Airlines For the Rest Of Us: The Rise and Fall of America's Local Service Airlines
English


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About The Book

Small Cities to be Hurt Tremendously by Airline Cuts Airline Subsidy Cuts Leave Three Towns Flightless No Convenient Route to Buffalo -actual newspaper headlines 2007-08 It wasnt always like this. At least not during the era of the Local Service Airlines. From the 1950s through the mid-1980s these feisty colorful startups provided a level of service unheard of today reaching small communities across America. They had to. Encouraged and supported by the Civil Aeronautics Board these privately-owned companies were mandated to bring reliable scheduled airline transportation-plus airmail and small package service-to the citizens of places like Enid Oklahoma; or Walla Walla Washington; or Kokomo Indiana-and other places ignored by the bigger and older airlines. The locals may have begun with second-hand propeller-driven equipment like the legendary DC-3 but by the mid-60s they were operating turboprops and jets-just like the bigger airlines. And some of these Locals especially Frontier and Ozark and Piedmont eventually gave the big boys a run for their money. One Local Allegheny became todays US Airways. These truly were Airlines For the Rest of Us and this is the story of how they began how they grew and why they disappeared.
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