage accumulation and award redemption 75 The original name of the WorldPerks program was the Northwest Orient Airlines Free Flight Plan which began in 1981 76 The original program used paper coupons and gave credit for flight segments Upon renaming the program to WorldPerks in 1986 a mileage based system was used In addition to its Northwest Airlink and SkyTeam alliance partnerships Northwest offered frequent flyer partnerships with the following airlines 77 nbsp Air Tahiti Nui nbsp Alaska Airlines nbsp American Eagle California routes only nbsp Cebu Pacific temporarily suspended nbsp China Airlines nbsp China Eastern Airlines nbsp Continental Airlines discontinued after Continental left SkyTeam on October 24 2009 nbsp Garuda Indonesia temporarily suspended nbsp Gulfstream International Airlines nbsp Hawaiian Airlines inter island and international routes only nbsp Horizon Air nbsp Japan Airlines nbsp Jet Airways nbsp Jetstar Asia Airways WorldPerks Asia only nbsp Kingfisher Airlines nbsp Kenya Airways nbsp Malaysia Airlines nbsp Malev Hungarian Airlines nbsp Midwest Airlines nbsp nbsp Thai AirAsia WorldPerks Asia only Northwest also offered frequent flyer partnerships with the following car rental agencies 78 Alamo Rent A Car Avis Rent A Car Budget Rent A Car 79 Dollar Rent A Car Hertz Rent A Car National Car Rental Thrifty Car RentalWorldClubs Edit nbsp WorldClubs was Northwest s member lounge Members had reciprocal access to a number of other clubs including fellow SkyTeam carriers such as KLM Delta Air Lines and Air France Northwest also had partnerships with various other airline lounges on an airport by airport basis Unlike some other airline lounges WorldClubs offered free alcoholic beverages in domestic locations and Tokyo Narita Northwest also offered free Wi Fi internet access worldwide Locations Edit The following airports had Northwest Airlines WorldClub locations nbsp Northwest WorldClub Chicago O Hare International Airport Terminal 2Boston Chicago O Hare Detroit 4 Honolulu London Heathrow SkyTeam Lounge Los Angeles Manila Memphis Milwaukee Minneapolis St Paul 2 Newark New York La Guardia Portland OR San Francisco Seattle Tacoma Tokyo Narita 2 Washington Dulles Washington Reagan Incidents and accidents EditFatal accidents Edit The following are major incidents and accidents that occurred on Northwest s mainline aircraft Northwest Airlines Reported Incidents Flight Date Aircraft Location Description CasualtiesFatal Serious Minor Uninjured Ground2 January 10 1938 LockheedModel 14 Bozeman Montana Crashed in the Bridger Mountains 12 mi 19 km northeast of Bozeman Montana This was the airline s first fatal crash Three other Lockheed Model 14 aircraft belonging to Northwest crashed over the next thirteen months 105 October 30 1941 Douglas DC 3 Moorhead Minnesota The plane crashed in fog and mist due to icing on the wings Fourteen of the fifteen passengers were killed in the crash The pilot Clarence Bates was thrown clear of the wreckage and was the lone survivor 80 14 14422 March 12 1948 Douglas DC 4 Mount Sanford Alaska Flight 4422 was a military charter en route back to the US from Shanghai China and had just refueled at Merrill Field in Anchorage Alaska before continuing on toward LaGuardia Airport where the flight was to be concluded The aircraft veered 23 miles off course and struck a mountain during a snowstorm The snowstorms quickly buried the aircraft in a mountain glacier 30421 81 August 29 1948 Martin 202 Winona Minnesota Northwest 421 was flying a scheduled domestic route from Chicago Minneapolis St Paul when it crashed about 4 1 mi 6 6 km NW of Winona Minnesota after entering the leading edge of a thunderstorm Pieces of the plane were seen falling and the plane was found on a bluff on the east side of the Mississippi River The cause of the crash was the fatigue of the left wing causing it to separate from the plane and precipitating the plunge 376427 82 October 27 1948 Douglas DC 4 Edmonton Alberta Flight 6427 was on a special cargo trip flying Minneapolis St Paul Edmonton Anchorage Merrill Field Tokyo when it crashed into a wooded area 34 4 mi 55 4 km N of Edmonton soon after takeoff The investigation revealed that the captain had feathered the propellers in simulation to instruct the copilot on emergency procedures This was determined to be the primary cause of the crash 2 3307 83 March 7 1950 Martin 202 Minneapolis Minnesota Flight 307 was operating a domestically scheduled passenger flight routing Washington DC Detroit Madison Rochester Minneapolis St Paul Winnipeg crashed just before landing at Minneapolis after deciding not to land at Rochester due to weather The plane struck a flagpole at the National Soldiers Cemetery The plane continued flying for another 3 8 mi 6 1 km when the left wing separated and fell The plane crashed into a house and both were engulfed in flames The cause of the crash was determined to be the loss of visual reference to the ground due to the snow falling at the time 13 22501 June 23 1950 Douglas DC 4 Lake Michigan Northwest 2501 was lost over Lake Michigan during a flight from New York s LaGuardia Airport to Seattle WA The aircraft went off radar and a widespread search was conducted Some debris upholstery and human remains were found floating on the surface but divers were unable to locate the plane s wreckage 58N A 84 October 13 1950 Martin 202 Almelund Minnesota This flight was intended to be a training flight originating and ending at Minneapolis St Paul The reversal of the right propeller during the flight caused the plane to spin out of control and crash killing all on board 6115 85 November 7 1950 Martin 202 Butte Montana Flight 115 was flying a scheduled route of Chicago Minneapolis St Paul Billings Great Falls Helena Butte Seattle when it crashed 3 1 mi 5 0 km E of Butte while landing The plane crashed into the eastern slope of a ridge The cause of the crash was improperly followed approach procedures 21115 86 January 16 1951 Martin 202 Reardan Washington Flight 115 which was the same designation as the previous accident was on the scheduled route of Minneapolis St Paul Billings Kalispell Spokane Wenatchee Yakima Seattle when it crashed about 11 9 mi 19 2 km W of Reardan after the captain decided not to land at Wenatchee but proceed to Yakima due to weather An emergency message from the plane was heard briefly 15 seconds after the clearance was given The cause of the crash is not known 10324 87 January 19 1952 Douglas C 54 Sandspit British Columbia Flight 324 was flying a nonscheduled flight originating in Tokyo ending at McChord Air Force Base with intermediate stops in Shemya and Anchorage Elmendorf Air Force Base While opposite Sitka Alaska the No 1 propeller was feathered by the captain who requested a diversion to Sandspit As the plane was landing it touched down about a third of the way down the runway at around the midpoint power was applied and the plane took off but it stalled due to the steep climb and plunged into the water at the end of the runway The cause of the crash was the icing that prevented the pilot from retracting the nose gear 36 72 April 2 1956 Boeing Stratocruiser Puget Sound Washington Flight 2 crashed after takeoff from Seattle Tacoma International Airport on a flight to Portland Oregon Chicago and New York City The pilots ditched the aircraft into Puget Sound 5 4 mi 8 7 km off Seattle 5 2 31710 March 17 1960 Lockheed L 188 Electra Cannelton Indiana Flight 710 was en route to Miami from Chicago when the aircraft lost a wing at approximately 18 000 feet near Tell City Indiana 631 11 88 July 14 1960 Douglas DC 7 Pacific Ocean near Manila Philippines Northwest 1 11 was flying from New York City to Manila Philippines with stops in Seattle Anchorage Cold Bay Tokyo and Okinawa The plane was on its final leg between Okinawa and Manila when the No 2 engine experienced power loss The propeller then separated from the plane and hit the fuselage slashing a 15 inch hole The pilot decided to ditch the plane in the Pacific Ocean about 77 5 mi 124 7 km NE of Manila Upon impact the rear of the plane separated as well as the engines and right wing The majority of the survivors used the right wing which floated for three hours as a life raft until rescue came 1 58104 89 October 28 1960 Douglas C 54 Missoula Montana Flight 104 was flying from Spokane to Missoula when it crashed about 20 miles 30 km W of Missoula in the Clark Fork Valley The plane was seen making a steep left banking turn with nose up the plane continued rolling and crashed inverted The crash was attributed to pilot error 12706 90 September 16 1961 Lockheed L 188 Electra Chicago Illinois Flight 706 was on a routine flight from Milwaukee to Miami with stops in Chicago Tampa and Ft Lauderdale While departing from Chicago the plane banked to the right and gradually descended until hitting the ground The cause of the crash was mechanical failure of the ailerons 37705 91 February 12 1963 Boeing 720 Florida Everglades Flight 705 flying from Miami to Chicago crashed in the Florida Everglades approximately 37 miles 60 km SW of Miami International Airport while diverting to avoid bad weather The cause of the crash was an unrecoverable loss of control due to severe turbulence 43293 92 June 3 1963 Douglas DC 7 Pacific Oceannear Annette Island Alaska Flight 293 was flying a Military Air Transport Service MATS flight from McChord Air Force Base outside Tacoma Washington to Elmendorf Air Force Base outside Anchorage Alaska While in flight contact was lost Floating debris from the plane was located 182 5 mi 293 7 km WSW of Annette Island The cause of the crash was never determined 1016231 93 December 1 1974 Boeing 727 Stony Point New York Flight 6231 was flying on a ferry flight from John F Kennedy International Airport to Buffalo when it crashed in the vicinity of Stony Point As the plane was cleared to climb the airspeed and rate of climb increased until the plane stalled and descended out of control into a wooded area The cause of the crash was loss of control because the flight crew failed to realize and correct the aircraft s high angle of attack low speed stall and descending spiral 3608 94 January 20 1983 Boeing 727 Portland Oregon Flight 608 was en route from Seattle Washington to Portland Oregon when it was hijacked The man informed a flight attendant that he had a bomb and demanded to be taken to Afghanistan Landing in Portland to refuel the hijacker negotiated with airport authorities Federal agents stormed the aircraft The hijacker threw the box he claimed had a bomb at the agents who shot and killed him The box contained no explosives 1 40255 August 16 1987 McDonnell Douglas MD 82 Romulus Michigan Flight 255 crashed on takeoff from Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport All but one aboard the MD 82 died The cause of the crash was attempted takeoff with the wrong configuration due to pilot mismanagement of the aircraft 154 1 21482 95 December 3 1990 Douglas DC 9 Romulus Michigan Flight 1482 a DC 9 14 departing for Pittsburgh collided with Flight 299 a Boeing 727 200 departing for Memphis at Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport near the intersection of runways 09 27 and 03C 21C in dense fog The 727 had begun its takeoff roll and the DC 9 had just taxied onto the active runway None of the 146 passengers and 10 crew members aboard the 727 were injured but the DC 9 sustained serious damage 8 10 26299 95 December 3 1990 Boeing 727 Romulus Michigan Involved in collision with Flight 1482 detailed in the previous line 156Total casualties Fatal Serious Minor Uninjured Ground 20 incidents 620 18 89 187 4Non fatal accidents and incidents Edit October 22 1962 1962 10 22 A DC 7 with 7 crew and 95 passengers 96 made a successful water landing in Sitka Sound The military charter flight was en route to Elmendorf Air Force Base from McChord Air Force Base and prior to the ditching at just before 1 p m local time the crew had been struggling with a propeller problem for about 45 minutes 97 The plane stayed afloat for 24 minutes after coming to rest in the water giving the occupants ample time to evacuate into life rafts Only 6 minor injuries were reported all passengers and crew were quickly rescued by U S Coast Guard ships 98 The accident report called the ditching an outstanding feat citing several key factors in this water landing s success pilots skill ideal conditions calm seas favorable weather daylight time to prepare for the ditching and the military passengers ease with following orders 99 Pilots who flew over the scene also praised the Northwest crew calling it the finest ditching they had ever seen 98 July 1 1968 1968 07 01 Northwest Airlines Flight 714 was hijacked to Cuba 100 January 22 1971 1971 01 22 Northwest Airlines Flight 433 was hijacked en route from Milwaukee to Detroit Michigan The hijacker demanded to be taken to Algeria but the plane landed in Cuba instead 101 November 24 1971 1971 11 24 Northwest Airlines Flight 305 en route from Portland International Airport to Seattle Tacoma International Airport was hijacked by D B Cooper After receiving a 200 000 ransom payment and four parachutes in Seattle he ordered the crew to fly to Mexico and he jumped from the aft airstairs of the Boeing 727 051 while it was in flight over Washington The aircraft later landed safely in Reno Nevada but Cooper s fate remains unknown May 8 1977 1977 05 08 Northwest Orient Airlines Flight 22 was hijacked after taking off from Haneda Airport Japan The hijacker demanded to be taken to the Soviet Union but was taken down 102 January 4 1990 1990 01 04 Northwest Airlines Flight 5 a flight from Miami to Minneapolis one of the three engines of the Boeing 727 aircraft fell off 103 The plane s crew unaware that they had lost an engine continued to fly for 25 minutes before making a safe landing in Tampa 104 March 8 1990 1990 03 08 a Northwest flight flew from Fargo North Dakota to Minneapolis with the entire cockpit crew legally drunk All three pilots were subsequently fired and had their licenses revoked by the FAA 105 November 20 1992 A 727 lost hydraulic power and made an emergency landing in Detroit with only engine power to steer the plane citation needed January 2 1999 1999 01 02 Jan 3 due to bad weather and blizzards passengers were stranded on aircraft at Detroit for periods up to 8 hours An official inquiry found the delays were serious and indicate that this event had important implications for passenger safety Moreover even if the well being of passengers had not been an issue the review team believes that the stranding of passengers on aircraft queued on taxiways for up to 8 hours invites more serious problems and is simply unacceptable None of the other airlines serving Detroit experienced ground delays approaching the magnitude of Northwest s delays 106 Subsequently passengers brought various legal claims against the carrier including false imprisonment and negligence and obtained a 7 1 million settlement 107 March 17 2001 2001 03 17 An Airbus A320 registered as N357NW Flight 985 had been forced to abort the landing when the A320 s nose suddenly lifts up while at the airspeed of 110 knots well before reaching v1 speed The plane then overran through Runway 03C and came to rest at the muddy terrain near Detroit Metropolitan Airport There were three minor injuries The cause for a sudden takeoff was the incorrect setting for the plane s trim which the trim was set at 1 7 up and it was caused by the incorrect takeoff speed when using Runway 03C as it was used by the flight crew at v1 138 knots which was below the correct minimum takeoff speed at v1 145 knots The aircraft involved in the accident was repaired and went back into service After the aircraft was being acquired by Delta Air Lines at the time when Northwest Airlines was merged on January 31 2010 the accident aircraft N357NW still remains in service as of May 2023 108 October 9 2002 2002 10 09 Northwest Airlines Flight 85 a Boeing 747 400 experienced a lower rudder hardover during cruise The crew declared an emergency and diverted the airplane to Ted Stevens International Airport in Anchorage Alaska 109 June 19 2004 2004 06 19 pilots mistakenly landed at Ellsworth AFB instead of the nearby Rapid City airport Passengers aboard were asked to close their window shades by US Air Force security personnel 110 May 10 2005 2005 05 10 a Northwest Airlines DC 9 collided on the ground with a Northwest Airlines Airbus A319 that had just pushed back from the gate at Minneapolis Saint Paul International Airport The DC 9 suffered a malfunction in one of its hydraulic systems in flight After landing the captain shut down one of the plane s engines inadvertently disabling the remaining working hydraulic system Six people were injured and both planes were substantially damaged 111 The Airbus A319 was later repaired and is currently in service with Delta Air Lines as of December 2022 June 19 2005 2005 06 19 at 0435 in the morning Tehran local time Northwest Airlines Flight 41 Ship No 1243 operating from Mumbai to Amsterdam made an emergency landing at the Mehrabad International Airport in Tehran Iran It was the first American air carrier to land in Iran in 26 years since the Iranian Revolution in 1979 112 August 19 2005 2005 08 19 a Northwest Airlines 747 200 registration N627US operating flight NW74 from Tokyo Narita Airport landed at Guam International Airport without its nose gear fully extended The nose of aircraft made full contact with the runway Smoke was reported on board and all passengers and crew were evacuated with only two minor injuries reported 113 114 October 20 2007 2007 10 20 Northwest Airlines Flight 1432 executed an emergency landing at Hector International Airport in Fargo North Dakota because the nose wheels had jammed in an abnormal position There were no injuries on board 115 February 20 2009 2009 02 20 Northwest Airlines Flight 2 a Boeing 747 400 flying from Ninoy Aquino International Airport in Manila Philippines to Narita International Airport near Tokyo Japan experienced severe turbulence when descending to Narita The aircraft with 408 passengers and 14 crew members aboard landed safely however 50 people were injured around five were hospitalized 116 May 4 2009 2009 05 04 An Airbus A320 211 registration N311US operated by Northwest Airlines as flight NW557 experienced a tailstrike resulting in substantial damage upon landing on runway 16L at Denver International Airport Colorado DEN The flight was a regularly scheduled passenger flight which departed from Minneapolis St Paul Airport Minnesota MSP at 11 39 117 October 21 2009 2009 10 21 Northwest Airlines Flight 188 an Airbus A320 flying from San Diego International Airport to Minneapolis St Paul International Airport overflew the Minneapolis airport and continued to fly off course by 150 miles leaving air traffic control to believe that the flight had been hijacked 118 119 The pilots originally stated that they were in an argument regarding airline policy and did not notice that they had flown off course 120 but later admitted to using their personal laptop computers at the time 121 The pilots contacted air traffic control after they realized their mistake and the flight arrived safely in Minneapolis about one hour late The pilots commercial flying licenses were subsequently revoked by the FAA 122 December 25 2009 2009 12 25 a Nigerian al Qaeda member tried to detonate plastic explosives on Northwest Airlines Flight 253 an Airbus A330 from Amsterdam to Detroit as the plane was landing in Detroit The device failed to detonate properly and the suspect suffered third degree burns Two other passengers incurred minor injuries The White House said it considered it an attempted terrorist attack 123 See also EditList of defunct airlines of the United States Professional Flight Attendants AssociationReferences Edit Delta and Northwest Integration Merger Updates Delta com January 31 2010 Archived from the original on December 21 2014 Retrieved March 5 2010 Letter from Northwest Archived April 17 2008 American Airlines US Airways Complete Merger WSJ com Published 10 December 2013 WATS Scheduled Passenger Kilometres Flown Iata org December 4 2012 Archived from the original on November 4 2013 Retrieved October 4 2013 Scheduled Freight Tonne Kilometres Flown Iata org December 4 2012 Archived from the original on October 6 2013 Retrieved October 4 2013 https northwestairlineshistory org aircraft Airlink and Express operator and aircraft list a b Northwest Airlines Becomes Minority Owner of Midwest Airlines Midwest Airlines Official Press Release August 17 2007 a b c d Significant events in Northwest s history Associated Press at NBC News September 14 2005 Retrieved on January 11 2012 Parcel Post Archived from the original on January 20 2008 Air Mail Scandal April 29th 1930 airlinefiles airlinefiles com Montana and the Sky The Beginning of Aviation in the Land of the Shining Mountains ASIN B0006BP8GE p 223 Ward Paul W BIG AIR LINES PUT IN BIDS FOR CARRYING MAIL permanent dead link The Sun April 21 1934 Start Page 1 2 pages Retrieved on January 11 2012 Northwest Airways Inc which had a 4 69 percent slice of the 1933 airmail business reorganized as the Northwest Airlines Inc and bid to day to 1939 NWA timetable Airchive com Archived from the original on March 20 2012 Retrieved October 4 2013 https www northwestairlineshistory org wp content uploads 2018 10 NW schedule 1948 03 15 jpg dead link First Commercial Flight from U S to Japan July 15 1947 Northwest Airlines Website Archived June 4 2000 1947 timetable Retrieved October 4 2013 Low air coach fares to all these cities Pittsburgh Press advertisement January 17 1956 p 15 30 savings Spokesman Review Spokane Washington advertisement February 18 1976 p 6 Birth mark Pittsburgh Post Gazette advertisement April 30 1969 p 5 http northwestairlineshistory org Digital Archive Timetables Jan 1 1960 Northwest Orient Airlines system timetable McCartney Scott Airline passenger injuries from turbulence decline Archive The Wall Street Journal at the Pittsburgh Post Gazette May 3 2005 But the improvement comes from more than just buckling up Northwest Airlines has been a pioneer in developing forecasting for turbulence and wind shear and today Northwest sells its daily turbulence plot to several other airlines Northwest is particularly interested in the issue because it flies so much in mountainous areas Handbook of Airline Statistics biannual CAB publication 1961 map and 1974 map Archived March 20 2012 at the Wayback Machine Roach and Eastwood 2003 p 66 Northwest Historical Timeline 1980 s Northwest Airlines Archived June 19 2000 Moylan Martin October 30 2008 Northwest Airlines a look back at its long history Minnesota Public Radio Ohanian Lee E May 11 2010 Another Too Big To Fail Firm Forbes Walters Robert October 2 1986 Trend toward monopolizing of the skies Waycross Journal Herald p P 3 Dallos Robert E February 19 1986 Proposed Northwest Republic Deal Justice Dept Cites Concern Over Air Merger Los Angeles Times a b Detroit Airport History metroairport com Archived from the original on September 16 2016 Retrieved September 8 2016 Beresnevicius Rytis January 21 2019 Top 10 Most Beautiful Airline Liveries Of All Time Aerotime Hub Archived from the original on July 17 2020 Retrieved July 16 2020 Northwest Airlines Chapter 11 Petition PDF PacerMonitor Retrieved June 9 2016 Northwest Partner Files for Protection The New York Times October 14 2005 Retrieved February 9 2010 Northwest clear to exit Chapter 11 Startribune com May 19 2007 Archived from the original on October 20 2007 Retrieved October 4 2013 Northwest Airlines To Become Passive Investor of Midwest Airlines Official Press Release August 13 2007 Northwest Airlines and TPG Bid Now In Competition with AirTran Airways USA Today August 14 2007 Mutzabaugh Ben September 25 2007 Delta United airlines get first crack at new China routes ABC News Retrieved July 16 2020 Delta Air Lines Blog Employees Celebrate Another Merger Milestone Blog delta com February 5 2010 Archived from the original on February 14 2010 Retrieved March 5 2010 ATW Daily News Atwonline com February 2 2010 Retrieved March 5 2010 permanent dead link dead link Bartz Diane July 30 2010 Delta s Northwest pleading guilty to price fixing Reuters Thomson Reuters Retrieved July 30 2010 a b c Grayson Katharine Delta CEO We ll consolidate MSP office space Minneapolis St Paul Business Journal Friday June 12 2009 Last modified on Monday June 15 2009 Retrieved on January 19 2012 Northwest Airlines Credit Application Northwest Airlines Archived January 2 2010 NWA pilots threaten to oppose merger Minnesota Public Radio April 14 2008 Retrieved on July 28 2009 a b c Feyder Susan Delta Air Lines putting Northwest s onetime HQ up for sale or lease Star Tribune October 7 2009 Retrieved on December 27 2009 Delta puts Northwest headquarters in Eagan on the market Minnesota Public Radio October 8 2009 Retrieved on February 1 2011 Niemela Jennifer Delta reaches deal on Minnesota jobs Minneapolis St Paul Business Journal Tuesday December 16 2008 Retrieved on January 19 2012 delta air lines farmers market building c Minneapolis St Paul International Airport Retrieved on January 19 2012 Location MSP Airport Delta Building C North Side near Compass Airlines Entrance World Airline Directory Flight International March 20 1975 In 2011 Delta renewed the Northwest Airlines trademark while using a small NWA logo briefly on its website The web names NorthWestAirlines com NWA com and NorthWestOrient com now rollover to the Delta website 496 Head Office Minneapolis St Paul International Airport St Paul Minnesota 55111 USA World Airline Directory Flight International March 30 1985 104 Retrieved on July 23 2009 Head Office Minneapolis St Paul International Airport St Paul Minnesota 55111 USA Press Release re Northwest Airlines Archived October 17 2012 at the Wayback Machine National Mediation Board June 18 1998 Northwest Airlines Strike and Labor Negotiations American Association of Behavioral and Social Sciences AABSS Grounded Archived January 1 2014 at the Wayback Machine Public Broadcasting Service September 1 1998 CASE STUDY Northwest Airlines Berkman Center for Internet and Society Retrieved on November 29 2009 Strike settlement agreement PDF Archived from the original PDF on September 10 2008 Northwest Airlines Strike Settlement Approved November 6 2006 Archived April 12 2008 at the Wayback Machine A Seething Summer of Discontent for Northwest Airlines Archived September 19 2011 at the Wayback Machine Dan Schlossberg August 1 2007 ConsumerAffairs com Northwest Airlines and the State of Minnesota Archived November 5 2009 at the Wayback Machine Minnesota Legislative Reference Library Northwest Airlines projects it ll be worth 7B post bankruptcy Martin Moylan Minnesota Public Radio February 15 2007 January 29 2008 BW20080129 Northwest Airlines Reports Full Year 2007 Results Jan 29 2008 Reuters Flight attendants reject new contract with Northwest Minnesota Public Radio Jul 31 2006 Judge rules Northwest flight attendants can strike Minnesota Public Radio Aug 17 2006 Northwest Walkout Is Blocked New York Times August 26 2006 U S Judge Prohibits Strikes at Northwest Washington Post September 16 2006 Published March 12 1993 March 12 1993 Northwest Airlines Past Route To Australia New York Times Retrieved October 4 2013 Northwest Airlines Announces Bid For U S China Nonstop Service Nwa com Retrieved October 4 2013 Continental Airlines Continental to Join Star Alliance Frequently Asked Questions Continental com Archived from the original on February 19 2010 Retrieved March 5 2010 Continental Airlines Earn OnePass Miles on Airline Partner Continental com Archived from the original on October 14 2009 Retrieved March 5 2010 Aircraft By Type Delta Flight Museum Retrieved July 16 2020 747 Experience Bailey Jeff October 27 2007 U S Airlines Put Off Buying New Planes The New York Times Using Old DC 9s Pays Off for Northwest Southernairways org Archived from the original on October 5 2013 Retrieved October 4 2013 Kramon Glenn Northwest Airlines Bans Smoking on Most Flights The New York Times March 24 1988 1 Retrieved on February 8 2012 Home Northwest Airlines History Centre not specific enough to verify In Flight Meals Northwest Airlines Archived October 26 2008 Northwest Airlines WorldPerks Program Information Archived March 12 2009 Northwest Orient Free Flight Plan Insideflyer com Archived from the original on May 25 2006 Retrieved October 4 2013 Northwest Airlines WorldPerks Airline Partnerships Archived March 17 2009 Northwest Airlines WorldPerks Car Rental Partnerships Archived April 16 2008 Northwest Airlines Partners With Budget Rent A Car Official Press Release August 22 2008 Northwest Orient Airlines crash October 30 1941 planecrashinfo ASN Aircraft accident Martin 2 0 2 NC93044 Winona WI Aviation safety net Retrieved March 5 2010 ASN Aircraft accident Douglas C 54A 15 DC NC88785 Edmonton AB Aviation safety net Retrieved March 5 2010 ASN Aircraft accident Martin 2 0 2 NC93050 Minneapolis MN Aviation safety net Retrieved March 5 2010 ASN Aircraft accident Martin 2 0 2 NC93037 Almelund MN Aviation safety net Retrieved March 5 2010 ASN Aircraft accident Martin 2 0 2 N93040 Butte MT Aviation safety net Retrieved March 5 2010 ASN Aircraft accident Martin 2 0 2 N93054 Reardan WA Aviation safety net Retrieved March 5 2010 ASN Aircraft accident Douglas C 54E 5 DO N45342 Sandspit Airport BC YZP Aviation safety net Retrieved March 5 2010 ASN Aircraft accident Douglas DC 7C N292 Polillo Island Aviation safety net Retrieved March 5 2010 ASN Aircraft accident Douglas C 54A 10 DC N48762 Missoula MT Aviation safety net Retrieved March 5 2010 ASN Aircraft accident Aviation safety net Archived from the original on May 8 2008 Retrieved March 5 2010 ASN Aircraft accident Boeing 720 051B N724US Everglades Florida Aviation safety net Retrieved March 5 2010 ASN Aircraft accident Douglas DC 7CF N290 Annette Island AK USA Aviation safety net Retrieved March 5 2010 ASN Aircraft accident Boeing 727 251 N274US Stony Point New York Aviation safety net Retrieved March 5 2010 Hijacking description at the Aviation Safety Network a b DCA91MA010A Ntsb gov Retrieved August 17 2012 Aircraft Accident Report Douglas DC 7C N285 Northwest Airlines Inc Ditching in Sitka Sound Alaska October 22 1962 Washington DC Civil Aeronautics Board September 19 1963 p 1 DC 7 Ditches In Sea Near Sitka All Safe The Seattle Daily Times October 22 1962 a b Sims Ward T October 23 1962 102 Saved As Plane Ditches Seattle Post Intelligencer Aircraft Accident Report Douglas DC 7C N285 Northwest Airlines Inc Ditching in Sitka Sound Alaska October 22 1962 Washington DC Civil Aeronautics Board September 19 1963 p 5 Hijacking Aviation safety net Retrieved March 5 2010 Hijacking description at the Aviation Safety Network Hijacking description at the Aviation Safety Network Weiner Eric January 5 1990 Jet Lands After an Engine Drops Off The New York Times Retrieved February 9 2010 Weiner Eric January 6 1990 Pilots Had No Way of Knowing Jet Engine Fell Off Experts Say The New York Times Retrieved February 9 2010 Cushman John March 17 1990 3 Pilots Dismissed in Alcohol Abuse The New York Times Retrieved February 9 2010 Report on the January 1999 Detroit Snowstorm U S Department of Transportation June 1999 Archived from the original on October 22 2009 Retrieved June 2 2012 Tension on a crowded plane nears the breaking point as it festers snowbound Wall Street Journal Archived from the original on April 2 2010 Plane skids off Detroit runway 3 hurt CNN March 17 2001 Retrieved May 24 2023 Rudder hardover Boeing 747 400 fss aero Flight Simulation Systems October 9 2002 Retrieved June 2 2012 Harlan Bill June 21 2004 Landing incident prompts investigations Rapid City Journal Archived from the original on October 10 2004 Retrieved April 6 2008 NTSB Pilot caused airport collision Twincities com March 5 2007 Retrieved April 5 2015 Audio interview with Bo Corby Captain of NWA Flight 41 Flightpodcast com Retrieved October 4 2013 Photos Boeing 747 251B Aircraft Pictures Airliners net Retrieved on February 14 2011 胴体着陸 BELLY LANDING 緊急脱出 emergency exit YouTube Retrieved on February 14 2011 Dsavit Landing photo of Flight 1432 Archived from the original on March 23 2012 Retrieved July 21 2008 Yuasa Shino February 20 2009 50 hurt in turbulence on Japan bound flight Seattle Times AP Retrieved August 17 2012 ASN Aircraft accident Airbus A320 211 N311US Denver International Airport CO DEN Aviation safety net Retrieved on February 14 2011 NWA188 overshoots MSP by 150 miles WCCO Archived from the original on October 25 2009 ATC fears NWA188 hijacked CNN Edition cnn com Retrieved October 4 2013 Pilots in heated argument causing 150 mile off course NTSB Advisory Archived December 6 2009 Maynard Micheline October 26 2009 Off Course Pilots Cite Computer Distraction The New York Times Retrieved February 9 2010 Wald Matthew October 27 2009 F A A Revokes Licenses of Pilots Who Missed Airport The New York Times Retrieved February 9 2010 Officials Possible terror attack on Northwest jet NBC News December 28 2009 Retrieved October 4 2013 Bibliography EditRoach J and Eastwood A B Jet Airliner Production List Volume 1 Boeing 2003 The Aviation Hobby Shop ISBN 0 907178 97 9 Taylor H A Tony April July 1982 Stratocruiser Ending an Airline Era Air Enthusiast No 18 pp 37 53 ISSN 0143 5450 Further reading EditEl Hai Jack 2013 Non stop A Turbulent History of Northwest Airlines University of Minnesota Press 2013 291 pp Heavily illustrated Ruble Kenneth D 1986 Flight to the Top How a Hometown Airline Made History and Keeps on Making It The Absorbing Sixty year Story of Northwest Airlines New York Viking Press Pilots Who Flew Drunk are Sentenced to Prison October 27 1990 St Louis Post Dispatch p 7A Retrieved March 21 2005 from LexisNexis Moylan Martin J NWA to trim mechanics jobs March 17 2005 Detroit Free Press Northwest Airlines history timeline on www nwa com U S Postal Service history airmail service starts Order 2006 2 1 dead link Joint Application of Alitalia Linee Aeree Italiane S p A Czech Airlines Delta Air Lines Inc KLM Royal Dutch Airlines Northwest Airlines Inc and Societe Air France for Approval of and Antitrust Immunity for Alliance Agreements United States Department of Transportation February 6 2006 Extensive archival records of Northwest Airlines are available for research use at the Minnesota Historical Society External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Northwest Airlines Northwest Airlines Archive WorldTraveler inflight magazine Former timetable and cost Portals nbsp Companies nbsp Aviation nbsp United States Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Northwest Airlines amp oldid 1170357125, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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