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Texas International Airlines

Texas International Airlines Inc. was a United States airline, known from 1940 until 1947 as Aviation Enterprises,[1] until 1969 as Trans-Texas Airways (TTa), and as Texas International Airlines until 1982, when it merged with Continental Airlines. It was headquartered near William P. Hobby Airport in Houston, Texas.[2]

Texas International Airlines
IATA ICAO Callsign
TI TIA TEXAS
Founded1944 (1944)
(as Aviation Enterprises)
Ceased operationsOctober 31, 1982 (1982-10-31)
(merged into Continental Airlines)
Hubs
Parent companyTexas Air Corporation (1980—1982)
HeadquartersHouston, Texas, U.S.
Key peopleFrank Lorenzo

Trans-Texas Airways (TTa) was a "local-service" airline as designated by the federal Civil Aeronautics Board in Texas and surrounding states.[3] In August 1953, it scheduled flights to 36 airports from El Paso to Memphis; in May 1968, TTa flew to 48 U.S. airports plus Monterrey, Tampico and Veracruz in Mexico. The airline changed its name to Texas International and continued to grow.

When Texas International was merged into Continental Airlines in 1982, it had grown to reach Baltimore, Colorado Springs, Denver, Fort Lauderdale, Hartford, Kansas City, Los Angeles,Ontario CA., Mexico City, Milwaukee, Minneapolis/St. Paul, Omaha, Phoenix, St. Louis, Salt Lake City, Tucson, and Washington, DC, and had an all-DC-9 jet fleet.[4][5] In 2010, Continental merged into United Airlines.

History

Revenue passenger traffic, in millions of passenger-miles (scheduled flights only, domestic plus international)
Year Pax-Miles
1951 17
1955 35
1960 70
1965 209
1970 659
1975 580[6]

In 1949, all Trans-Texas Airways flights were operated within the state of Texas with Douglas DC-3s which the airline called "Starliners".[7] In November 1949, it served Alpine, Beaumont/Port Arthur, Beeville, Brownsville, Brownwood, Carrizo Springs/Crystal City, Coleman, Dallas (Love Field), Del Rio, Eagle Pass, El Paso, Fort Stockton, Fort Worth, Galveston, Harlingen, Houston (Hobby Airport), Laredo, Lufkin, Marfa, McAllen, Palestine, San Angelo, San Antonio, Uvalde, Van Horn, and Victoria.[8]

The network expanded to Memphis and Marshall in 1953, Lafayette in 1956, New Orleans and Jackson in 1959, into Mexico in 1967, and to Denver in 1969. In late 1963 the carrier added 13 new cities by taking over service formerly operated by Continental Airlines. These cities included Albuquerque, Carlsbad, Clovis, Hobbs, Roswell, and Santa Fe in New Mexico as well as Abilene, Amarillo, Big Spring, College Station, Lubbock, Temple, and Waco in Texas.[9]

About April 1961, Convair 240s formerly operated by American Airlines began carrying Trans-Texas passengers; the airline later converted them to Convair 600s, replacing the piston engines with Rolls-Royce Dart turboprop engines. These turboprop powered Convair aircraft were referred to by the airline as the "Jet Powered TTa Silver Cloud 600".[10] First scheduled CV-600 flights were in March 1966. Small Beechcraft C99 commuter turboprops were later added to serve the smaller cities of Longview, Lufkin, Galveston, Tyler and Victoria (the last DC-3 flight was in 1968).

 
A Texas International Airlines DC-9-15 at Los Angeles International Airport

In October 1966, Trans-Texas Airways introduced the Douglas DC-9-10 (which the airline marketed as the "Pamper-jet")[11] with its jet fleet subsequently being expanded to nineteen DC-9-10s and seven McDonnell Douglas DC-9-30s. By 1968, TTa was flying DC-9s to Beaumont/Port Arthur; Harlingen; Hot Springs, Arkansas, Lake Charles, Louisiana; Roswell, New Mexico, and Santa Fe, New Mexico in addition to larger cities in its route system.[12] DC-9's briefly flew to Clovis, New Mexico, Carlsbad, New Mexico, and Hobbs, New Mexico in 1977.[13]

Trans-Texas was derisively called "Tree Top Airlines," "Tinker Toy Airlines", and "Teeter-Totter Airlines"[14] by competitors and cynical customers. When it changed its name to Texas International Airlines in April 1969,[15] the company ran newspaper ads showing a Tinker Toy airplane flying along treetops. The copy read "No More Tinker Toys. No More Treetops. We are now Texas International Airlines." As Texas International, the airline standardized on the DC-9 and Convair 600. The last Convair 600 flights were in 1979 and Texas International became all-jet with DC-9-10s and DC-9-30s.

In 1970, Texas International served: Abilene, Amarillo, Austin, Beaumont/Port Arthur, Big Spring, Brownwood, Bryan/College Station, Corpus Christi, Dallas/Ft. Worth, El Paso, Galveston, Harlingen, Houston, Laredo, Longview, Lubbock, Lufkin, McAllen, Midland/Odessa, San Angelo, San Antonio, Temple, Tyler, Victoria, Waco, and Wichita Falls, Texas.[16]

Outside of Texas in 1970, Texas International flew to Arkansas (El Dorado, Hot Springs, Jonesboro, Little Rock, Pine Bluff and Texarkana); California (Los Angeles); Colorado, (Denver); Louisiana (Alexandria, Baton Rouge, Fort Polk, Lafayette, Lake Charles, Monroe, New Orleans and Shreveport); Mississippi (Jackson); New Mexico (Albuquerque, Carlsbad, Clovis, Hobbs, Roswell and Santa Fe); Tennessee (Memphis); and Utah (Salt Lake City). In Mexico flights reached Monterrey, Tampico, Mérida and Veracruz.[17] The airline had several "milk run" flights, such as flight 904, a DC-9-10 that left Los Angeles at 11:00 a.m. and stopped in Albuquerque, Roswell, Midland/Odessa, Dallas/Ft. Worth, Houston, and Beaumont/Port Arthur, before arriving in Lafayette at 8:34 p.m.[18]

After suffering annual losses of up to $3 million, Texas International was acquired in 1972 by Jet Capital Corporation headed by 32-year-old Frank Lorenzo. The airline quickly realized a $6 million profit, largely due to wage cuts spearheaded by Lorenzo and sharp marketing efforts.

In the mid-1970s, in response to competition from Southwest Airlines, Texas International successfully petitioned the Civil Aeronautics Board to allow discounted fares. These fares become a staple of the airline and were advertised as "Peanuts Fares".[19] In spring 1978, the airline was flying nonstop between Dallas/Ft. Worth (DFW) and both Houston Intercontinental Airport (IAH) and Houston Hobby Airport (HOU), up to 18 round trip DC-9 flights a day, all with "Peanut Fares".[20] The Texas International March 15, 1978 timetable advertised "Peanut Fares" in other markets as well.[21]

The first modern frequent-flyer program was created at Texas International Airlines in 1979.[22] Lacking the computer resources of their larger competitors, Texas International was overtaken by American's introduction of AAdvantage in May 1981.

On June 11, 1980, Lorenzo established a holding company, Texas Air Corporation, for Texas International.[23] Texas Air then acquired Continental Airlines in 1982 and merged Continental and Texas International on October 31, 1982, under the former's name. The last Texas International aircraft were seen in 1983.

Today's successor to Trans-Texas Airways and Texas International is United Airlines, which merged with Continental in 2010. United currently operates a large hub at Houston George Bush Intercontinental Airport (IAH), a former hub for Texas International. The Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport (DFW) was also a hub for Texas International before its merger with Continental.[24]

Fleet

 
A Texas International Airlines Convair CV-600 at Dallas/Fort Worth, 1973

Livery

Following the name change to Texas International, the airline's early livery consisted of a dark purple cheatline above the windows leading up into three branches on the tail, which in 1973 was changed to a thick red cheatline across the windows on a white fuselage, along with a Columbia blue cheatline with a large white star on a blue tail.

Destinations

Destination information includes Trans-Texas Airways (TTa) and Texas International scheduled passenger service from 1949 to 1982.

Accidents

  • On February 6, 1969, Douglas DC-9-15MC N1304T collided in midair with a small, single engined Piper PA-28 aircraft over Harlingen, Texas; the Piper crashed, seriously injuring the pilot; the DC-9 landed safely with no casualties to the 59 on board.[25]
  • On September 27, 1973, Flight 655, a Convair 600, crashed in Arkansas while on a scheduled passenger/cargo flight from El Dorado, Arkansas, to Texarkana, Arkansas; all 11 on board died. This accident was the only fatal accident involving the airline, as well as the only fatal accident involving the Convair 600.
  • On November 16, 1976, Flight 987, a Douglas DC-9-14 (N9104) overran the runway and crashed on takeoff from Denver Stapleton International Airport (DEN) due to an unexplained malfunction of the stall warning system; all 86 on board survived, but the aircraft was written off.[26]
  • On March 17, 1980, Douglas DC-9-14 N9103 overran the runway while landing in rain at Baton Rouge Ryan Airport (BTR) due to pilot and ATC errors; all 50 on board survived, but the aircraft was written off.[27]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Aviation Enterprises". Airline History. Retrieved 8 April 2020.
  2. ^ World Airline Directory. Flight International. March 20, 1975. "505. "Head Office: PO Box 12788. 8437 Lockheed, Houston, Texas 77017, USA."
  3. ^ timetableimages.com, August 1968 Trans-Texas Airways system timetable
  4. ^ departedflights.com; April 1, 1981 Official Airline Guide (OAG), North American edition
  5. ^ departedflights.com, June 1, 1982 Continental/Texas International joint timetable
  6. ^ Shut down by strike until 4 April; sched RPMs were 947 million in 1976.
  7. ^ timetableimages.com, Nov. 1, 1949 Trans-Texas timetable
  8. ^ timetableimages.com, Nov. 1, 1949 Trans-Texas route map
  9. ^ Trans Texas Airways timetable, October 15, 1963
  10. ^ https://www.timetableimages.com/i-t/ti/6603a.jpg
  11. ^ timetableimages.com, Oct. 20, 1966 Trans-Texas timetable
  12. ^ timetableimages.com, August 1968 Trans-Texas timetable
  13. ^ Texas International June 1, 1977 timetable
  14. ^ Michelle C (March 23, 2014). "Trans Texas Airlines service (1949)". Retrieved May 11, 2016.
  15. ^ Nock Komos (August 1989). Air Progress: 76. {{cite journal}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  16. ^ departedflights.com, July 1, 1970 Texas International route map
  17. ^ departedflights.com, July 1, 1970 Texas International route map
  18. ^ Feb. 1, 1976 Official Airline Guide, North American edition
  19. ^ departedflights.com, July 15, 1981 Texas International route map
  20. ^ http://www.departedflights.com, March 15, 1978 Texas International timetable
  21. ^ http://www.departedflights.com, March 15, 1978 Texas International timetable
  22. ^ David M Rowell (August 13, 2010). "A History of US Airline Deregulation Part 4 : 1979 - 2010 : The Effects of Deregulation - Lower Fares, More Travel, Frequent Flier Programs". The Travel Insider. Retrieved September 21, 2010.
  23. ^ Thomas Petzinger (1995). "Hard Landings: the epic contest for power and profits that plunged the airlines into chaos". Times Business.
  24. ^ departedflights.com, July 15, 1981 Texas International timetable map
  25. ^ Accident description for N1304T at the Aviation Safety Network
  26. ^ Accident description for N9104 at the Aviation Safety Network
  27. ^ Accident description for N9103 at the Aviation Safety Network

External links

texas, international, airlines, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, js. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Texas International Airlines news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message Texas International Airlines Inc was a United States airline known from 1940 until 1947 as Aviation Enterprises 1 until 1969 as Trans Texas Airways TTa and as Texas International Airlines until 1982 when it merged with Continental Airlines It was headquartered near William P Hobby Airport in Houston Texas 2 Texas International AirlinesIATA ICAO CallsignTI TIA TEXASFounded1944 1944 as Aviation Enterprises Ceased operationsOctober 31 1982 1982 10 31 merged into Continental Airlines HubsDallas Fort WorthDallas LoveHouston HobbyHouston IntercontinentalParent companyTexas Air Corporation 1980 1982 HeadquartersHouston Texas U S Key peopleFrank LorenzoTrans Texas Airways TTa was a local service airline as designated by the federal Civil Aeronautics Board in Texas and surrounding states 3 In August 1953 it scheduled flights to 36 airports from El Paso to Memphis in May 1968 TTa flew to 48 U S airports plus Monterrey Tampico and Veracruz in Mexico The airline changed its name to Texas International and continued to grow When Texas International was merged into Continental Airlines in 1982 it had grown to reach Baltimore Colorado Springs Denver Fort Lauderdale Hartford Kansas City Los Angeles Ontario CA Mexico City Milwaukee Minneapolis St Paul Omaha Phoenix St Louis Salt Lake City Tucson and Washington DC and had an all DC 9 jet fleet 4 5 In 2010 Continental merged into United Airlines Contents 1 History 2 Fleet 2 1 Livery 3 Destinations 4 Accidents 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory EditRevenue passenger traffic in millions of passenger miles scheduled flights only domestic plus international Year Pax Miles1951 171955 351960 701965 2091970 6591975 580 6 In 1949 all Trans Texas Airways flights were operated within the state of Texas with Douglas DC 3s which the airline called Starliners 7 In November 1949 it served Alpine Beaumont Port Arthur Beeville Brownsville Brownwood Carrizo Springs Crystal City Coleman Dallas Love Field Del Rio Eagle Pass El Paso Fort Stockton Fort Worth Galveston Harlingen Houston Hobby Airport Laredo Lufkin Marfa McAllen Palestine San Angelo San Antonio Uvalde Van Horn and Victoria 8 The network expanded to Memphis and Marshall in 1953 Lafayette in 1956 New Orleans and Jackson in 1959 into Mexico in 1967 and to Denver in 1969 In late 1963 the carrier added 13 new cities by taking over service formerly operated by Continental Airlines These cities included Albuquerque Carlsbad Clovis Hobbs Roswell and Santa Fe in New Mexico as well as Abilene Amarillo Big Spring College Station Lubbock Temple and Waco in Texas 9 About April 1961 Convair 240s formerly operated by American Airlines began carrying Trans Texas passengers the airline later converted them to Convair 600s replacing the piston engines with Rolls Royce Dart turboprop engines These turboprop powered Convair aircraft were referred to by the airline as the Jet Powered TTa Silver Cloud 600 10 First scheduled CV 600 flights were in March 1966 Small Beechcraft C99 commuter turboprops were later added to serve the smaller cities of Longview Lufkin Galveston Tyler and Victoria the last DC 3 flight was in 1968 A Texas International Airlines DC 9 15 at Los Angeles International Airport In October 1966 Trans Texas Airways introduced the Douglas DC 9 10 which the airline marketed as the Pamper jet 11 with its jet fleet subsequently being expanded to nineteen DC 9 10s and seven McDonnell Douglas DC 9 30s By 1968 TTa was flying DC 9s to Beaumont Port Arthur Harlingen Hot Springs Arkansas Lake Charles Louisiana Roswell New Mexico and Santa Fe New Mexico in addition to larger cities in its route system 12 DC 9 s briefly flew to Clovis New Mexico Carlsbad New Mexico and Hobbs New Mexico in 1977 13 Trans Texas was derisively called Tree Top Airlines Tinker Toy Airlines and Teeter Totter Airlines 14 by competitors and cynical customers When it changed its name to Texas International Airlines in April 1969 15 the company ran newspaper ads showing a Tinker Toy airplane flying along treetops The copy read No More Tinker Toys No More Treetops We are now Texas International Airlines As Texas International the airline standardized on the DC 9 and Convair 600 The last Convair 600 flights were in 1979 and Texas International became all jet with DC 9 10s and DC 9 30s In 1970 Texas International served Abilene Amarillo Austin Beaumont Port Arthur Big Spring Brownwood Bryan College Station Corpus Christi Dallas Ft Worth El Paso Galveston Harlingen Houston Laredo Longview Lubbock Lufkin McAllen Midland Odessa San Angelo San Antonio Temple Tyler Victoria Waco and Wichita Falls Texas 16 Outside of Texas in 1970 Texas International flew to Arkansas El Dorado Hot Springs Jonesboro Little Rock Pine Bluff and Texarkana California Los Angeles Colorado Denver Louisiana Alexandria Baton Rouge Fort Polk Lafayette Lake Charles Monroe New Orleans and Shreveport Mississippi Jackson New Mexico Albuquerque Carlsbad Clovis Hobbs Roswell and Santa Fe Tennessee Memphis and Utah Salt Lake City In Mexico flights reached Monterrey Tampico Merida and Veracruz 17 The airline had several milk run flights such as flight 904 a DC 9 10 that left Los Angeles at 11 00 a m and stopped in Albuquerque Roswell Midland Odessa Dallas Ft Worth Houston and Beaumont Port Arthur before arriving in Lafayette at 8 34 p m 18 After suffering annual losses of up to 3 million Texas International was acquired in 1972 by Jet Capital Corporation headed by 32 year old Frank Lorenzo The airline quickly realized a 6 million profit largely due to wage cuts spearheaded by Lorenzo and sharp marketing efforts In the mid 1970s in response to competition from Southwest Airlines Texas International successfully petitioned the Civil Aeronautics Board to allow discounted fares These fares become a staple of the airline and were advertised as Peanuts Fares 19 In spring 1978 the airline was flying nonstop between Dallas Ft Worth DFW and both Houston Intercontinental Airport IAH and Houston Hobby Airport HOU up to 18 round trip DC 9 flights a day all with Peanut Fares 20 The Texas International March 15 1978 timetable advertised Peanut Fares in other markets as well 21 The first modern frequent flyer program was created at Texas International Airlines in 1979 22 Lacking the computer resources of their larger competitors Texas International was overtaken by American s introduction of AAdvantage in May 1981 On June 11 1980 Lorenzo established a holding company Texas Air Corporation for Texas International 23 Texas Air then acquired Continental Airlines in 1982 and merged Continental and Texas International on October 31 1982 under the former s name The last Texas International aircraft were seen in 1983 Today s successor to Trans Texas Airways and Texas International is United Airlines which merged with Continental in 2010 United currently operates a large hub at Houston George Bush Intercontinental Airport IAH a former hub for Texas International The Dallas Fort Worth International Airport DFW was also a hub for Texas International before its merger with Continental 24 Fleet Edit A Texas International Airlines Convair CV 600 at Dallas Fort Worth 1973 Beechcraft C99 Commuter Convair 240 operated by Trans Texas Airways Convair 600 turboprop conversion of the piston powered Convair 240 Douglas DC 3 operated by Trans Texas Airways Douglas DC 9 10 McDonnell Douglas DC 9 30Livery Edit Following the name change to Texas International the airline s early livery consisted of a dark purple cheatline above the windows leading up into three branches on the tail which in 1973 was changed to a thick red cheatline across the windows on a white fuselage along with a Columbia blue cheatline with a large white star on a blue tail Destinations EditMain article List of Texas International Airlines destinations Destination information includes Trans Texas Airways TTa and Texas International scheduled passenger service from 1949 to 1982 Accidents EditOn February 6 1969 Douglas DC 9 15MC N1304T collided in midair with a small single engined Piper PA 28 aircraft over Harlingen Texas the Piper crashed seriously injuring the pilot the DC 9 landed safely with no casualties to the 59 on board 25 On September 27 1973 Flight 655 a Convair 600 crashed in Arkansas while on a scheduled passenger cargo flight from El Dorado Arkansas to Texarkana Arkansas all 11 on board died This accident was the only fatal accident involving the airline as well as the only fatal accident involving the Convair 600 On November 16 1976 Flight 987 a Douglas DC 9 14 N9104 overran the runway and crashed on takeoff from Denver Stapleton International Airport DEN due to an unexplained malfunction of the stall warning system all 86 on board survived but the aircraft was written off 26 On March 17 1980 Douglas DC 9 14 N9103 overran the runway while landing in rain at Baton Rouge Ryan Airport BTR due to pilot and ATC errors all 50 on board survived but the aircraft was written off 27 See also EditList of defunct airlines of the United States Texas Air CorporationReferences Edit Aviation Enterprises Airline History Retrieved 8 April 2020 World Airline Directory Flight International March 20 1975 505 Head Office PO Box 12788 8437 Lockheed Houston Texas 77017 USA timetableimages com August 1968 Trans Texas Airways system timetable departedflights com April 1 1981 Official Airline Guide OAG North American edition departedflights com June 1 1982 Continental Texas International joint timetable Shut down by strike until 4 April sched RPMs were 947 million in 1976 timetableimages com Nov 1 1949 Trans Texas timetable timetableimages com Nov 1 1949 Trans Texas route map Trans Texas Airways timetable October 15 1963 https www timetableimages com i t ti 6603a jpg timetableimages com Oct 20 1966 Trans Texas timetable timetableimages com August 1968 Trans Texas timetable Texas International June 1 1977 timetable Michelle C March 23 2014 Trans Texas Airlines service 1949 Retrieved May 11 2016 Nock Komos August 1989 Air Progress 76 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Missing or empty title help departedflights com July 1 1970 Texas International route map departedflights com July 1 1970 Texas International route map Feb 1 1976 Official Airline Guide North American edition departedflights com July 15 1981 Texas International route map http www departedflights com March 15 1978 Texas International timetable http www departedflights com March 15 1978 Texas International timetable David M Rowell August 13 2010 A History of US Airline Deregulation Part 4 1979 2010 The Effects of Deregulation Lower Fares More Travel Frequent Flier Programs The Travel Insider Retrieved September 21 2010 Thomas Petzinger 1995 Hard Landings the epic contest for power and profits that plunged the airlines into chaos Times Business departedflights com July 15 1981 Texas International timetable map Accident description for N1304T at the Aviation Safety Network Accident description for N9104 at the Aviation Safety Network Accident description for N9103 at the Aviation Safety NetworkExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Texas International Airlines Trans Texas Airlines no 13620 Aircraft Dolph Briscoe Center for American History University of Texas at Austin Bailey Bob Studios May 24 1949 Portals United States Texas Companies Aviation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Texas International Airlines amp oldid 1143937910, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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