Capital Airlines was an airline serving the eastern United States which was merged into United Airlines in 1961. Its primary hubs were National Airport near Washington, DC, and Allegheny County Airport near Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. At its peak, it was the fifth largest domestic carrier in the U.S..
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History
Predecessors
Clifford A. Ball, a McKeesport, Pennsylvania, automobile dealer and owner of a controlling interest in Bettis Field near Pittsburgh, won airmail contract route #11 on March 27, 1926. In April of the following year, The Clifford Ball Airline began operating between Pittsburgh and Cleveland, Ohio. Famed humorist and performer Will Rogers was known to be a regular passenger,[citation needed] but scheduled passenger service did not begin until April 28, 1928. The following August, it became the first airline to serve Washington, DC, from the west, offering its flagship "Path of the Eagle" service from Cleveland to Hoover Field across the Potomac River.
Ball sold his interests in November 1930 to Pittsburgh Aviation Industries Corp., and the airline became Pennsylvania Air Lines (PAL). It was reorganized as Pennsylvania Airlines after the Air Mail scandal of the early 1930s. Central Airlines, otherwise notable for hiring Helen Richey, the first female commercial pilot in the U.S., became PAL's main competitor after its founding in 1934. The two companies merged to form Pennsylvania Central Airlines, or PCA, on November 1, 1936.
Pennsylvania Central Airlines
PCA, based at the new Allegheny County Airport near Pittsburgh, continued to add routes, notably to Chicago in 1938, and aircraft, notably the Douglas DC-3 in 1939.
In 1941, PCA moved its headquarters to the new Washington National Airport in Arlington, Virginia, becoming one of its three original tenants; PCA had been consulted during the airport's design. The row of office buildings adjacent its hangars gained the nickname "mahogany row" and the airline adopted the slogan "The Capital Airline," with its aircraft dubbed "Capitaliners." By 1947 its route network no longer reflected its name, and on April 21, 1948, the airline adopted a new insignia, colors and name: Capital Airlines.
In 1946, the airline became the launch customer for the Douglas DC-4. In 1948 it created the "Nighthawk," the first coach class service, designed to compete with the railroads between Chicago and New York City as well as the dominant carriers on the route, United, TWA and American.
Capital's last decade
In 1948, the first airborne television was installed on a Capital airplane.[citation needed]
In 1950 Capital Airlines received its first Lockheed Constellations, enabling it to compete more effectively on longer distance routes. In 1955 it became the first U.S. operator of Vickers Viscounts, the first passenger turboprop. The Viscounts were deployed on the flagship Washington-Chicago route and the airline hoped to use them on expanded service, but they were mostly stymied by the Civil Aeronautics Board.
On July 20, 1952, a Capital pilot reported seeing a blue-white ball in the sky. The Unidentified Flying Object reports caused a sensation in the Washington area.[citation needed]
The airline also encountered labor difficulties. Maintenance personnel went on strike in 1958, crippling operations for 38 days. On April 1, 1960, the New York State Commission Against Discrimination faulted Capital Airlines for failing to hire Patricia Banks, an African-American woman who had been denied employment as a flight attendant despite meeting all job requirements. She became one of only two black flight attendants in the country.
These problems compounded slow revenue growth in the late 1950s, and the airline began to struggle financially. In May 1960, Vickers foreclosed on Capital's entire fleet of Viscounts, and bankruptcy for the airline seemed certain. However, on July 28, 1960, it announced a merger with Chicago-based rival United Airlines, saving it from that fate. When completed on July 1, 1961, it was the largest airline merger in history.[1]
In 1981, former employees formed the Capital Airlines Association to preserve their memories of the old carrier. A retired United Airlines pilot, Milt Marshall, bought the Capital trademark and operated a charter business under the Capital name out of Waterbury-Oxford Airport in Connecticut.
In a bizarre final chapter to the brand's story, in July 2004 Capt. Marshall was transporting a passenger in a Capital Airways Piper Navajo from Waterbury to upstate New York. The plane crashed as it made an approach in clear weather near Lake George. Both pilot and passenger were killed. Their bodies were mangled and burned in the wreckage. An ammunition clip with two missing rounds was found at the crash scene but no gun was ever found. Many people believe that the passenger, a businessman who was facing both bankruptcy and indictment for fraud and who had attempted to buy a large life insurance policy just prior to the flight, killed the pilot and himself causing the crash. The bodies were so mutilated that no official cause of death was determined and the case was closed. This marked the last chapter in the tragedy strewn history of Capital Airlines.[2]
Accidents and incidents
- August 31, 1940 - Douglas DC-3A NC21789, operating under the PCA name, departed Washington, DC into an intense thunderstorm. It was struck or nearly struck by lightning and dived from 6,000 feet (1,800 m) into an alfalfa field, killing all 25 aboard in the Lovettsville Air Disaster, the worst American airplane accident at that date.[3][4]
- February 20, 1956 - Vickers Viscount N7404 (c/n 90) was damaged beyond economic repair at Chicago Midway International Airport when it landed short of the runway due to a malfunction of the propeller control switches. Despite this, the aircraft was remanufactured as c/n 301 and entered service with Trans-Canada Air Lines in May 1957.[5]
- April 6, 1958 - Vickers Viscount N7437, operating Capital Airlines Flight 67 stalled and crashed on approach to Saginaw, Michigan, resulting in 49 fatalities.The cause was attributed to ice accretion on the horizontal stabiliser.[6]
- May 20, 1958 - Vickers Viscount N7410 was involved in a mid-air collision with a Lockheed T-33 of the Air National Guard. All eleven on board the were killed when it crashed at Brunswick, Maryland, as was one of the two crew members of the T-33.[7]
- May 12, 1959 - Lockheed Constellation N2735A rolled off the runway and down a mountain in Charleston, West Virginia, killing 2.[8]
- May 12, 1959 - Vickers Viscount N7463, operating Capital Airlines Flight 75 broke up in mid-air after encountering thunderstorms. The aircraft crashed at Chase, Maryland, killing all 31 people on board.[9]
- January 18, 1960 – Vickers Viscount N7462, operating Flight 20 crashed at Holdcroft, Virginia, after losing power from at first two, then all four engines. All 50 people on board were killed.[10]
See also
- Miss Pittsburgh - preserved historic aircraft flown by Clifford Ball
References
- ^ "United Airlines - Timeline - The Jet Age and Corporate Expansion 1959–1969". united.com. http://www.united.com/page/article/0,,2691,00.html. Retrieved December 17, 2009.
- ^ "Capital Airlines Virtual Museum, N45032, Captain Milton Marshall, Michael Keilt". http://baesel.net/cftside2.htm. Retrieved December 17, 2009.
- ^ "Death in the Blue Ridge". TIME. September 9, 1940. http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,764600,00.html. Retrieved 2009-04-14. "The news of the worst crash in the history of U. S. aviation ended 17 months of safe operation.".
- ^ "Accident description for Douglas DC-3 NC21789 on August 31, 1940". PlaneCrashInfo. http://www.planecrashinfo.com/1940/1940-11.htm. Retrieved 16 December 2009.
- ^ "Accident description for Vickers Viscount N7404 on February 20, 1956". Aviation Safety Network. http://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=19560220-1. Retrieved 6 September 2009.
- ^ "Accident description for Vickers Viscount N7437 on April 6, 1958". Aviation Safety Network. http://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=19580406-0. Retrieved 6 September 2009.
- ^ "Accident description for Vickers Viscount N7410 on May 20, 1958". Aviation Safety Network. http://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=19580520-1. Retrieved 6 September 2009.
- ^ "Accident description for Lockeheed Constellation N2735A on May 12, 1959". Aviation Safety Network. http://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=19590512-0. Retrieved 6 September 2009.
- ^ "Accident description for Vickers Viscount N7463 on May 12, 1959". Aviation Safety Network. http://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=19590512-1. Retrieved 6 September 2009.
- ^ "Accident description for Vickers Viscount N7462 on January 18, 1960". Aviation Safety Network. http://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=19600118-0. Retrieved 6 September 2009.
| This article includes a list of references or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it has insufficient inline citations. Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations where appropriate. (December 2009) |
Sources
- Airline History: Capital Airlines (archive.org copy)
- Lloyd, Kristin B. "Flying the Capital Way, Part I" (PDF), Historic Alexandria Quarterly, Winter 1997
- Lloyd, Kristin B. "Flying the Capital Way, Part II" (PDF), Historic Alexandria Quarterly, Spring 1998
External links
- Capital Airlines timeline, baesel.net
- Memorabilia related to Capital Airlines and its predecessors, baesel.net
- Images of Capital Airlines timetables and route map, airtimes.com
- Capital Airlines history, century-of-flight.net
- Clifford Ball Airline history, oldbeacon.com
- Southwestern Pennsylvania aviation from 1919 to 1930, stvincent.edu (archive.org copy)
- Fleet listing of Pennsylvania Central aircraft
- Fleet listing of Capital Airlines aircraft
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