Oldest Airlines in the World – Is your National Airlines on the List?
Wright brothers flew
the first flight on the beaches of Kitty Hawk in 1903; soon hereafter
commercial airlines began forming around the world. The very first would have been
over 100 years old now — if they were still around. However, there are some
airlines still flying today that are well into their 90s going high & strong.
Pointing which
airlines are among the world’s oldest is a little difficult question than it
sounds. For instance, a German airline called Lufthansa was founded in 1926,
but was dissolved by the Allies in 1951. A completely new airline founded
in 1953 restoring the name, pattern and logo. Despite that, Lufthansa unfortunately
does not make to this list since the new airline and the old were separate
entities.
By contrast, the
airline we now know as Delta was called Huff Daland Dusters when it
was founded in 1924 and renamed in 1928. Because it was the same airline, it
does make the list. We are only counting airlines whose original or main
component is the airline that you can still fly today.
With all that in
mind, here are the stars of the sky. How many have you flown? Also, is your
national airlines on the list?
Founding date: October 8,
1929
Country: Cuba
Call sign: CU
Cuba’s national
carrier began as a charter service and flying school, but launched scheduled
flights around the island in 1930. It was not until 1945 that it began flying
to Miami. Its inaugural transatlantic route, to Madrid, launched in 1948 and
stopped in Bermuda, the Azores and Lisbon. The company was taken over by the
Cuban government and reorganized following the 1959 revolution.
Founding date: March 5,
1929
Country: Chile
Call sign: LA
LATAM is
actually the result of the 2012 merger between LAN and TAM, but we’re including
it here because the LAN portion of the company dates to 1929, when it was
founded by Chile’s Comodoro Arturo Merino Benítez as Línea Aérea
Nacional. Today, the massive South American airline is a member of the Oneworld
alliance and has a fleet of over 120 planes flying to nearly 70 destinations.
Founding date: January
30, 1929
Country: U.S.A.
Call sign: HA
Hawaiian
Airlines started off as Inter-Island Airways in October of 1929, with sightseeing
tours over Oahu followed by scheduled service the next month from Honolulu
to Hilo via Molokai and Maui. The airline had already carried more than 10,000
passengers by the end of 1930, and changed its name to Hawaiian Airlines in
1941. It began commercial jet service from Hawaii to Los Angeles in 1960 and
was the first U.S. airline to operate a flight with an all-female crew in 1979.
Today, the airline flies to nearly 30 destinations with a fleet of more
than 50 planes.
11. LOT Polish Airlines
Founding date: January 1,
1929
Country: Poland
Call sign: LO
LOT was the
product of a merger between two existing airlines, Aerolot and Aero. The new
airline’s first two routes were from Warsaw to Katowice and
Bydgoszcz, with its first international route, to Vienna, launching in 1929. It
adopted the logo of a stork back in 1931. LOT ceased operations during WWII but
restarted service in 1946. The airline became a member of the Star Alliance in
2003.
Founding date: June 28,
1927
Country: Spain
Call sign: IB
Though Iberia
has been part of a company called I.A.G. since 2011, along with other major
carriers like British Airways and Aer Lingus, Iberia itself is over 90 years
old now. Its maiden flight, from Madrid to Barcelona on December 14, 1927, was
inaugurated by King Alfonso XIII of Spain. Now, the airline has a fleet of
around 80 planes and flies to nearly 100 destinations and is a member of the
Oneworld alliance.
9. Air Serbia
Founding date: June 17,
1927
Country: Serbia
Call sign: JU
Air Serbia has
undergone several reinventions since its founding many decades ago. First
called Aeroput, it was reestablished as JAT, short for Jugoslovenski
Aerotransport, in 1947, and then Jat Airways in 2003. Along with an investment
from Etihad, the airline became Air Serbia in 2013. It currently has a fleet of
21 aircraft and flies to over 40 destinations.
8. Tajik Air
Founding date: September
3, 1924
Country: Tajikistan
Call sign: 7J
Originally
established as a division of Aeroflot, the airline became independent in 1991.
You won’t find it on many Western routes, but it does operate flights to 19
destinations, including cities in China, India, Iran, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,
Russia, and Turkey. The airline currently has a fleet of 14 planes.
7. Delta Air Lines
Founding date: May 30,
1924
Country: U.S.A.
Call sign: DL
Delta Air Lines was
called Huff Daland Dusters when it was founded in Macon, Georgia, as a
crop-dusting airline in an effort to combat a boll weevil infestation that was
decimating U.S. cotton crops. By 1925, the airline had a fleet of 18 planes,
making it the largest private airline in the world at the time. The name was
changed to Delta Air Service in 1928 and passenger service began in 1929. Delta
continued to operate a crop-dusting division until 1966, though. Over the course
of decades, the airline merged with Chicago and Southern Air Lines, Northeast
Airlines, Western Airlines and finally Northwest in 2008. Delta was also
founding member of the SkyTeam alliance in 2000. Delta is currently the world’s
second-largest airline, with a fleet of more than 800 aircraft flying to more
than 300 destinations across the globe.
6. Finnair
Founding date:
November 1, 1923
Country: Finland
Call sign: AY
Called Aero when
it was founded back in 1923, Finnair’s first aircraft was a German Junkers F13
seaplane. Its skis allowed it to float on water or land or ice since, at the
time the airline began flying in 1924, there were no commercial airfields in
Finland. The airline’s final seaplane flight took place in December 1936, from
which point all flights took off and landed on solid ground. Finnair was
the first western airline to operate regular flights to the U.S.S.R. after
World War II, and the first to offer flights from Western Europe to Mainland
China starting in 1988. The airline officially changed its name to Finnair in
1968 and joined the Oneworld alliance in 1997. Today, Finnair flies to
over 130 destinations and has over 60 aircraft.
5. Czech Airlines
Founding date: October 6,
1923
Country: Czech Republic
Call sign: OK
The name Czech
Airlines only dates to May 1995, but the company was originally called
Czechoslovak State Airlines, or CSA, when it was founded back in the 1920s. The
carrier’s first flight took place from Prague to Bratislava on October 29,
1923, and the airline grew from there until March 1939, when it ceased
operations until September 1945 due to World War II. Czech Airlines became a
member of SkyTeam in 2001.
4. Aeroflot
Founding date: March 17,
1923
Country: Russia
Call sign: SU
Originally
founded as Dobrolyot, the airline changed its name to Aeroflot in 1932.
Aeroflot became one of the world’s largest airlines during the Soviet
era, when it was the flag carrier of the U.S.S.R. Though it is now
semi-privatized, a majority of the company is still owned by the Russian government,
making it the de facto state airline of Russia. It became a member of the
SkyTeam alliance in 2006 and currently has a fleet of over 200 planes flying to
more than 120 destinations.
3. Qantas
Founding date: November
16, 1920
Country: Australia
Call sign: QF
Ever wonder
where the word Qantas came from? It’s an acronym for the airline’s original
name: Queensland and Northern Territory Aerial Services Ltd. The airline
adopted its famous kangaroo logo, of which there have been many iterations
since, in 1944. Qantas introduced the world’s first business class aboard the
Boeing 747 in 1979. A recent milestone for the airline: Nonstop flights from
Perth to London launching in March aboard the airline’s new Boeing 787-9
Dreamliners, which will mark the first regularly scheduled nonstop commercial
service between Australia and Europe.
Founding date: December
5, 1919
Country: Colombia
Call sign: AV
It might
surprise some to learn that the world’s second-oldest airline is actually
Colombia’s Avianca. It was founded as SCADTA, or Sociedad Colombo Alemana de
Transporte Aéreo and its first flight was from Barranquilla to Puerto Berrio in
September 1920. The airline changed its name to Avianca – an acronym of
Aerovías Nacionales de Colombia – in 1940 when it merged with another
acronymized airline named SACO (Servicio Aéreo Colombiano) and its German
backers were forced to divest due to World War II. Avianca now includes
subsidiaries in several Latin American countries and merged with the Salvadoran
carrier TACA, which itself was founded in 1931, in 2009. The combined airline
became a member of the Star Alliance in 2012.
1. KLM
Founding date: October 7,
1919
Country: Netherlands
Call sign: KL
With a
tongue-twister name ‘Koninklijke Luchtvaart Maatschappij’, no wonder everyone
shortens this airline’s name to KLM. The translation from Dutch is the Royal
Aviation Company, and it is the oldest existing airline in the world. Its first
flight ever was aboard a De Havilland DH-16 piloted by Captain Jerry Shaw
between Amsterdam Schipol and London in 1920, and its first transatlantic
flight took place in 1934 from Amsterdam to Curaçao. Today, the airline has
a fleet of 200 planes and carries over 30 million passengers per year.
So here it is!
End of List and End of Article. Though it was a bit of a knowledge, it might
have brought disappointment to some for not finding their national airlines on
the list. Really Really Sorry 'Air India'. Have a Nice Flight Folks















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