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Encyclopedia > Regional Airlines

For regional airlines in Europe, see European regional airlines.

In the United States, regional airlines were an important building block of the passenger air system we have today. The U.S. Government encouraged the forming of regional airlines to provide feeder services from smaller communities to larger towns, where air passengers could connect to the major trunk airlines, such as American, Eastern, or United. The government also encouraged regional airline growth with the goal of making convenient air travel within the geographical reach of every American.


Regional airlines began by operating propellor-driven equipment over short routes, sometimes on stages of less than 100 miles in length.


Some examples of the original regional airlines sanctioned by the Civil Aeronautics Board in the 1940s and 1950s include:

Many of the regional airlines eventually transitioned to jet equipment, often providing convenient passenger jet service to small communities by the 1960s and 1970s. Many of those communities lack comparable service today. Of the airlines listed above, none survives today. Some airlines use these names today; however, they are not the corporate successors to the original airlines.


In the early 21st century, regional airlines vary in ownership from being independent companies to being wholly owned subsidiaries of major trunk carriers such as American Airlines, USAirways, or Continental Airlines. Their aircraft frequently are painted in the same color scheme as the airline whose flights they support, and they exist primarily to feed passengers from smaller towns to a major airline's hub. Current regional airlines have a reputation for flying small, uncomfortable, loud and slow propellor aircraft, but many of these companies are upgrading their fleets to 30, 40, 50, and 70 passenger regional jets.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Regional Airlines - definition of Regional Airlines in Encyclopedia (314 words)
Many of the regional airlines eventually transitioned to jet equipment, often providing convenient passenger jet service to small communities by the 1960s and 1970s.
Their aircraft frequently are painted in the same color scheme as the airline whose flights they support, and they exist primarily to feed passengers from smaller towns to a major airline's hub.
Current regional airlines have a reputation for flying small, uncomfortable, loud and slow propellor aircraft, but many of these companies are upgrading their fleets to 30, 40, 50, and 70 passenger regional jets.
Regional airline - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (455 words)
Regional airlines are a type of airline service that is intended to feed a larger airline or larger aircraft.
Many of the regional airlines eventually transitioned to jet equipment, providing jet service to small communities by the 1960s and 1970s as the airlines grew in size.
Some of Europe's regional airlines are subsidiaries of national air carriers, though there remains a strong entrepreneurial sector of independents.
  More results at FactBites »

 

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