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American Airlines
IATA
AA ICAO
AAL Callsign
AMERICAN
Founded 1930 (as American Airways)
Hubs Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport
O'Hare International Airport
Miami International Airport
Lambert-St. Louis International Airport
Luis Muñoz Marín International Airport
Focus cities John F. Kennedy International Airport
LaGuardia Airport
Logan International Airport
Los Angeles International Airport
Raleigh-Durham International Airport
Frequent flyer program AAdvantage
Member lounge Admirals Club
Alliance Oneworld
Fleet size 652 (+48 Orders)
Destinations 158
Parent company AMR Corporation
Company slogan We know why you fly. We're American Airlines.
Headquarters Fort Worth, Texas
Key people Gerard Arpey (CEO)
Tom Horton (CFO)
Website: http://www.aa.com/
American Airlines (AA) is the largest airline in the world in terms of total
passengers-miles transported[1] and fleet size [2], and the second-largest
airline in the world (behind Air France-KLM) in terms of total operating
revenues[3]. A wholly owned subsidiary of the AMR Corporation, the airline
is headquartered in Fort Worth, Texas, adjacent to the Dallas/Fort Worth
International Airport. American operates scheduled flights throughout the
United States, as well as flights to Canada, Latin America, the Caribbean,
Western Europe, Japan, China, and India. The Chairman, President, and CEO of
AA is Gerard Arpey. In 2005, the airline flew more than 138 billion revenue
passenger miles (RPMs).
As of February 2007, American serves 157 cities (excluding codeshares with
partner airlines) with a fleet of 670 aircraft. American carries more
passengers between the US and Latin America (12.1 million in 2004) than any
other airline, and is also strong in the transcontinental market.
American has five hubs: Dallas/Fort Worth (DFW), Chicago (ORD), Miami (MIA),
Saint Louis (STL), and San Juan (SJU). Dallas/Fort Worth is the airline's
largest hub, with AA operating over 84 percent of flights at the airport and
traveling to more destinations than from any of its other hubs. Los Angeles
International Airport (LAX) and New York City (JFK) serve as focus cities
and international gateways. American operates maintenance bases at Tulsa (TUL),
Kansas City (MCI), and Fort Worth Alliance (AFW).
American Eagle Airlines is a Fort Worth, Texas-based regional airline
partner of American Airlines, wholly owned by AMR Corporation.
American Airlines is a founding member of the Oneworld airline alliance.
History
Formation
American Airlines was developed from a conglomeration of about 82 small
airlines through a series of corporate acquisitions and reorganizations:
initially, the name American Airways was used as a common brand by a number
of independent air carriers. These included Southern Air Transport in Texas,
Southern Air Fast Express (SAFE) in the western US, Universal Aviation in
the Midwest (which operated a transcontinental air/rail route in 1929), and
Colonial Air Transport in the Northeast.
On January 25, 1930, American Airways was incorporated as a single company,
with routes from Boston, New York and Chicago, Illinois to Dallas, and a
route from Dallas to Los Angeles. The airline operated its routes with wood
and fabric covered Fokker Trimotors and all metal Ford Trimotors. In 1934
American began flying Curtiss Condor biplanes fitted with sleeping berths.
American Airlines before World War II
In 1934, American Airways Company was acquired by E.L. Cord, who renamed the
company "American Air Lines". Cord hired Texas businessman C.R. (Cyrus
Rowlett) Smith to run the company. Early in its history, the company was
headquartered at Chicago Midway International Airport in Chicago, Illinois.
Smith worked closely with Donald Douglas to develop the DC-3, which American
Airlines started flying in 1936. With the DC-3, American began to brand
itself using nautical terms, calling its aircraft "Flagships" and
establishing the "Admirals Club," an honorary club for valued passengers.
The DC-3s had a four-star "admiral's pennant" which would fly outside the
cockpit window while the aircraft was parked, one of the most well-known
images of the airline at the time.
American was the first airline to cooperate with Fiorello LaGuardia's plans
to build an airport in New York City, and partly as a result became the
owner of the world's first airline lounge at the new LaGuardia Airport (LGA),
which became known as the "Admirals Club." Membership was initially by
invitation only, but a discrimination suit decades later changed the club
into a paid membership club, creating the model for other airline lounges.
Postwar developments
After World War II, American launched an international subsidiary, American
Overseas Airlines to serve Europe; however, AOA was sold to rival Pan Am in
1950. AA launched another subsidiary around the same time, Líneas Aéreas
Americanas de Mexico S.A., to operate flights to Mexico, and built several
airports there.
American Airlines was an early adopter of jet aircraft, and introduced the
first transcontinental jet service using Boeing 707s on 25 January 1959.
With the introduction of its "Astrojets," as it dubbed the new jet fleet,
American's focus shifted to nonstop coast-to-coast flights, although it
maintained feeder connections to other cities along its old route using
smaller Convair 990s and Lockheed Electras. American invested $440 million
in jet aircraft up to 1962, launched the first electronic booking system
(Sabre) together with IBM, and built an upgraded terminal at Idlewild (now
JFK) Airport in New York City which became the airline's largest base of
operations.[4]
Expansion in 1980s and 1990s
American changed its routing to a hub-and-spoke system starting in 1981,
opening its first hubs at DFW and Chicago O'Hare. American began flights to
Europe and Japan from these hubs in the mid-1980s.
In the late 1980s, American opened three new hubs for north-south traffic.
San Jose International Airport was added as a hub after American purchased
Air California. American also built a new terminal and runway at
Raleigh-Durham International Airport to take advantage of the
rapidly-growing Research Triangle Park nearby, as well as compete with
USAir's hub in Charlotte. Nashville was also chosen as a hub.
Lower fuel prices in the era and a favorable business climate at the time
led to higher than average airline industry profits. The industry's
expansion was not lost on the American Airline's existing employees who on
February 17, 1997 struck for higher wages. President Bill Clinton invoked
the Railway Labor Act citing economic impact to the United States a few
minutes later quashing the strike.[5] Pilots settled for substantially lower
wage increases than their demands as a result.
The three new hubs were all abandoned in the 1990s: some San Jose facilities
were sold to Reno Air, and likewise at Raleigh/Durham to Midway Airlines.
Midway went out of business in 2001. American purchased Reno Air in February
1999 and fully integrated its operations on 31 August 1999, but did not
resume hub operations in San Jose.
Miami also became a hub after American bought Central and South American
routes from Eastern Air Lines in 1990 (inherited from Braniff International
Airways but originated by Panagra). Through the 1990s, American expanded its
route network in Latin America to become the dominant U.S. carrier in the
region.
On 15 October 1998 American Airlines became the first airline to offer
electronic ticketing in all 44 countries it serves.
TWA merger, 9/11, and aftermath
Mr. Crandall left the company in 1998 and was replaced by Donald J. Carty,
who negotiated the purchase of Trans World Airlines and its hub in St. Louis
in April 2001.
The merger of seniority lists remains a contentious issue, particularly for
pilots - the groups were represented by different unions at their respective
airlines. In the final merger, 60 percent of former TWA pilots were moved to
the bottom of the seniority list at AA. The most senior TWA captain, hired
in 1963, was integrated at the same seniority level as an AA captain hired
in 1985. However, the TWA pilots were given
"super-seniority" and a specified ratio of positions as captain if they
stayed in St. Louis. The result was that most former TWA pilots stayed in
St. Louis and roughly maintained their same relative seniority; though, some
left St. Louis and fly in the co-pilot seat next to AA pilots who may have
been hired at a later date, but are more senior outside the protections
afforded to that base. For cabin crews, all former TWA flight attendants
(approximately 4,200 employees) were furloughed by mid-2003 due to the AA
flight attendants' union putting TWA flight attendants at the bottom of
their seniority list.
In the wake of the TWA merger and the roughly concurrent September 11, 2001
attacks by al-Qaeda operatives working under the direction of Osama bin
Laden (which claimed two of AA's aircraft along with passengers and crew),
American began losing money. Mr. Carty negotiated new wage and benefit
agreements with the airline's labor unions, but was forced to resign after
union leaders discovered that Carty was planning to award handsome executive
compensation packages at the same time. St. Louis' hub was also downsized
afterwards.
In Mr. Carty's wake, American has undergone additional cost-cutting
measures, including rolling back its "More Room Throughout Coach" program
(which eliminated several seats on certain aircraft types), ending
three-class service on many international flights, and standardizing its
fleet at each hub (see below). However, the airline has rebounded and
expanded its service into new markets, including Ireland, India and mainland
China.
On July 20, 2005, for the first time in 17 quarters, American announced a
quarterly profit; the airline earned $58 million in the second quarter of
2005. It had previously lobbied for the preservation of the Wright
Amendment, which regulates commercial airline operations at Love Field in
Dallas. On June 15, 2006, American reached an agreement with Southwest
Airlines and the cities of Dallas and Fort Worth to seek repeal of the
Wright Amendment on the conditions that Love Field remain a domestic airport
and that its gate capacity be limited.[6]
Slogans
* Current - "We know why you fly."
* 2001 (post-9/11) - "We are an airline that is proud to bear the name
American"
* Mid 1980s-mid 1990s - "Something special in the air"
* 1970s-1980s - "We're American Airlines, doing what we do best"
* Early 1970s - "It's good to know you're on American Airlines."
* 1967-1969 - "Fly the American Way"
* 1964-1967 - "American built an airline for professional travelers."
* 1950s-early 1960s - "America's Leading (domestic) Airline"
Destinations
American Airlines serves destinations on five continents. Its network is
particularly developed in the Americas, where it serves more destinations
than any other U.S. airline. Hubs at Dallas/Fort Worth, Miami and New York (JFK)
serve as major gateways to the Americas, while American's Chicago hub has
become the airline's primary gateway to Europe and Asia. Similar to other
U.S. legacy carriers, American has dramatically cut back on flying
point-to-point routes (both domestic and international) to once-important
non-hub cities such as Boston, San Jose, and Fort Lauderdale in favor of
consolidating operations into major hubs. American is the only U.S. airline
with scheduled flights to Anguilla, Bolivia, Dominica, Grenada and Saint
Vincent and the Grenadines.
In recent years, American has begun to expand its network in Asia, albeit
with mixed success. In 2005, American re-introduced a non-stop flight from
Dallas/Fort Worth to Osaka, which had been discontinued after the September
11 terrorist attacks, but this service was discontinued a year later.
American also launched non-stop service from Chicago to Nagoya, but that too
ended within a year. Also in 2005, American launched service from Chicago to
Delhi.[7] Somewhat surprising to some (given the lack of success that United
Airlines encountered operating the same route) this service has been
profitable. In April 2006, American began service from Chicago to Shanghai,
which has also proven to be profitable for the company. However, in October
2006, American ceased its San Jose, CA to Tokyo/Narita service, leaving LAX
as American's sole international gateway on the West Coast. American planned
to start flights between Dallas/Fort Worth and Beijing via Chicago-O'Hare
(on Westbound only) in 2007 but lost its bid to United Airlines' Dulles to
Beijing route.
American will restart its old daily non-stop service to Barranquilla,
Colombia on December 13, 2007.
American has recently applied to fly between Miami and the Venezuelan city
of Valencia. The route is waiting for government approval to begin on 10 May
2007.
American will soon to apply to the United States Department of
Transportation for nonstop flights between Chicago-O'Hare and Beijing,
China. If approved by the US Government, the flight will begin on March 25,
2009. [1]
American will begin service from Dallas/Fort Worth and Raleigh/ Durham to
London's Heathrow Airport as well as from New York (JFK) to London's
Stansted Airport. [2]
New Routes
* Austin, TX(AUS) - Orange County, CA (SNA) begins September 5, 2007.
* Chicago O'hare, IL(ORD) - Fort Walton Beach, FL(VPS) begins September 5,
2007 (Operated by American Eagle).
* Dallas/Fort Worth, TX(DFW) - Flint, MI(FNT) begins September 5, 2007
(Operated by American Eagle).
* Dallas/Fort Worth, TX(DFW) - Rosewell, NM(ROW) begins September 5, 2007
(Operated by American Eagle).
* New York Kennedy, NY(JFK) - Las Vegas, NV(LAS) begins September 5, 2007.
* New York LaGuardia,NY(LGA) - Louisville, KY(SDF) begins September 5,2007
(Operated by American Eagle).
* Barbados, West Indies(BGI) - Castries, St Lucia(SLU) begins September 5,
2007 (Operated by American Eagle).
* New York Kennedy,NY(JFK) - London-Stansted,United Kingdom(STN) begins
October 28, 2007.
* New York Kennedy, NY(JFK) - St. Lucia Hewanorra, West Indies(UVF) begins
November 15, 2007.
* New York Kennedy, NY(JFK) - St. Kitts/Nevis, Leeward Islands(SKB) begins
November 17,2007.
* Miami, FL(MIA) - Barranquilla, Colombia(BAQ) restart December 13, 2007.
* Ft. Lauderdale, FL (FLL) - San Jose, Costa Rica (SJO) begins December 14,
2007.
* Ft. Lauderdale, FL (FLL) - Santo Domingo, DR (SDQ) begins December 14,
2007.
* Miami, FL (MIA) - Valencia, Venezuela (VLN) begins late 2007, pending
government approval.
* Chicago O'Hare, IL(ORD) - Beijing, China(PEK) begins March 25, 2009,
pending government approval.
Fleet
Current fleet
As of March, 2007, American's fleet has an average age of 13.9 years.[8] The
American Airlines fleet consists of the following aircraft (as of March
2007):[9]
Almost half of its fleet is composed of McDonnell Douglas MD-82 and MD-83
series twinjets, referred to by AA as "Super 80," denoting the type's
original name, "DC-9 Super 80." Much of the Super 80 fleet dates back to the
early 1980s, although some were later acquired from TWA. Most if not all of
the MD-80 fleet has already been fitted with the new cabin interior, however
the first class seats are slightly narrower than the ones on the 737-800
cabin due to the width of the MD-80 cabin. American will start phasing out
some of its older MD-80s when its next order of 737-800s is delivered
sometime in 2009.[10] The airline thinks it is worth some of its fresh
profit to replace its aging, fuel-hungry, and inefficient MD-80s. AA has
considered ordering more new aircraft in the future if its financial
conditions allow.
On April 24, 2007 American announced that it would be upgrading the interior
on all of their 757s. The upgrade calls for new economy and first class
seats, two additional first class seats increasing the number from 22 to 24,
new interior side walls to give the cabin a brighter more welcoming
appearance, new LCD monitors to replace the old CRT monitors, new interior
carpet, and new digital media file serves used to enhance movie and music
entertainment. American also announced on April 24 that they will be
conducting the same upgrades on their Boeing 767-200 fleet. AA has also
introduced new aircraft to its fleet: the newest are the Boeing 777-200ERs,
which replaced MD-11s on key transoceanic routes in the late 1990s such as
Tokyo Narita, and 737-800s, which replaced 727s on many domestic and
Caribbean routes. The "More Room Throughout Coach" or MRTC, which increased
seat pitch and passenger legroom by reducing the number of seats, was an
experimental marketing and business plan that has been discontinued.
American Airlines announced on April 25, 2007 that they will be the launch
customer to fit their 767-200/300 fleet with blended winglets. The company
installing and designing them is APB (aviation partners boeing). All of
these upgrades are expected to be completed by mid 2010 and begin in January
of 2008.
American has discontinued three-class service on most aircraft, but
continues to offer first class on 777 and 767-200 aircraft. First class
passengers on 777 routes enjoy the "Flagship Suite," a first class seat that
can swivel inwards toward a personal work area and also recline 180 degrees
to become a bed (slightly more than half the 777 fleet have these seats, the
remaining aircraft are planned to be fitted with the flagship suites in
2007. Currently some of the 777s still have the old first class seats which
are already beginning to wear and tear and are reported to be uncomfortable
and have old technology, these seats are known as the Pacific route seats
however many of the aircraft with these seats are now being used on the
Atlantic routes as well. [11] 767-200 flights between JFK, SFO, and LAX
offer three-class "American Flagship Service" which replicates the passenger
service offered on long international flights. The business class cabins of
American's 767-300 aircraft are in the process of being refitted with
electronic "lie-flat" seats. When the installation is complete, the seats
will also be introduced on American's 777s.
On all American aircraft except the 757s formerly operated by TWA,
passengers in all cabins have a cigarette port DC power ports in the first
and/or business class cabins, and at select seats in coach. All classes of
service on the 777 have personal video screens, although they lack
Audio/Video On Demand (AVOD) systems. These personal video screens have the
"GateConnect" feature which allows passengers to view terminal maps and
connecting flight information for their destination airport.
American has redesigned its schedules so that each hub city receives certain
aircraft types more often than others, which is intended to simplify
maintenance and last-minute fleet substitutions. For example, 737-800s are
not flown to Chicago and St. Louis, while S80s are not flown to Miami or San
Juan.
American Airlines was one of three carriers (Continental Airlines and Delta
Air Lines being the other two) to sign an exclusivity agreement with Boeing
in the late 1990s. When Boeing acquired McDonnell Douglas, the European
Union forced Boeing to void the contracts, the carriers are widely believed
to still have a gentleman's agreement with Boeing.
In March 2007 American decided to pull its order for 47 Boeing 737-800
forward three years from 2013-2016 to 2009-2012, to replace some of its
older MD-80s and increase fuel airline fuel efficiency. The same deal
includes the right to purchase Boeing 787 aircraft, although there are no
details on size and schedule of potential orders.[12]
American Airlines Fleet Aircraft ↓ Total ↓ Passengers
(First/Business/Economy) ↓ Routes ↓ Notes ↓
Airbus A300B4-600R 34 267 (16/251) Short-medium haul routes, Caribbean.
Boeing 737-800 77
(47 orders) 142 (16/126)
148 (16/132) Short-medium haul domestic, Canada, Mexico. All to be fitted
with winglets
Boeing 757-200 124 180 (22/158)
188 (22/166) Medium-long haul worldwide routes All to be fitted with
winglets
Ex-TWA 757s are being sold to Delta
All to be fitted with new interiors.
Boeing 767-200ER 15 165 (9/30/126)
167 (9/30/128) Long haul domestic routes Non -ER aircraft being phased out
of service
All to be fitted with winglets
All 767-200 aircraft will be fitted with new interiors.
Boeing 767-300ER 58 219 (30/189)
223 (30/193)
225 (30/195) Medium-long haul international routes All to be fitted with
winglets
All to be fitted with New Business Class
Boeing 777-200ER 47
(6 orders) 245 (16/35/194)
247 (18/35/194) Long haul international routes Some to be fitted with new
interiors
All to be fitted with New Business Class and Flagship suites in First Class
Retired fleet
American Airlines Retired Fleet Aircraft ↓ Year Retired ↓ Notes ↓
BAC 111 1972
BAe 146 1993 ex-AirCal
Boeing 707 1981
Boeing 717 2002 ex-TWA
Boeing 727-023 1993
Boeing 727-223 2002
Boeing 737-1xx 1993 ex-AirCal
Boeing 737-2xx 1993 ex-AirCal
Boeing 737-3A4 1993 ex-AirCal
Boeing 747-123 1983 Exchanged with Pan Am for additional DC-10s
Boeing 747-SP31 1994
Boeing 767-331 2002 ex-TWA
Boeing 767-3YO 2002 ex-TWA
Convair 240 1960s
Convair 990 1970s
Curtiss Condor 1930s
Douglas DC-2 1930s
Douglas DC-3 1930s
Douglas DC-4 1940s
Douglas DC-6 1966
Douglas DC-7 1950s
Douglas DC-9 2001 ex-TWA
Fokker F100 2004 Sold to Jetsgo until Sudden Liquidation
Now Sold to Avianca
Ford 5-AT-B Trimotor 1920s
Lockheed L-188 Electra 1960s
AAdvantage
AAdvantage is the frequent flyer program of American Airlines. Launched May
1, 1981, it was the first such loyalty program in the world, and remains the
largest with more than 50 million members as of 2005.
Miles accumulated in the program allow members to redeem tickets, upgrade
service class, or obtain free or discounted car rentals, hotel stays,
merchandise, or other products and services through partners. The most
active members, based on the amount and price of travel booked, are
designated AAdvantage Gold, AAdvantage Platinum, and AAdvantage Executive
Platinum elite members, with privileges such as separate check-in, priority
upgrade and standby processing, or complimentary upgrades. They also receive
similar privileges from AA's partner airlines, notably those in oneworld.
History
Increased competition following the 1978 Airline Deregulation Act prompted
airline marketing professionals to develop ways to reward repeat customers
and build brand loyalty. The first idea at American, a special "loyalty
fare," was modified and expanded to offer complimentary first class tickets
and upgrades to first class for companions, or discounted coach tickets.
Membership was seeded by searching AA's SABRE computer reservations system
for recurring phone numbers. The 130,000 most frequent flyers, plus an
additional 60,000 members of AA's Admirals Club were pre-enrolled and sent
letters with their new account numbers. The name was selected by AA's
advertising agency, and is consistent with other American Airlines programs
featuring the "AA" in the name and logo.
Less than a week later, rival United Airlines launched its Mileage Plus
program; other airlines followed in the ensuing months and years. The rapid
appearance of competition changed the nature of the program, and as airlines
began to compete on the features of their frequent flyer programs,
AAdvantage liberalized its rules, established partnerships with hotel and
rental car agencies, and offered promotions such as extra free beverages. In
1982 AAdvantage also became the first program to cooperate with an
international carrier; members could accrue and redeem miles on British
Airways flights to Europe.
In 2005 American Airlines joined other major US carriers in introducing an
online shopping portal allowing shoppers to earn AAdvantage miles when
shopping online.
Partnerships
In addition to its oneworld, American Connection, and American Eagle
partnerships, American Airlines offers frequent flier partnerships with the
following airlines:
* Alaska Airlines
* Air Pacific
* British Airways
* Cathay Pacific Airways
* China Eastern Airlines
* Deutsche Bahn (AiRail Service)
* EVA Air
* Finnair
* Gulf Air
* Hawaiian Airlines
* Iberia Airlines
* Japan Airlines
* LAN Airlines
* Malev Hungarian Airlines
* Mexicana
* Qantas
* Brussels Airlines
* SNCF
* TAM
* Turkish Airlines
Admirals Club
The Admirals Club was conceived by AA president C.R. Smith as a marketing
gimmick shortly after he was made an honorary Texas Ranger. Inspired by the
Kentucky colonels and other honorary organizations, Smith decided to make
particularly valued passengers "admirals" of the "Flagship fleet" (AA called
its aircraft "Flagships" at the time). The list of Admirals included many
celebrities, politicians and other VIPs, as well as more "ordinary"
customers who had been particularly loyal to the airline.
There was no physical Admirals Club until shortly after the opening of
LaGuardia Airport. During the airport's construction, New York Mayor
Fiorello LaGuardia had an upper-level lounge set aside for press conferences
and business meetings. At one such press conference, he noted that the
entire terminal was being offered for lease to airline tenants; after a
reporter asked whether the lounge would be leased as well, LaGuardia replied
that it would, and a vice president of AA immediately offered to lease the
premises. The airline then procured a liquor license and began operating the
lounge as the "Admirals Club" in 1939.
The second Admirals Club opened at Washington National Airport. Because it
was illegal to sell alcohol in Virginia at the time, the Club contained
refrigerators for the use of its members, so they could store their own
liquor at the airport.
For many years, membership in the Admirals Club (and most other airline
lounges) was by the airline's invitation. After a passenger sued for
discrimination, the Club (and most other airline lounges) switched to a paid
membership program. Membership now costs $250 to $450 a year, depending on
previous member status and AAdvantage frequent flyer program level;
membership can also be purchased with AAdvantage miles.
Locations
* Atlanta
* Austin
* Bogotá
* Boston
* Buenos Aires
* Caracas
* Chicago O'Hare (3)
* Dallas-Fort Worth (4)
* Denver
* Frankfurt
* Honolulu (shared with Qantas)
* Kansas City
* London Heathrow
* Los Angeles
* Mexico City
* Miami (2)
* Nashville
* Newark
* New York JFK (2)
* New York LaGuardia
* Orange County
* Panama City
* Paris CDG
* Philadelphia
* Raleigh-Durham
* Rio de Janeiro
* Santiago
* Santiago De Los Caballeros
* Santo Domingo
* San Diego
* San Francisco
* San Jose
* San Juan
* São Paulo
* St. Louis
* Tokyo-Narita
* Toronto
* Washington Dulles
* Washington National
Codeshare agreements
American has codeshare agreements with the following airlines:
* Aer Lingus
* Air Pacific
* Alaska Airlines
* British Airways
* Cathay Pacific Airways
* China Eastern Airlines
* Deutsche Bahn (AiRail Service)
* EVA Air
* Finnair
* Gulf Air
* Hawaiian Airlines
* Horizon Air
* Iberia Airlines
* Japan Airlines
* LAN Airlines
* Malév
* Mexicana
* Qantas Airways
* Brussels Airlines
* SNCF
* TAM Airlines
* Turkish Airlines
* Royal Jordanian.
AmericanConnection, which feeds American's hub at Lambert Saint Louis
International Airport, is also a codesharing operation with three regional
carriers. It also has reciprocal agreements for earning frequent flyer miles
with several airlines, including all other members of the Oneworld alliance.
Incidents and accidents
* October 23, 1942; American Airlines Flight 28, en route from Burbank,
California to New York City, crashed in Chino Canyon near Palm Springs after
it was clipped by a U.S. Army Air Corps Lockheed B-34 Ventura II bomber. The
crash killed all nine passengers and crew of three aboard the Douglas DC-3;
among the victims was award-winning composer and Hollywood songwriter Ralph
Rainger. The bomber, being flown by a two-man crew, landed safely.
* July 28, 1943: American Airlines Flight 63 (Flagship Ohio), a Douglas DC-3
routing Cleveland-Columbus-Dayton-Cincinnati-Louisville-Nashville crashed on
the last segment of the flight (Louisville-Nashville) about 1.6 miles west
of Trammel, KY. The plane descended from 200 feet until it struck trees,
then across an open field and stopped in an upright position. Of the 22
people onboard (18 passenger and 4 crew) 20 died. The cause of the crash was
loss of control due to severe turbulence and violent downdrafts.
[3]
* October 15, 1943: American Airlines Flight 63 (Flagship Missouri) a
Douglas DC-3 routing Nashville-Memphis crashed near Centerville, TN. As the
plane was cleared to climb by Nashville, the plane instead descended until
it impacted a sloped hill and burst into flames. All 11 people onboard (8
passengers and 3 crew) were killed, including Blan R. Maxwell, who was the
speaker of the Tennessee State Senate. The cause of the crash was determined
to be icing on the plane either on the wings or propellers.
[4]
* February 10, 1944: American Airlines Flight 2, a DC-3 routing Little
Rock-Memphis crashed into the Mississippi River about 18.1 miles from
Memphis International Airport. All 24 occupants onboard (21 passengers and 3
crew members) were killed. 11 of the fatalities were members of the armed
services The cause of the crash was never determined.
[5]
* January 10, 1945: American Airlines Flight 6001, a Douglas DC-3 was
approaching Lockheed Air Terminal now known as Bob Hope Airport in Burbank,
CA when it apparently veered to the left as if circling to landing. The
pilot radioed, stating he could not contact visual with the ground and
requested vectors to Palmdale. The plane was given clearance to proceed, and
was not seen or heard from again until the next day when search crews found
the wreckage in foothills approximately 3 miles NE from the Lockheed Air
Terminal. All 24 occupants (21 passengers and 3 crew) including 17 members
of the Army and Navy were killed. The cause of the crash was determined to
be the pilot's missed approach procedure to the point where it could not be
applied safely.
[6]
* February 23, 1945: American Airlines Flight 9, a Douglas DC-3 flying on a
routing New York-Washington, DC-Nashville-Los Angeles, crashed into the
wooded summit of Glade Mountain about 6 miles SW of the town of Rural
Retreat, VA. Of the 22 occupants onboard (19 passengers and 3 crewmembers)
17 were killed. The cause of the crash was determined to be pilot error in
not properly remaining at a safe altitude.
[7]
* March 3, 1946: American Airlines Flight 6-103, a Douglas DC-3, routing New
York-Tucson-San Diego, crashed into Thing Mountain, CA near El Centro, CA.
The plane reported flying over El Centro; thereafter the plane descended and
crashed into the mountain. All 25 occupants onboard (22 passengers and 3
crew were killed). The cause of the crash was determined to be the pilot's
action in permitting the descent to occur, to which no explanation has ever
been given.
[8]
* August 25, 1946: American Airlines Flight 26, (Flagship Tulsa), a Douglas
C-47 was on a training flight originating and terminating in Memphis, TN.
Approximately 5 miles WSW of Ashland, MS the plane crashed into the ground.
Both occupants onboard were killed. The cause of the crash was determined to
be an unexplained loss of control.
[9]
* December 28, 1946: American Airlines Flight 2007, a Douglas C-50, routing
Detroit-Chicago crashed near Michigan City, IN after an emergency divert to
South Bend after the pilot reported problems with both engines. The plane
crash-landed near Michigan City. Of the 21 occupants onboard (18 passengers
and 3 crew) 2 of the crew were killed. The cause of the crash was determined
to be fuel starvation in both engines.
* August 8, 1947: American Airlines Flight ? a Douglas DC-3 flying New
York-Buffalo on a cargo flight (transporting an engine) crashed into
Flushing Bay while returning to La Guardia Airport after the pilot reported
low oil pressure in engine #2. The plane upon impact sank in approximately 5
minutes. Both pilots onboard were killed. The cause of the crash was
determined to be insufficient air speed for a single engine operation while
attempting the landing.
[10]
* November 29, 1949: Flight 157, a Douglas DC-6, veered off the runway and
struck buildings after the flight crew lost control of the plane during its
final approach to Dallas Love Field 26 passengers and 2 crew members were
killed.
* August 22, [[1950[]: American Airlines Flight 14 a Douglas DC-6 flying
from Los Angeles-Chicago suffered decompression after a propeller blade from
the #3 engine failed and punctured the fuselage near Eagle, CO. The plane
made a safe landing in Denver. One passenger, who was suffering from a heart
condition died. The cause of the crash was fatigue in the engine.
[11]
* January 22, 1952: American Airlines Flight 6780, a Convair 240 was on
routing Buffalo-Rochester-Syracuse-Newark when it crashed into the corner of
the intersection of Williamson and South Streets, in the city of Elizabeth,
NJ approximately 3.4 miles SE of Newark while descending for a landing. The
plane was noticed to be drifting off course and descending prior to the
crash. All 27 occupants onboard (20 passengers and 3 crew) plus 7 civilians
on the ground, were killed. Among the passengers was Robert P. Patterson,
former Undersecretary of War under Franklin Delano Roosevelt and former War
Secretary under Harry S. Truman. The cause of the crash was never
determined.
[http://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=19520122-00
* September 16, 1953: American Airlines Flight 723, a Convair 240 was flying
Boston-Springfield-Albany-Syracuse,
NY-Rochester-Buffalo-Detroit-Chicago-when it crashed while descending for
landing. The plane crashed into a series of radio towers in a fog, crashed
and burned. All 28 occupants onboard (25 passengers and 3 crew) were killed.
[12]
* July 6, 1954: American Airlines Flight 163, a Douglas DC-6 was flying
Cleveland-St. Louis when a 15 year old passenger burst into the cockpit with
an empty pistol. The captain produced his own gun, shot and killed the
perpetrator
* March 20, 1955: American Airlines Flight 711, a Convair 240, was flying
Chicago-Branson, MO when it crashed a quarter mile short of the airport
while landing. Of the 35 occupants onboard (32 passengers and 3 crew), 13
were killed. The cause of the crash was determined to be spatial
disorientation and inattention to instruments.
* August 4, 1955: American Airlines Flight 476, a Convair 240, flying
Tulsa-Springfield, Missouri-St. Louis-New York crashed while attempting to
make an emergency landing at Fort Leonard Wood, MO after the #2 engine
caught fire. While descending the right wing broke off and the plane crashed
into a forest. All 30 occupants onboard (27 passengers and 3 crew were
killed). The cause of the crash was determined to be to be the "installation
of an unairworthy cylinder".
[13]
* January 6, 1957: American Airlines Flight ?, a Convair 240, flying
Providence, RI-Joplin-Tulsa when it struck trees about 4 miles N of the
approach end to Rwy 17 at Tulsa International Airport, slid along the ground
to the top of an upslope, and then jumped a ditch and came to rest 540 feet
from the approach end. Of the 10 occupants onboard (7 passengers and 3 crew)
one passenger was killed. The cause of the crash was determined to be the
lack of alertness by the captain in allowing the first officer to continue
the descent at too low of an altitude.
[14]
* February 3, 1959: Flight 320, a Lockheed L-188 Electra, crashed on
approach to LaGuardia on February 3, 1959 due to pilot error.
* August 15, 1959: American Airlines Flight 514 (Flagship Connecticut), a
Boeing 707 was on a training flight ending at Calverton=Peconic River
Airport, NY now known as Calverton Executive Airport, when during descent
the plane began a barrel roll to the right, yawed and crashed in flames
after the pilots shut off the engines to simulate a flemout. All 5 crew
onboard were killed. The cause of the crash was determined to be the failure
of the crew to recognize the yaw.
[15]
* January 28, 1961: American Airlines Flight 1502 (Flagship Oklahoma) was on
a training flight from Idlewild-Idlewild when it crashed about 5 miles W of
Montauk Point after being seen left-wing low steep dive. All 6 occupants on
board were killed. The cause of the crash was determined to be a loss of
control but the reason for loss was never known.
* March 1, 1962: Flight 1, a Boeing 707, crashed shortly after takeoff from
Idlewild (now JFK) airport due to a maintenance error causing rudder
failure.
* November 8, 1965: Flight 383, a Boeing 727, crashed on approach to
Cincinnati airport. The aircraft crashed, killing 58 and leaving four
survivors, including a flight attendant, Toni Ketchell. Pilot error was
cited.
* December 28 1970; American Airlines (Trans Caribbean Airways) 727-200; St.
Thomas, US Virgin Islands: The pilot made a hard landing which caused the
aircraft to bounce, followed by a second touchdown which caused the main
landing gear to fail. The aircraft overran the runway and hit an embankment.
Two of the 46 passengers were killed, the crew survived.
* April 27, 1976: Flight 625, a Boeing 727, crashed on approach to St.
Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands. Overran short runway, pilot error cited.
* May 25, 1979:Flight 191, a McDonnell Douglas DC-10, crashed at Chicago's
O'Hare International Airport. During the takeoff roll, the left engine and
pylon separated from the wing. The crew continued the takeoff, but wing
damage due to the engine separation also damaged the aircraft hydraulic
system and caused retraction of some flight control surfaces. The aircraft
rolled and crashed shortly after takeoff. All 258 passengers and 13 crew
were killed. Two people on the ground were also killed.
* 15 November 1979:American Airlines Flight 444 enroute from
Chicago-Washington, DC; an unsuccessful bomb aboard the plane that did not
result in any fatalities.
* February 19, 1988: American Eagle Fairchild Metro III; Cary, North
Carolina: The aircraft departed during low ceiling, low visibility, and
night conditions. Shortly after takeoff the aircraft impacted a reservoir.
Analysis of radar data indicated the aircraft was in a 45 degree descending
turn. Both crew members and all 10 passengers were killed.
* June 7, 1992; American Eagle (Executive Air) CASA 212-200; Mayaguez,
Puerto Rico: The aircraft crashed one kilometer short of the runway in bad
weather. Both crew and all three passengers were killed.
* October 31, [[1994]; American Eagle ATR 72; Near Roselawn, Indiana: The
aircraft inverted, dived, and crashed from holding pattern at 10,000 feet
(3050 m) due to icing. The four crew and 64 passengers were all killed.
* December 13, 1994: American Eagle Jetstream 31; Raleigh-Durham, North
Carolina: Crashed about 5 miles (8 km) short of the runway at night in icing
conditions and with possible engine trouble. Both crew and 13 of the 18
passengers were killed.
* 12 November 1995:American Airlines Flight 1572 an MD-83 on a domestic
scheduled passenger flight between Chicago-Hartford impacted trees and
landed short of the runway threshold on landing at Bradley International
Airport. There were no injuries among the 78 onboard. The cause of the crash
was determined to be the failure of the crew to properly maintain the
required altitude during descent.
* December 20, 1995:Flight 965, a Boeing 757, crashed on approach to Calí,
Colombia, on , due to an outdated flight map, and Cali's old approach system
and radar knocked off by guerillas have been blamed.
* June 1, 1999:Flight 1420, a McDonnell Douglas MD-82, overran the runway
into the Arkansas River while landing IN Little Rock, Arkansas.
* September 11, 2001 attacks: Two American Airlines aircraft were hijacked
and crashed during the : Flight 77 (a Boeing 757) was intentionally crashed
into the Pentagon and Flight 11 (a Boeing 767) was intentionally crashed
into the North tower of the World Trade Center.
* November 12, 2001: Flight 587, an Airbus A300 crashed in New York City due
to separation of the rudder.
* December 22, 2001:A plot to bomb Flight 63 by "shoe bomber" Richard Reid
was foiled. The flight was en route from Paris Charles De Gaulle to Miami,
and was diverted to Boston's Logan Airport.
* May 9, 2004: an American Eagle Super ATR, flight 5401, crash-landed in San
Juan, Puerto Rico when one of the tires blew. Seventeen people were injured,
but there were no fatalities.
* October 19, 2004: American Connection BAe Jetstream 32; near Kirksville,
Missouri: The aircraft was on a scheduled flight from St. Louis to
Kirksville when it crashed about four miles (6.4 km) south of the
destination airport. All but 2 on board died.
* December 7, 2005: A passenger on Flight 924, who officials said claimed to
have a bomb in a carry-on bag, was shot and killed by a team of federal air
marshals on the jetway as the plane boarded at Miami International Airport
for a flight to Orlando, Florida, from Medellín, Colombia.
* March 18, 2005: a passenger died aboard American Airlines on a New York
JFK to Los Angeles flight after being restrained by 7 passengers. Reportedly
the passenger was unruly prior to his death.[13]
Livery
American's early liveries varied widely, but a common livery was adopted in
the 1930s, featuring an eagle painted on the fuselage. The eagle became a
symbol of the company and inspired the name of American Eagle Airlines.
Propeller aircraft featured an international orange lightning bolt running
down the length of the fuselage, which was replaced by a simpler orange
stripe with the introduction of jets.
In the late 1960s, American commissioned an industrial designer to develop a
new livery. The original design called for a red, white, and blue stripe on
the fuselage, and a simple "AA" logo, without an eagle, on the tail.
However, American's employees revolted when the livery was made public, and
launched a "Save the Eagle" campaign similar to the "Save the Flying Red
Horse" campaign at Mobil. Eventually, the designer caved in and created a
highly stylized eagle, which remains the company's logo to this day. In
1999, American painted a new Boeing 757 in its 1959 international orange
livery.
American is the only major U.S. airline that leaves the majority of its
aircraft surfaces unpainted. This was because C. R. Smith hated painted
aircraft, and refused to use any liveries that involved painting the entire
plane. Robert "Bob" Crandall later justified the distinctive natural metal
finish by noting that less paint reduced the aircraft's weight, thus saving
on fuel costs. Eastern Air Lines and US Airways have also maintained
unpainted airplanes in the past.
Trivia
* In the 1960s, Mattel released a series of American Airlines stewardess
Barbie dolls.
* An "American Airlines Space Freighter," the Valley Forge, was the setting
for the 1971 science fiction movie Silent Running, starring Bruce Dern and
directed by Douglas Trumbull. The freighter featured the then-new "AA" logo
on the hull.
* On 30 March 1973 AA became the first major airline to employ a female
pilot when Bonnie Tiburzi was hired to fly Boeing 727s.
* AA was featured prominently in the first two Home Alone movies.
* In the early 1990s, singer Janet Jackson made a commercial for AA.
* AA has been a long-time promotional sponsor of The Oprah Winfrey Show,
broadcast from AA's hub city of Chicago.
* AA is one of the few companies to have purchased naming rights for two
sporting venues: the AmericanAirlines Arena in Miami and the American
Airlines Center in Dallas. The 2006 NBA Finals saw the Miami Heat taking on
the Dallas Mavericks, creating great exposure for American Airlines.
* The airline received a 100% rating on the first Corporate Equality Index
released by the Human Rights Campaign in 2002 and has maintained their
rating in respect to policies on LGBT employees.
* Lieutenant Governor Brian Dubie of Vermont was formerly a pilot for the
airline until his re-election in 2006.
* American has three inflight magazines, American Way, Celebrated Living
(First and Business Class) and Nexos - American's Spanish and Portuguese
language publication.
* AA is the first airline to develop a frequent flyer program, dubbed
AAdvantage and created on May 1, 1981. It is the largest airline loyalty
program in the world and maintains an active membership of more than 56
million members.
* As of 2006, AA's regional airline, American Eagle, had almost completed an
extensive fleet transformation, replacing their turboprop aircraft with
Embraer regional jets and Canadair regional jets, with the exception of the
remaining ATR & Saab turboprops which they are in the process of phasing
out.
* AA's "American Connection" service operates from the Saint Louis hub.
Unlike "American Eagle", Under a marketing agreement with American Airlines,
three independent airlines – Chautauqua Airlines, Regions Air and Trans
States Airlines – operate flights with the AA code under the
AmericanConnection brand name. All three airlines are providers of regional
flying to and from St. Louis for American Airlines, previously operating for
TWA as TWExpress.
* AA is the only legacy carrier in the United States which has not filed for
Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection
* Vignelli Associates designed the AA eagle logo in 1967. Vignelli
attributes the introduction of his firm to American Airlines to Henry
Dreyfuss, the legendary AA design consultant. The logo is still in use
today.
* American Airlines uses the code name "Jim Wilson" for corpses that are
shipped with the flight. [16]
* American originally wanted to celebrate its new Love Field service in 2005
but canceled the plans because of the crash in Chicago of Southwest Airlines
Flight 1248.
References
1. ^ [Aviation Week and Space Technology, January 15, 2007, p. 349],
2. ^ http://www.aviationexplorer.com/american_airlines.htm
3. ^ http://www.aviationexplorer.com/american_airlines.htm
4. ^ Jets Across the U.S., TIME, November 17, 1958.
5. ^ http://www.iht.com/articles/1997/02/17/fly.t_1.php.
6. ^ American Airlines Joins Southwest Airlines in Defeating the Wright
Amendment (Today In The Sky: November 2, 2006)
7. ^ American Airlines Introduces Non-Stop Service To Delhi
8. ^ American Airlines Fleet Age
9. ^ "Directory: World Airlines", Flight International, 2007-03-27, pp.
74-75.
10. ^ Trottman, Melanie. "AMR Accelerates Orders For Fuel-Efficient 737's".
Wall Street Journal, March 29, 2007
11. ^ http://www.aa.com/content/amrcorp/pressReleases/2006_03/09_bizclass.jhtml
12. ^ Darren Shannon. "American reveals plan to buy 787s as it revises 737
order", Flight International, 2007-04-03, p. 8.
13. ^ http://www.airguideonline.com/airsafety_nonfatal05.htm
Sources
* John M. Capozzi, A Spirit of Greatness (JMC, 2001), ISBN 0-9656410-3-1
* Don Bedwell, Silverbird: The American Airlines Story (Airways, 1999), ISBN
0-9653993-6-2
* Al Casey, Casey's Law (Arcade, 1997), ISBN 1-55970-307-5
* Simon Forty, ABC American Airlines (Ian Allan, 1997), ISBN 1-882663-21-7
* Dan Reed, The American Eagle: The Ascent of Bob Crandall and American
Airlines (St. Martin's, 1993), ISBN 0-312-08696-2
* Robert J. Serling, Eagle (St. Martin's, 1985), ISBN 0-312-22453-2
* International Directory of Company Histories, St. James Press.
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