Hughes Airwest
Hughes Airwest was a local service carrier, a scheduled airline in the Western United States from 1970 to 1980. It was backed by Howard Hughes' Summa Corporation. Its original name in 1968 was Air West and the air carrier was owned by Nick Bez. Hughes Airwest flew routes in the western U.S. and to several destinations in Mexico and Canada; its headquarters were on the grounds of San Francisco International Airport in unincorporated San Mateo County, California.
With distinctive all-yellow aircraft, the company slogan was Top Banana in the West; Hughes Airwest was purchased by Republic Airlines in 1980, which in turn was merged into Northwest Airlines in 1986. Northwest Airlines was then merged into Delta Air Lines in 2010.
History
On April 17, 1968, three earlier local service carriers in the western U.S. merged to form Air West:- Pacific Air Lines, which previously operated as Southwest Airways when it was founded in 1941, was based in San Francisco, flew along the coast and California's Central Valley, linking cities from Medford, Oregon, to southern California. Pacific operated Boeing 727-100s and Fairchild F-27s in 1968.
- Bonanza Air Lines routes reached west from its Phoenix base to southern California and north to Las Vegas, Reno, and Salt Lake City. Bonanza flew Douglas DC-9-10s and Fairchild F-27s in 1968, with a DC-9-30 on order, delivered after the merger.
- West Coast Airlines, based at Boeing Field in Seattle, served the Pacific Northwest, Idaho, Utah, Montana, and northern California. West Coast operated DC-9-10s, F-27s, and Piper Navajos in 1968.
Hungry for another adventure in the airline industry, TWA's former owner Howard Hughes sought the airline in 1968, and the US$90 million deal was finalized in April 1970. Renamed Hughes Air West, its call sign became "Hughes Air," and the airline expanded to several cities in the western United States, Canada, and Mexico. With the new yellow paint scheme, unveiled in September 1971, the airline began calling itself Hughes Airwest, two words instead of the initial three.
The airline participated in some movies in the 1970s, notably The Gauntlet with Clint Eastwood and Sondra Locke in 1977. Eastwood's character arrives in Las Vegas from Phoenix on the airline and when he phones the airport for flight departure times, Locke's character sarcastically called the airline, "Air Worst." Also in 1977, the airline was operating service from both Burbank and Orange County to Denver via an interchange flight agreement with the original Frontier Airlines. Hughes Airwest soon introduced its own jet service to Denver from a number of locations.
Like other local service airlines in the 1970s, Hughes Airwest eliminated many stops and opened longer routes. Service expanded to resorts in Mexico; domestic routes didn't reach east of Utah and Arizona until Denver, Des Moines, Milwaukee, and Houston Hobby Airport were added in 1978. When it ended F-27 turboprop flights in 1979, Hughes Airwest became an all-jet airline with 727-200s, DC-9-10s, and DC-9-30s.
In September 1979, the airline was grounded for two months by a walkout by their ticket agents, reservations handlers, and office employees, who had been without a contract for over a year. During 1979, several airlines showed interest in buying Hughes Airwest, including Alaska and Allegheny, with the latter soon becoming USAir. The strike was resolved in late October and flights resumed in November. Four months later they were the target of a buyout by Republic Airlines, which was finalized on October 1, 1980, for $38.5 million. Minneapolis-based Republic had formed in July 1979 via the merger of North Central Airlines and Southern Airways, the first under airline deregulation.
Republic was acquired by Northwest Airlines in 1986, which merged into Delta Air Lines in 2010.
Corporate affairs
The original headquarters were in two buildings in downtown San Mateo, California, on the San Francisco peninsula.Its new headquarters were located in San Mateo. The airline scheduled the move to a new headquarters in late August 1973; the complex was on a hill overlooking San Mateo and San Francisco Bay. The airline relocated two departments from the offices at San Francisco International Airport: flight control and reservations.
Livery
Hughes Airwest's planes were recognizable by their banana-yellow fuselage and tail colors. Their airplanes were often dubbed "flying bananas" and the airline launched an advertising campaign with the catchphrase "Top Banana in the West." Most nicknames given to Hughes Airwest airplanes in aviation books and magazines have to do with bananas. Apart from their all-yellow scheme, the airplanes also featured a blue logo on the vertical stabilizer that resembled three diamonds connected. The name Hughes Airwest, in stylized lettering, was featured unconventionally below the front passenger windows.This livery was devised by the southern California design firm of Mario Armond Zamparelli, following the crash of Flight 706 in June 1971, caused by a mid-air collision with a U.S. Marine Corps F-4B jet fighter near Duarte, California. In late 1971, the company launched a new marketing campaign which included new colors and repainted planes. The cabin windows also had a metallized PET film coating originally, but this proved too costly to maintain. Zamparelli also designed the uniforms of the flight attendants in the new colors, primarily in Sundance Yellow trimmed with Universe Blue.
After the sale in October 1980 the all-yellow paint scheme was gradually replaced by Republic's white with blue and green trim. Aircraft tails bore Republic's flying mallard, "Herman the Duck."
Fleet
Air West and Hughes Airwest operated the following aircraft types at various times during their existence:| Aircraft | Total | Introduced | Retired | Notes |
| Boeing 727-193 | 3 | 1968 | 1972 | |
| Boeing 727-200 | 11 | 1976 | 1980 | |
| Douglas C-47A Skytrain | 7 | 1968 | 1969 | |
| McDonnell Douglas DC-9-14 | 5 | 1970 | 1980 | |
| McDonnell Douglas DC-9-15RC | 12 | 1973 | 1980 | |
| McDonnell Douglas DC-9-31 | 30 | 1970 | 1980 | |
| McDonnell Douglas DC-9-32 | 2 | 1971 | 1980 | |
| Fairchild F-27 | 34 | 1968 | 1980 | |
| Piper PA-31 Navajo | 4 | 1968 | 1970 |
Destinations
Air West in July 1968
This is a list of destinations taken from the Air West system timetable dated July 1, 1968, when the merger to form Air West became effective. Cities served with jets are noted in bold. Air West was operating Boeing 727-100, Douglas DC-9-10, and McDonnell Douglas DC-9-30 jets, as well as Fairchild F-27 turboprops and small Piper Navajo twin props at this time. The majority of the destinations on this list that did not have jet service were served with Fairchild F-27 twin turboprops.ARIZONA:
- Grand Canyon
- Kingman
- Page
- Phoenix : Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport - Hub
- Prescott
- Tucson
- Yuma
IDAHO:
- Boise - Hub
- Burley/Rupert
- Idaho Falls
- Lewiston
- Pocatello
- Twin Falls
- Sun Valley/Hailey/Ketchum
- Great Falls
- Kalispell
- Las Vegas : McCarran International Airport - Hub
- Reno
UTAH:
- Cedar City
- Salt Lake City : Salt Lake City International Airport - Hub
CANADA:
- Calgary, Alberta : Calgary International Airport
- La Paz
- Mazatlan
- Puerto Vallarta
- Guadalajara
- '''Guaymas'''
Hughes Airwest in September 1980
ARIZONA:
- Grand Canyon
- Phoenix : Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport - Hub
- Tucson
COLORADO:
- Denver : Stapleton International Airport
- Boise - Hub
- Idaho Falls
- Lewiston
- Pocatello
- Twin Falls
- Des Moines
- Kalispell
- Las Vegas : McCarran International Airport - Hub
- Reno
- Eugene
- Klamath Falls
- Portland : Portland International Airport
- Redmond/Bend
- Houston : William P. Hobby Airport
- Salt Lake City : Salt Lake City International Airport - Hub
- Pasco/Kennewick/Richland
- Seattle : Seattle-Tacoma International Airport - Hub
- Spokane
- Yakima
- Milwaukee
- Calgary, Alberta : Calgary International Airport
- Edmonton, Alberta : Edmonton International Airport
- Manzanillo
- Mazatlan
- Puerto Vallarta
Accidents and incidents