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Transocean Air Lines

Transocean Air Lines was an airline based in the United States that operated from 1946, when it was established as ONAT (Orvis Nelson Air Transport Company), until its bankruptcy in 1960. It was based in Oakland, California.[1]

Transocean Air Lines
IATA ICAO Callsign
(none) TL TALOA
Founded1946
Commenced operations1946
Ceased operations1960
Operating basesOakland, California

History edit

 
Transocean DC-4

Transocean founder Orvis Marcus Nelson was an Air Transport Command pilot during World War II. Upon the end of the war in August 1945, he was sent to Okinawa, where he and several other aviators attempted to organize a new Japanese domestic airline with assistance from United Air Lines. United president Pat Patterson was not interested in the proposal, but introduced Nelson to General Douglas MacArthur, who also rejected the proposal.[2][3]

Nelson returned to the United States and flew for several months as a United pilot, but was recruited by United management to organize a new airline operation in March 1946. The new airline would fulfill an ATC contract to provide military airlift service between San Francisco and Honolulu using surplus C-54 aircraft. ONAT's first flight operated on March 16, and thereafter the airline carried many American soldiers and sailors home from the South Pacific theater.[4]

ONAT operated as a sole proprietorship until June 1, 1946, when the operation was incorporated as Transocean Air Lines.[3] Several weeks later, TAL was contracted by Philippine Airlines to provide a transpacific DC-4 charter service between the United States and the Philippines, which was for a brief time in 1946 the only commercial flight operating between the United States and East Asia. The service was extended to Shanghai, Bangkok, and Karachi later that year.[3]

 
Transocean SA-16 used for Trust Territory service

Transocean provided personnel for Pak-Air, an airline in the newly formed country of Pakistan, from 1947 to 1949.[5]

In 1948 Transocean began to operate twice weekly service between Caracas and Rome after making a deal with the Venezuelan government. By this time, it operated 16 maintenance bases in Europe and the Pacific region.[6]

The Chinese Nationalist Air Force hired Transocean to ferry 157 Curtis C-46 transport aircraft from California to Shanghai in 1948. Transocean refitted each aircraft with additional fuel tanks to extend its range to 2,600 miles and flew the aircraft to China via Honolulu, Wake Island, Guam, and Okinawa.[5]

The Civil Aeronautics Board charged Transocean with illegally transporting passengers overseas in 1948; Transocean argued that the CAB had no jurisdiction over charter flights, beginning a legal fight which continued into the 1950s. Thereafter, in 1949 and 1950, Transocean received special permission to conduct transatlantic charter flights.[7]

In 1949, the airline was tapped by the Department of the Interior and United Nations to provide air service to the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands from a base at Guam, using four SA-16 Albatross flying boats for this service. Pan American took over operation of the Trust Territory service upon TAL's bankruptcy.[8]

Transocean assisted in the startup of Air Djibouti in 1949 and was thereafter involved in the startup of Air Jordan.[5] It was one of the operating carriers of the Berlin Airlift and provided around 10% of the US military's airlift requirements for the Korean War.[9]

Transocean provided the initial equipment and crews for Japan Airlines in 1951 (fulfilling a contract originally signed by Northwest Airlines), and in 1952 signed an agreement to provide crews, dispatchers, and instructors to train JAL's local personnel. Transocean also supplied mechanics and instructors to start up JAL's maintenance operation.[5]

In 1952 Transocean entered into a wet lease agreement to operate cargo flights for Scandinavian Airlines.[10]

In 1953 the government of Afghanistan hired Transocean to provide weekly Kabul-Kandahar-Jerusalem-Cairo air service.[5]

 
Transocean Boeing 377

Bankruptcy and legacy edit

In the 1950s, Transocean attempted to obtain certification to serve Asia through Hawaii and Guam, a market then mainly served by Pan Am and being contested by several other airlines. Transocean's request was denied by the Civil Aeronautics Board in 1955. Thereafter, the company attempted a reorganization with outside financing so that it could procure new aircraft, but by the time CAB approval was obtained in 1959, Transocean was already in dire financial straits.[11]

Transocean declared bankruptcy in 1960.[12] Historians are divided as to the causes of its demise, with some citing government interference with its core business and others citing Nelson's reckless management practices.[9]

A half-century after the airline's demise, nearly 200 of their former employees – and now their children and grandchildren – are members of the Taloa Alumni Association. The Transocean group meets for a reunion every year.[13]

Ernest K. Gann and Slonnie Sloniger worked at Transocean.

Destinations edit

According to its October 27, 1958 system timetable, Transocean was operating scheduled passenger service with Lockheed Constellation propliners on the following routes:[14]

  • Burbank (BUR) – Honolulu (HNL) – operated three days a week round trip
  • Oakland (OAK) – Honolulu (HNL) – operated three days a week round trip
  • Oakland (OAK) – Burbank (BUR) – Chicago Midway Airport (MDW) – New York Idlewild Airport (IDL, now JFK Airport) – Hartford (BDL) – operated twice a week round trip
  • Oakland (OAK) – Honolulu (HNL) – Wake Island (AWK) – Guam (GUM) – Okinawa (OKA) – operated twice a week round trip

Fleet edit

Aircraft operated by Transocean Air Lines[15] Total: 146 aircraft, of which 68 were DC-4s. In addition, Taloa Academy of Aeronautics had a total of 56 single-engined trainers at its peak.[16]

  • Not all aircraft were used at the same time, see

Accidents and incidents edit

During almost 14 years of continuous airline activity Transocean's total casualties were 90 passengers and 16 crew.[17]

  • August 15, 1949: A Transocean Air Lines Douglas C-54A (N79998) ditched 7 mi off Lurga Point, Ireland due to fuel exhaustion after the pilot overflew Shannon Airport, where they were due to refuel, and attempted to return; all 58 passengers and crew were able to escape, but seven passengers and one crew member either drowned or died of exposure. The aircraft was flying from Rome to New York.[18][19]
  • November 5, 1951: Transocean Air Lines Flight 5763, a Martin 2-0-2 (N93039), crashed in fog at Tucumcari Airport, New Mexico, killing one of 29 on board.[20][21]
  • December 30, 1951: Transocean Air Lines Flight 501, a Curtiss C-46 Commando (N68963), crashed near Fairbanks, Alaska due to spatial disorientation caused by pilot error, killing all four passengers and crew on board; the wreckage was found on January 3, 1952.[22][23]
  • March 20, 1953: Transocean Air Lines Flight 942, a Douglas C-54G (N88942, former USAAF 45-623) crashed in a field 12 mi southwest of Alvarado, California killing all 35 passengers and crew on board. The cause was an unexplained loss of control that may have resulted from wing icing.[24][25][26]

In popular culture edit

The 1954 film The High and the Mighty featured a Transocean airliner, albeit thinly disguised. The Douglas DC-4 (N4665V) used to film the daylight flying sequences and the Honolulu "gate" sequence was a former C-54A-10-DC built as a military transport in 1942 at Long Beach, California, by Douglas Aircraft Company. When the exterior and flying sequences were filmed in November 1953, the airliner was being operated by Oakland, California-based non-scheduled carrier Transocean Airlines (1946–1962), the largest civil aviation operator of converted C-54s in the 1950s, and named The African Queen. Ernest K. Gann wrote the original story while he was flying DC-4s for Transocean over the Hawaii-California routes. The film's fictional airline's name "TOPAC" was painted over the Transocean's red, white and yellow color scheme for filming.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "ONAT (Orvis Nelson Air Transport Company)". Airline History. Retrieved 14 April 2020.
  2. ^ "Destined to Fly". TALOA. Retrieved 2023-01-09. From Arue Szura, Folded Wings: A History of Transocean Air Lines, Pictorial Histories Publishing Company.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  3. ^ a b c "Transocean Airways – A Look Back – May 23, 2014 | Robert Novell". Retrieved 2023-01-10.
  4. ^ "ONAT". TALOA. Retrieved 2023-01-09.
  5. ^ a b c d e "Transocean Airways – A look Back (Part Two) | Robert Novell". Retrieved 2023-01-10.
  6. ^ "AVIATION: Flying Handyman". Time. 1948-11-22. ISSN 0040-781X. Retrieved 2023-01-10.
  7. ^ Goldklang, Jack (1962). "Transatlantic Charter Policy - A Study in Airline Regulation". Journal of Air Law and Commerce. 28: 99.
  8. ^ "The Trust Territory". TALOA. Retrieved 2023-01-09.
  9. ^ a b Launius, Roger (2014-06-16). "Orvis Nelson and the Transocean Air Lines Experience". Roger Launius's Blog. Retrieved 2023-01-10.
  10. ^ Sundberg, Jacob (1961). Air Charter: A Study in Legal Development (PDF). Stockholm: P.A. Norstedt.
  11. ^ "End of a Golden Age". TALOA. Retrieved 2023-01-10.
  12. ^ "14 Airliners Sold as Scrap" (PDF). The New York Times. 3 September 1960.
  13. ^ . Archived from the original on 30 August 2010.
  14. ^ "Transocean Air Lines system timetable". 27 October 1958.
  15. ^ . Archived from the original on 28 July 2011.
  16. ^ . Archived from the original on 28 July 2011.
  17. ^ "Airline/Operator "Tr-Tz"". Retrieved 2020-09-22.
  18. ^ Keating, James Patrick. "Miracle on Galway Bay". On-line Journal of Research on Irish Maritime History. Retrieved 8 March 2015.
  19. ^ Accident description for N79998 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 12 August 2013.
  20. ^ . www.airdisaster.com. Archived from the original on 3 January 2009. Retrieved 2020-09-22.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  21. ^ Accident description for N93039 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 12 August 2013.
  22. ^ . Air Disaster. Archived from the original on 2 January 2009. Retrieved 2020-09-22.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  23. ^ Accident description for N68963 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 12 August 2013.
  24. ^ . www.airdisaster.com. Archived from the original on 7 January 2009. Retrieved 2020-09-22.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  25. ^ "The Crash of Transocean Flight 942". www.Check-Six.com. Retrieved 13 May 2013.
  26. ^ Accident description for N88942 at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 12 August 2013.
  27. ^ . Air Disaster. Archived from the original on 14 July 2007. Retrieved 2020-09-22.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)

External links edit

  • Official website of Transocean Air Lines Alumni Association

transocean, lines, japanese, airline, japan, transocean, louisiana, based, airline, gulf, transport, airline, based, united, states, that, operated, from, 1946, when, established, onat, orvis, nelson, transport, company, until, bankruptcy, 1960, based, oakland. For the Japanese airline see Japan Transocean Air For the Louisiana based airline see Gulf Air Transport Transocean Air Lines was an airline based in the United States that operated from 1946 when it was established as ONAT Orvis Nelson Air Transport Company until its bankruptcy in 1960 It was based in Oakland California 1 Transocean Air LinesIATA ICAO Callsign none TL TALOAFounded1946Commenced operations1946Ceased operations1960Operating basesOakland California Contents 1 History 1 1 Bankruptcy and legacy 2 Destinations 3 Fleet 4 Accidents and incidents 5 In popular culture 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory edit nbsp Transocean DC 4Transocean founder Orvis Marcus Nelson was an Air Transport Command pilot during World War II Upon the end of the war in August 1945 he was sent to Okinawa where he and several other aviators attempted to organize a new Japanese domestic airline with assistance from United Air Lines United president Pat Patterson was not interested in the proposal but introduced Nelson to General Douglas MacArthur who also rejected the proposal 2 3 Nelson returned to the United States and flew for several months as a United pilot but was recruited by United management to organize a new airline operation in March 1946 The new airline would fulfill an ATC contract to provide military airlift service between San Francisco and Honolulu using surplus C 54 aircraft ONAT s first flight operated on March 16 and thereafter the airline carried many American soldiers and sailors home from the South Pacific theater 4 ONAT operated as a sole proprietorship until June 1 1946 when the operation was incorporated as Transocean Air Lines 3 Several weeks later TAL was contracted by Philippine Airlines to provide a transpacific DC 4 charter service between the United States and the Philippines which was for a brief time in 1946 the only commercial flight operating between the United States and East Asia The service was extended to Shanghai Bangkok and Karachi later that year 3 nbsp Transocean SA 16 used for Trust Territory serviceTransocean provided personnel for Pak Air an airline in the newly formed country of Pakistan from 1947 to 1949 5 In 1948 Transocean began to operate twice weekly service between Caracas and Rome after making a deal with the Venezuelan government By this time it operated 16 maintenance bases in Europe and the Pacific region 6 The Chinese Nationalist Air Force hired Transocean to ferry 157 Curtis C 46 transport aircraft from California to Shanghai in 1948 Transocean refitted each aircraft with additional fuel tanks to extend its range to 2 600 miles and flew the aircraft to China via Honolulu Wake Island Guam and Okinawa 5 The Civil Aeronautics Board charged Transocean with illegally transporting passengers overseas in 1948 Transocean argued that the CAB had no jurisdiction over charter flights beginning a legal fight which continued into the 1950s Thereafter in 1949 and 1950 Transocean received special permission to conduct transatlantic charter flights 7 In 1949 the airline was tapped by the Department of the Interior and United Nations to provide air service to the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands from a base at Guam using four SA 16 Albatross flying boats for this service Pan American took over operation of the Trust Territory service upon TAL s bankruptcy 8 Transocean assisted in the startup of Air Djibouti in 1949 and was thereafter involved in the startup of Air Jordan 5 It was one of the operating carriers of the Berlin Airlift and provided around 10 of the US military s airlift requirements for the Korean War 9 Transocean provided the initial equipment and crews for Japan Airlines in 1951 fulfilling a contract originally signed by Northwest Airlines and in 1952 signed an agreement to provide crews dispatchers and instructors to train JAL s local personnel Transocean also supplied mechanics and instructors to start up JAL s maintenance operation 5 In 1952 Transocean entered into a wet lease agreement to operate cargo flights for Scandinavian Airlines 10 In 1953 the government of Afghanistan hired Transocean to provide weekly Kabul Kandahar Jerusalem Cairo air service 5 nbsp Transocean Boeing 377Bankruptcy and legacy edit In the 1950s Transocean attempted to obtain certification to serve Asia through Hawaii and Guam a market then mainly served by Pan Am and being contested by several other airlines Transocean s request was denied by the Civil Aeronautics Board in 1955 Thereafter the company attempted a reorganization with outside financing so that it could procure new aircraft but by the time CAB approval was obtained in 1959 Transocean was already in dire financial straits 11 Transocean declared bankruptcy in 1960 12 Historians are divided as to the causes of its demise with some citing government interference with its core business and others citing Nelson s reckless management practices 9 A half century after the airline s demise nearly 200 of their former employees and now their children and grandchildren are members of the Taloa Alumni Association The Transocean group meets for a reunion every year 13 Ernest K Gann and Slonnie Sloniger worked at Transocean Destinations editAccording to its October 27 1958 system timetable Transocean was operating scheduled passenger service with Lockheed Constellation propliners on the following routes 14 Burbank BUR Honolulu HNL operated three days a week round trip Oakland OAK Honolulu HNL operated three days a week round trip Oakland OAK Burbank BUR Chicago Midway Airport MDW New York Idlewild Airport IDL now JFK Airport Hartford BDL operated twice a week round trip Oakland OAK Honolulu HNL Wake Island AWK Guam GUM Okinawa OKA operated twice a week round tripFleet editAircraft operated by Transocean Air Lines 15 Total 146 aircraft of which 68 were DC 4s In addition Taloa Academy of Aeronautics had a total of 56 single engined trainers at its peak 16 8 Boeing 377 Stratocruiser from 1958 60 1 Cessna 170 1 Cessna 182 1 Cessna T 50 from 1948 5 Consolidated PBY Catalina from 1949 58 2 Convair CV 340 16 Curtis C 46 Commando 9 Douglas DC 3 68 Douglas DC 4 from 1946 60 1 Douglas DC 6B 4 Grumman G 44 Widgeon 1 Lockheed Model 18 Lodestar 3 Lockheed L 749A Constellation from 1958 59 2 Lockheed L 1049G Super Constellation from 1958 59 13 Martin 2 0 2 4 Noorduyn Norseman from 1950 52 1 Piper PA 18 Super Cub from 1950 52 1 Stinson Reliant from 1950 52Not all aircraft were used at the same time see fleet history websiteAccidents and incidents editDuring almost 14 years of continuous airline activity Transocean s total casualties were 90 passengers and 16 crew 17 August 15 1949 A Transocean Air Lines Douglas C 54A N79998 ditched 7 mi off Lurga Point Ireland due to fuel exhaustion after the pilot overflew Shannon Airport where they were due to refuel and attempted to return all 58 passengers and crew were able to escape but seven passengers and one crew member either drowned or died of exposure The aircraft was flying from Rome to New York 18 19 November 5 1951 Transocean Air Lines Flight 5763 a Martin 2 0 2 N93039 crashed in fog at Tucumcari Airport New Mexico killing one of 29 on board 20 21 December 30 1951 Transocean Air Lines Flight 501 a Curtiss C 46 Commando N68963 crashed near Fairbanks Alaska due to spatial disorientation caused by pilot error killing all four passengers and crew on board the wreckage was found on January 3 1952 22 23 March 20 1953 Transocean Air Lines Flight 942 a Douglas C 54G N88942 former USAAF 45 623 crashed in a field 12 mi southwest of Alvarado California killing all 35 passengers and crew on board The cause was an unexplained loss of control that may have resulted from wing icing 24 25 26 July 12 1953 Transocean Air Lines Flight 512 a Douglas DC 6 named The Royal Hawaiian crashed in the Pacific Ocean 344 mi east of Wake Island for reasons unknown killing all 58 passengers and crew on board 27 In popular culture editThe 1954 film The High and the Mighty featured a Transocean airliner albeit thinly disguised The Douglas DC 4 N4665V used to film the daylight flying sequences and the Honolulu gate sequence was a former C 54A 10 DC built as a military transport in 1942 at Long Beach California by Douglas Aircraft Company When the exterior and flying sequences were filmed in November 1953 the airliner was being operated by Oakland California based non scheduled carrier Transocean Airlines 1946 1962 the largest civil aviation operator of converted C 54s in the 1950s and named The African Queen Ernest K Gann wrote the original story while he was flying DC 4s for Transocean over the Hawaii California routes The film s fictional airline s name TOPAC was painted over the Transocean s red white and yellow color scheme for filming See also editList of defunct airlines of the United StatesReferences edit ONAT Orvis Nelson Air Transport Company Airline History Retrieved 14 April 2020 Destined to Fly TALOA Retrieved 2023 01 09 From Arue Szura Folded Wings A History of Transocean Air Lines Pictorial Histories Publishing Company a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint postscript link a b c Transocean Airways A Look Back May 23 2014 Robert Novell Retrieved 2023 01 10 ONAT TALOA Retrieved 2023 01 09 a b c d e Transocean Airways A look Back Part Two Robert Novell Retrieved 2023 01 10 AVIATION Flying Handyman Time 1948 11 22 ISSN 0040 781X Retrieved 2023 01 10 Goldklang Jack 1962 Transatlantic Charter Policy A Study in Airline Regulation Journal of Air Law and Commerce 28 99 The Trust Territory TALOA Retrieved 2023 01 09 a b Launius Roger 2014 06 16 Orvis Nelson and the Transocean Air Lines Experience Roger Launius s Blog Retrieved 2023 01 10 Sundberg Jacob 1961 Air Charter A Study in Legal Development PDF Stockholm P A Norstedt End of a Golden Age TALOA Retrieved 2023 01 10 14 Airliners Sold as Scrap PDF The New York Times 3 September 1960 TALOA Alumni Association Archived from the original on 30 August 2010 Transocean Air Lines system timetable 27 October 1958 Aircraft operated by Transocean Air Lines Archived from the original on 28 July 2011 Taloa Academy of Aeronautics Archived from the original on 28 July 2011 Airline Operator Tr Tz Retrieved 2020 09 22 Keating James Patrick Miracle on Galway Bay On line Journal of Research on Irish Maritime History Retrieved 8 March 2015 Accident description for N79998 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 12 August 2013 AirDisaster Com Accident Database www airdisaster com Archived from the original on 3 January 2009 Retrieved 2020 09 22 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Accident description for N93039 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 12 August 2013 AirDiisaster Com Accident Database Air Disaster Archived from the original on 2 January 2009 Retrieved 2020 09 22 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Accident description for N68963 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 12 August 2013 AirDisaster Com Accident Database www airdisaster com Archived from the original on 7 January 2009 Retrieved 2020 09 22 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link The Crash of Transocean Flight 942 www Check Six com Retrieved 13 May 2013 Accident description for N88942 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 12 August 2013 Airdisaster com Accident Database Air Disaster Archived from the original on 14 July 2007 Retrieved 2020 09 22 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Transocean Air Lines Official website of Transocean Air Lines Alumni AssociationPortals nbsp Companies nbsp Aviation nbsp This article relating to a United States airline is a stub You can help Wikipedia by expanding it vte Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Transocean Air Lines amp oldid 1144009870, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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