Defunct private charter airline of the United Kingdom (1961–1970)
For the 1980s charter airline of the same name, see Caledonian Airways (1988).
Caledonian Airways
IATA
ICAO
Callsign
CA
CA
CALEDONIAN
Founded
April 1961 (1961-04)
Commenced operations
29 November 1961 (1961-11-29)
Ceased operations
30 November 1970 (1970-11-30) (merged with British United Airways to form British Caledonian)
Hubs
Glasgow–Prestwick
London–Gatwick
Manchester
Parent company
Caledonian Airways Ltd
Headquarters
Horley, Surrey, England, UK (1961–1965)
Crawley, West Sussex, England, UK (1966–1970)
Key people
Adam Thomson
John de la Haye
Frank A Hope
Caledonian Airways was a wholly private, independent[nb 1] British charter airline formed in April 1961. It began with a single 104-seat Douglas DC-7C leased from the Belgian flag carrier Sabena.[1][2][3][4] Caledonian grew rapidly over the coming years to become the leading transatlantic "affinity group" charter operator by the end of the decade. During that period, passenger numbers grew from just 8,000 in 1961 to 800,000 in 1970.[5][6] The latter represented 22.7% of all British non-scheduled passengers.[7] It also became Britain's most consistently profitable and financially most secure independent airline of its era, never failing to make a profit in all its ten years of existence.[8][9] By the end of 1970, Caledonian operated an all-jet fleet consisting of eleven aircraft and provided employment for over 1,000 workers. At that time, its principal activities included group charters between North America, Europe and the Far East using Boeing 707s, and general charter and inclusive tour (IT) activities in Europe utilising One-Elevens.[10]
In 1970 Caledonian bought British United Airways (BUA), the largest contemporary independent airline and leading private sector scheduled carrier in the United Kingdom,[11] and rebranded as British Caledonian.
Cite error: There are <ref group=nb> tags on this page, but the references will not show without a {{reflist|group=nb}} template (see the help page).
^Aeroplane (Commercial Aviation Affairs: Caledonian Equipment), Vol. 101, No. 2613, p. 636, Temple Press, London, 16 November 1961
^"World Airline Survey". Flight International. 12 April 1962. p. 546.
^"The Caledonian punchbag". Flight International. 21 March 1987. p. 33.
^Flying to the sun – A history of Britain's holiday airlines: 10. Transatlantic service – Caledonian Airways, Woodley, C., The History Press, Stroud, 2016, p. 147
^"Competition Commission, British Airways Plc and British Caledonian Group plc – A report on the proposed merger, Chapter 4: British Caledonian Group plc, History and development, p.32" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 July 2011.
^Fly me, I'm Freddie!, p. 134
^"Air Transport, BCAL Atlantic growth". Flight International. 20 September 1973. p. 467.
^Fly me, I'm Freddie!, p. 131
^"Air Transport, BCAL Atlantic growth". Flight International. 20 September 1973. p. 466.
^"World Airline Survey". Flight International. 26 March 1970. p. 476.
^High Risk: The Politics of the Air, pp. 256/7
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