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Arizona Airways

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Arizona Airways
Founded8 September 1942
Commenced operations17 March 1946 (1946-03-17)
Ceased operations28 February 1948 (1948-02-28)
Operating basesPhoenix, Arizona
Fleet size3
DestinationsSee Destinations below
HeadquartersPhoenix, Arizona
United States
Key peopleH.O. (Rocky) Nelson
(Founder, President)

Arizona Airways was an Arizona intrastate airline that operated 1946–1948, making substantial losses. About the time it ceased operations, it was federally certificated as a local service carrier to fly smaller routes in Arizona, New Mexico and Texas by the Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB), the now-defunct US federal agency that at the time tightly regulated almost all air transportation in the United States. However, the company was unable to resume service and ultimately, as a non-operating airline, contributed its routes and other assets to a 1 June 1950 three-way merger with Monarch Air Lines and Challenger Airlines to create the original Frontier Airlines.

History

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Startup

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Arizona Airways incorporated in Arizona on September 8, 1942.[1] Its president was H.O. Nelson, an engineer and pilot, who went by the name Rocky. The company was originally formed to train Navy pilots during World War II.[2] Other Nelson business interests included holding the local Ercoupe franchise.[3] Robert Goldwater, brother of Barry, was on the company’s board once it recast as an actual airline. The airline ensured that all major parts of the state were represented on its board and this was noted by those outside of Phoenix.[4][5][6]

In July 1945, prior to starting airline service, Arizona Airways arranged to buy a moribund, money-losing Transcontinental & Western Air (TWA) route from Phoenix to Las Vegas (both states were then lightly populated; Arizona reached a population of 750,000 in 1950, when Nevada had a population of 160,000 vs 7.2mm and 3.2mm respectively in 2020). TWA stopped flying the route during World War II and did not want to resume it, so arranged to sell the route to Arizona Airways in exchange for $100,000 and the right to become a 20% owner.[2] Arizona Airways needed CAB approval to fly an interstate route. In the meantime, on March 17, 1946, Arizona Airways started intrastate service with a 21-passenger DC-3 featuring a Thunderbird livery, initially on a circular routing that included Tucson, Phoenix and five other points.[7] The CAB held hearings on the TWA deal shortly after.[8] In July, the CAB examiner recommended against the transaction[9] and in February 1947, the CAB Board itself voted to defer a decision on the transaction until the Board settled the general question of air service in Arizona and New Mexico, since that case was also open.[10] The airline had also applied in that case to become a local service carrier, as such airlines were heavily subsidized at the time. [11] So the TWA deal did not help Arizona Airways accelerate CAB certification. In June 1947, Arizona Airways and Bonanza Air Lines, then operating as a Nevada intrastate airline, proposed a merger,[12] but no mention of it was later made in the CAB cases that certificated each airline as a feeder carrier.[13][14]

Apogee, financial distress and sale

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The airline expanded across Arizona the remainder of 1946 and into 1947 (see Destinations below). In July 1947 it experimented with air freight service to Kingman.[15] However, the airline dropped some southern cities in the second half of 1947 for being unprofitable,[16] and in January 1948, the airline was flying only on one northern route out of Phoenix.[17] The airline enjoyed near constant news coverage, hardly a week went by without at least one article in the Arizona Republic, the state's biggest newspaper, and usually several, often updating progress on the CAB cases. The newspaper often referred to the airline as the "State Airway" or similar. In February 1948, the CAB awarded Arizona Airways four routes from Phoenix, three within Arizona, one across New Mexico to El Paso, Texas. In the airline's favor was it knew the territory and was backed by many of Arizona's "leading businessmen," showing the wisdom of statewide service and board representation. Certification was subject to upgrading airports to Federal standards (radios and other infrastructure) and shoring up its balance sheet, since Arizona Airways had few assets left. The CAB noted the company had covered operating losses with capital raising.[14]

The airline stopped flying on March 1, 1948, Nelson saying it was to allow the company to transition to Federally-sanctioned flying.[18] Communities duly upgraded airports. The CAB issued the certificate in June,[19] but nothing happened thereafter because the airline could not raise more money without existing shareholders being severely diluted, and existing shareholders (who'd invested $335,000) didn't want that. In May 1949, the CAB ordered Arizona Airways into operation by July 1.[20] Finally, in late June Monarch Air Lines said it would buy Arizona Airways.[21] The transaction was filed with the CAB, July 7, 1949. CAB approval took until April 10, 1950, complicated by the fact that Monarch was also purchasing Challenger Airlines. Acquisition terms were modest: 6,000 shares of Monarch stock and assumption of $150,000 in Arizona Airways liabilities.[22] By contrast, Monarch issued about 30,000 shares for Challenger at $10.78 per share,[23] so for an investment of $335,000 in Arizona Airways, shareholders got about $65,000 in Monarch equity. By April 26, Monarch was in possession of Arizona.[24]

Meanwhile, Bonanza Air Lines received its own local service certification in June 1949,[14] which was contingent on TWA transferring to Bonanza the same route (Las Vegas to Phoenix) that it had tried to sell to Arizona Airways in 1945. And in November 1949, Bonanza bought it, for $672.09, far less than the price TWA agreed with Arizona.[25]

The three-way merger creating Frontier Airlines closed on June 1, 1950 and Frontier flew the first flight over the routes Arizona Airways received over two years earlier.[26] Rocky Nelson became a Frontier Vice President but sadly died less than a year later at age 46.[27]

Fleet

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Though the airline was not operating, Arizona Airways contributed three DC-3s to the merger.[28]

Destinations

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A November 10, 1946 timetable shows the following Arizona destinations:[29]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Little Stories of Phoenix Life, Arizona Republic, September 9, 1942
  2. ^ a b New State Air Line Planned, Arizona Republic, 15 November 1945
  3. ^ "Route Acquisition Legality Pondered". Aviation Week. 4 (7): 42. 10 September 1945. ISSN 0005-2175.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  4. ^ State Airway Board Named, Arizona Republic, 18 December 18 1945
  5. ^ "Robert W. Goldwater, Sr.,1910–2006". historalleague.org. Historical League. Retrieved 22 June 2024.
  6. ^ Greater Airline Service Seen Here, Tucson Citizen, 23 February 1948
  7. ^ State Air Project Opened, Arizona Republic, March 18, 1946
  8. ^ Proposed Route Of Air Route To State Firm Is Assailed, Arizona Republic, 20 March 1946
  9. ^ "Arizona Route Deal Opposed by Examiner". Aviation Week. 6 (2): 30. 8 July 1946. ISSN 0005-2175.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  10. ^ "Transcontinental & Western Air, Inc.,—Arizona Airways, Inc., Route No. 38 Transfer". Civil Aeronautics Board Reports. 7: 787–791. July 1946 – March 1947. hdl:2027/osu.32437011657737.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: date format (link).
  11. ^ Eads, George C. (1972). The Local Service Airline Experiment. Brookings Institution. pp. 88–97. ISBN 9780815720225.
  12. ^ Bonanza Airline Merger Pending, Reno Gazette-Journal, 9 June 1947
  13. ^ "Arizona-New Mexico Case". Civil Aeronautics Board Reports. 9. Civil Aeronautics Board: 85–130. January–December 1948. hdl:2027/osu.32437011657638.
  14. ^ a b c "Additional California-Nevada Service". Civil Aeronautics Board Reports. 10. Civil Aeronautics Board: 405–454. January–November 1949. hdl:2027/osu.32437011657588.
  15. ^ Air Line Starts New Cargo Run, Arizona Republic, 30 July 1947
  16. ^ Tucson Plane Run Is Asked, Arizona Republic, 21 November 1947
  17. ^ Approval Of Most Air Line Feeders In State Sighted, Arizona Republic, 4 January 1948
  18. ^ Schultz, Ken (2004). Arizona Airways Inc., A Chronological Account 1942 to 1950 (PDF) (Report). Retrieved 24 June 2024.
  19. ^ Air Mail Feeder Line Okayed, Arizona Republic, 30 June 1948
  20. ^ Lack Of Capital Delays Start Of Operations By Airline, Arizona Republic, 12 May 1949
  21. ^ State Airway Merger Seen With Monarch, Arizona Republic, 21 June 1949
  22. ^ "Arizona-Monarch Merger Case". Civil Aeronautics Board Reports. 11: 246–277. December 1949 – August 1950. hdl:2027/osu.32437011657539.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: date format (link).
  23. ^ "Monarch-Challenger Merger Case". Civil Aeronautics Board Reports. 11: 33–38. December 1949 – August 1950. hdl:2027/osu.32437011657539.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: date format (link).
  24. ^ "Docket Nos. 3977 and 4011, Arizona-Monarch Merger Case—Frontier Airlines, Inc., Certificates Reissued—order serial No. 4162, adopted May 15, 1950". Civil Aeronautics Board Reports. 11: 1096–1099. December 1949 – August 1950. hdl:2027/osu.32437011657539.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: date format (link).
  25. ^ "Bonanza Air Lines, Inc.-Transcontinental & Western Air, Inc., Route Authorization Transfer". Civil Aeronautics Board Reports. 10. Civil Aeronautics Board: 893–900. January–November 1949. hdl:2027/osu.32437011657588.
  26. ^ Frontier's Initial Air Operations Successful, Arizona Republic, 2 June 1950
  27. ^ Rocky Nelson Funeral To Be Tomorrow, Arizona Republic, March 7, 1951
  28. ^ Triple Merger of Airlines Is Announced, Arizona Republic, 24 September 1949
  29. ^ "November 10, 1946 timetable". timetableimages.com. Arizona Airways. Retrieved 22 June 2024.
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