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词条 National Airlines (1934–1980)
释义

  1. History

     1930s  1940s  1950s  1960s  1970s  Acquisition by Pan Am 

  2. Route network

  3. Fleet

  4. Sun King Club

     Domestic  International 

  5. Incidents and accidents

     Fatal  Non-fatal  Hijackings 

  6. References

  7. Bibliography

{{Use mdy dates|date=November 2015}}{{about|one of the airlines that have shared this name|other uses of the name|National Airlines (disambiguation)|'national airlines'|Flag carrier}}{{Infobox airline
| airline = National Airlines
| logo = National70.png
| logo_size = 150
| IATA = NA[1]
| ICAO = NA[1]
| callsign = NATIONAL
| founded = 1934
| ceased = 1980
(acquired by Pan Am)
| destinations =
| fleet_size =
| hubs = Miami International Airport
| focus_cities = Jacksonville International Airport
John F. Kennedy International Airport
New Orleans Moisant Field
Tampa International Airport
| headquarters = Miami-Dade County, Florida
| key_people = George T. Baker
(founder, CEO 1934-1962)
Louis "Bud" Maytag
(CEO 1962-1980)
}}National Airlines was a United States airline that operated from 1934 to 1980.[2] For most of its existence the company was headquartered at Miami International Airport, Florida.[3] At its height, National Airlines had a network of "Coast-to-Coast-to-Coast" flights, linking Florida and the Gulf Coast with cities along the East Coast and large cities on the West Coast.[4] From 1970 to 1978, National, Pan American World Airways (Pan Am) and Trans World Airlines (TWA) were the only U.S. airlines that operated scheduled passenger flights to Europe.[5]

History

1930s

National Airlines was founded by George T. Baker (1899-1963) in 1934. Its headquarters were in St. Petersburg, Florida and it was based at the city's Albert Whitted Airport.[8] On October 15 of that year, revenue flights were launched, transporting passengers and mail from St. Petersburg to a few destinations within Florida using a fleet of two Ryan ST monoplanes.[8][9] In 1935, the Stinson Trimotor was introduced with National Airlines,[10] which were soon replaced by the Lockheed Model 10 Electra.[6] In 1939, the company headquarters were moved to Jacksonville.[8] By the end of the decade, the National Airlines network spanned from Miami to New Orleans,[11] on what it called the Buccaneer Route.[5]

1940s

Revenue passenger miles for years ending June 30:[12]

  • 1936: 249,799
  • 1938: 653,688
  • 1939: 1,340,050
  • 1940: 3,465,316
  • 1941: 7,264,322
  • 1946: 108,760,267

In 1940 the Lockheed Model 18 Lodestar became the backbone of National's fleet.[13] National was awarded rights from Florida to New York City and other cities along the East Coast in 1944, with flights starting in 1945.[14] In 1946 National got approval to fly to Havana, Cuba, which coincided with the introduction of the Douglas DC-4.[8] The DC-4 allowed non-stop flights between Miami and New York[15] that started on February 14, 1946. Later that year National relocated its headquarters to Miami International Airport; a maintenance base opened at Miami in 1950.[8][16]

The Douglas DC-6, National's first pressurized airliner, began flights on July 1, 1947[8] and reduced New York to Miami flight time from five to four hours.[8] Flights on the DC-6 were marketed as Star Service.[5] National ran the Piggy Bank Vacations campaign, promoting low-fare flights to Florida during the off-peak summer season.[17]

1950s

This decade saw the introduction of the Convair 340/440, the Douglas DC-7,[17] and the Lockheed L-1049 Super Constellation.[18] On December 10, 1958 National became the first airline to operate domestic jet flights, using a Boeing 707 leased from Pan American World Airways between Miami and New York.[8] In 1959 the Lockheed L-188 Electra was introduced into the fleet. It was the only turboprop aircraft type ever operated by the airline.[19] At the end of the decade Houston and Boston were the ends of the network with heavy emphasis on service between Florida and the U.S. East Coast and Gulf Coast.[18]

1960s

With the award of traffic rights on the southern transcontinental route on March 11, 1961, National Airlines gained access to California and began operating new Douglas DC-8 jetliners between Florida and Los Angeles and San Francisco with a number of flights making intermediate stops in Houston and/or New Orleans[8][20] (previously, American Airlines, Delta Air Lines and National had together operated Douglas DC-6 and DC-7 propliner aircraft with interchange through-service between Miami and California).[17] In March 1962, National was operating only one round trip transcontinental nonstop service: National flight numbers 34 and 35 between Miami and Los Angeles which were both flown with DC-8 jets.[21] According to the front cover of its system timetable at the time, National billed itself as the "Airline of the Stars". Concerning international destinations in Central and South America, a cooperation involving interchange flights with Pan Am was set up.[7]

Also during the early 1960s, National inaugurated new service with the Lockheed Electra propjet to Las Vegas and San Diego.[20] Eastbound coast to coast routes flown with the Electra at this time included San Diego-Los Angeles-Houston-New Orleans-Miami and San Francisco-Las Vegas-Houston-New Orleans-Tampa-Orlando-Jacksonville.[20] National was also operating other long, multistop routings with the Electra as this time such as Boston-New York City-Jacksonville-Orlando-Tampa-New Orleans-Houston-Las Vegas-San Francisco. National flight number 223 departed Boston at 7:30am and arrived in San Francisco at 8:42pm with this latter routing being flown on a daily basis.[20] Total travel time for this flight was 16 hours and 12 minutes.

In 1962 Louis Bergman "Bud" Maytag, Jr. (grandson of Maytag Corporation founder Frederick Louis Maytag I), who had previously led Frontier Airlines[22] bought a majority share in National Airlines and replaced George T. Baker as CEO.[8] In 1960, the airline modernized its fleet with new Douglas DC-8 jetliners which were then followed by ten new Boeing 727-100 trijets,[14] the first of which was delivered in 1964.

After the retirement of the Electras in 1968, National became an all-jet airline with the DC-8 and 727.[8] The airline introduced the first jet service into Key West, FL in 1968 with the Boeing 727-100. The Douglas DC-8 fleet included the stretched Super DC-8-61 which was the largest aircraft type operated by the airline until the introduction of new wide body jetliners such as the Boeing 747 and McDonnell Douglas DC-10. In 1969, National was operating the Super DC-8 nonstop between Miami and New York JFK airport and also nonstop between Miami and Los Angeles with these flights having specific names such as "The Royal Biscayne", "The Royal Dolphin", "The Gotham" and "The Manhattan" between Miami and New York, and "The Californian" and "The Caribbean" between Miami and Los Angeles.[23]

On July 26, 1969 the Atlanta-San Francisco nonstop route was awarded to National and service began on October 1, 1969. It was National's only route out of Atlanta.

1970s

{{pax|float=right
| note = (scheduled flights only, domestic and international)
| footnote = [24]{{full|date=April 2013}}
|1951|432
|1955|905
|1960|1041
|1965|2663
|1970|2643
|1975|3865
}}

A $17 million IBM electronic computer reservation system, called Res-A-Vision, was completed and put into operation in 1970.

On June 16, 1970 National Airlines reintroduced international flights, when their Miami-London route opened (flights to Cuba were suspended in 1961 due to the Cuban Revolution).[14] With the London route, they became the third U.S. transatlantic passenger carrier, after Pan Am and TWA.

In October, the Boeing 747-100 jumbo jet, at that time the largest commercial airliner, entered service with National on the Miami-New York nonstop route on October 1, 1970 and the Miami-Los Angeles transcontinental nonstop route on October 25, 1970.[8] National sold its 747s in May 1976. Also in 1970, National Airlines opened their own terminal at John F. Kennedy International Airport, which was dubbed the Sundrome.[25]

Having placed an order for ten aircraft back in 1969,[14] the wide body McDonnell Douglas DC-10-10 was put in service on the Miami-New York route on December 15, 1971.[8] A 1971 publicity campaign designed by F. William Free promoting National's flight attendants was criticized by the National Organization for Women as being sexist due to the slogan "I'm (flight attendant's name). Fly me.", or similar.[26][27] Seeing one of these posters in Manchester inspired Eric Stewart of 10cc to write the band's 1976 song "I'm Mandy Fly Me".

In May 1973, the front cover of the airline's system timetable proudly proclaimed, "National has daily nonstop 747s from Miami to London".[28] By early 1976, the airline was operating scheduled wide body DC-10 service to Houston (IAH), Las Vegas (LAS), Los Angeles (LAX), Miami (MIA), New Orleans (MSY), Orlando (MCO), San Diego (SAN), San Francisco (SFO), Tampa (TPA), West Palm Beach (PBI) and all three airports in the New York City area: John F. Kennedy (JFK), LaGuardia (LGA) and Newark (EWR).[29] With the advent of the intercontinental McDonnell Douglas DC-10-30, National Airlines then expanded their European network by adding Paris (inaugurated on June 22, 1977), as well as Frankfurt, Amsterdam (both in 1978)[8] and Zurich (in 1979).[9] National began the very first nonstop flights from New Orleans to Europe (to Amsterdam) on July 2, 1978. National then began nonstop New York Kennedy (JFK)-Amsterdam flights on December 13, 1978, taking the route over from Pan Am.

In 1975, National was forced to shut down for several months due to a strike by flight attendants.[30]

In the late 1970s, several airlines tried to take over National Airlines, who had become a major player in the southern transcontinental and Florida-East Coast airline markets.[31] In 1978, Texas International Airlines (which was led by Frank Lorenzo at that time) acquired 24.6 percent of the shares,[2] but did not succeed in the subsequent tender offer takeover bid. A similar attempt was made by Eastern Air Lines in 1979.[2] At the same time, the shares held by Texas International were sold to Pan American World Airways, who emerged as a white knight and succeeded in accumulating a controlling majority.

Acquisition by Pan Am

On January 7, 1980, the acquisition of National was completed,[2] with Pan Am taking over the National Airlines fleet and route network. Pan Am continued to utilize the former National Miami maintenance base and headquarters building until Pan Am itself ceased operations in December 1991.[31] Much later, National's "Sun King" logo was sold and "repackaged" much like Pan Am's to appear upon the branding of start up "low cost carrier" Southeast Airlines aircraft.

Most industry analysts believe that Pan Am paid too high a price for National, and was ill prepared to integrate National's domestic route network with Pan Am's own globe-girdling international network. The cultures of National and Pan Am also proved to be incompatible, making workforce integration difficult. Texas International walked away from their foiled attempt with a multi-million dollar stock profit and was poised for Lorenzo's next ventures—a startup airline in the high-density East coast corridor (New York Air), and subsequent acquisition of Continental Airlines.[31]

Route network

National Airlines operated scheduled flights to the following U.S. cities:

LocationStateAirport(s)BeganEndedNotes
MobileAlabamaMobile Municipal Airport
Mobile Regional Airport
November 1, 1938[11]
1980
Los AngelesCaliforniaLos Angeles International Airport
June 11, 1961[8][32]
1980
San DiegoCaliforniaSan Diego International Airport
June 11, 1961[8][32]
1980
San FranciscoCaliforniaSan Francisco International Airport
June 11, 1961[8][32]
1980
San JoseCaliforniaSan Jose International Airport
July 1, 1976
1979
Daytona BeachFloridaDaytona Beach Airport
Daytona Beach International Airport
October 15, 1934[33]
1980
Fort LauderdaleFloridaFort Lauderdale–Hollywood International Airport
October 19, 1959
1980
Fort MyersFloridaPage Field
July 16, 1937[6]
1980
JacksonvilleFloridaJacksonville Municipal Airport
Imeson Field
November 19, 1934[9]
1980
focus city
Key WestFloridaKey West International Airport
March 1, 1944[76]
ca. 1970[34]
LakelandFloridaLakeland Municipal Airport (Drane Field)
1934[6][8]
1962[7]
MarathonFloridaFlorida Keys Marathon Airport
1959
1961[7]
MariannaFloridaMarianna Municipal Airport
1938[11]
1961[7]
MelbourneFloridaMelbourne Airport
April 26, 1959[7]
1980
MiamiFloridaMiami Municipal Airport
Miami International Airport
July 16, 1937[6]
1980
main base
OrlandoFloridaOrlando Municipal Airport
Orlando International Airport
October 15, 1934[6][8]
1980
Palm BeachFloridaMorrison Field
August 1, 1944[35]
1980
Panama CityFloridaPanama City-Bay County Airport
September 1, 1948[15]
1980
PensacolaFloridaPensacola Municipal Airport
November 1, 1938[11]
1980
SarasotaFloridaSarasota-Brandenton Airport
July 16, 1937[6]
1980
St. PetersburgFloridaAlbert Whitted Airport
St. Petersburg–Clearwater International Airport
October 15, 1934[6][8]
1961[7]
TallahasseeFloridaTallahassee Municipal Airport
November 1, 1938[11]
1980
TampaFloridaDavis Islands Airport
Tampa International Airport
October 15, 1934[6][8]
1980
focus city
AtlantaGeorgiaWilliam B. Hartsfield Atlanta International Airport
October 1, 1969
1978
SavannahGeorgiaSavannah Airport
July 15, 1946[35]
1980
ValdostaGeorgiaValdosta Regional Airport
1946[15]
1960[7]
New OrleansLouisianaShushan Airport
New Orleans International Airport
November 1, 1938[11]
1980
focus city
BaltimoreMarylandFriendship Airport
September 1, 1948 (Harbor Field 1948)[16]
1980
BostonMassachusettsLogan International Airport
December 14, 1956[18]
1980
GulfportMississippiGulfport-Biloxi Airport
1938[11]
1959-60[7]
Las VegasNevadaMcCarran International Airport
June 11, 1961[7]
1980
NewarkNew JerseyNewark Airport
February 12, 1946[7]
1980
New York CityNew YorkIdlewild/Kennedy Airport
October 1, 1944[14][35]
1980
focus city
New York CityNew YorkLaGuardia Airport
October 1, 1944, end 1947
resume 1966[14][35]
1980
FayettevilleNorth CarolinaFayetteville Municipal Airport
1956-57[18]
1962[4]
New BernNorth CarolinaSimmons-Nott Airport
1946[15]
1962[4]
WilmingtonNorth CarolinaBluethenthal Field
1945-46[35]
1962[4]
PhiladelphiaPennsylvaniaPhiladelphia International Airport
July 1, 1945[35]
1980
ProvidenceRhode IslandT. F. Green Airport
December 14, 1956[18]
1980
CharlestonSouth CarolinaCharleston Airport
July 1, 1945[35]
1980
HoustonTexasWilliam P. Hobby Airport
followed by Houston Intercontinental Airport
November 20, 1956[18]
1980
Newport NewsVirginiaNewport News/Williamsburg International Airport
1955[18]
1980
NorfolkVirginiaNorfolk Airport
December 1, 1945[35]
1980
RichmondVirginiaRichmond International Airport
1948[16]
1971[36]
SeattleWashingtonSeattle–Tacoma International Airport
April 1, 1979[5]
1980
Washington, D.C.Washington National Airport
February 25, 1948[16]
1980

National also operated scheduled flights to the following destinations in Europe and the Caribbean:

LocationCountryAirportCommencedCeased
HavanaCubaJosé Martí International Airport
1946[16]
1961[14]
ParisFranceOrly Airport
June 22, 1977[34]
1980
AmsterdamNetherlandsAmsterdam Airport Schiphol
May 4, 1978[34]
1980
San JuanPuerto RicoLuis Muñoz Marín International Airport
April 1, 1979[37]
1980
ZurichSwitzerlandZurich Airport
July 22, 1979[9]
1980
LondonUnited KingdomLondon Heathrow Airport
June 16, 1970[34]
1980
FrankfurtWest GermanyFrankfurt Airport
May 1, 1978[34]
1980

Fleet

When National Airlines was acquired by Pan Am in 1980, the fleet consisted of 43 Boeing 727 aircraft (19 of the original series 100 model and 24 of the stretched series 200 variant), as well as 16 McDonnell Douglas DC-10 airliners (11 of the series 10 model used in domestic service and five of the intercontinental series 30 model used for service to Europe).[38]

Over the years, National owned the following aircraft types:[2]

{{inc-transport|date=January 2013}}
AircraftIntroducedRetired
Boeing 727 (includes B727-100 and stretched B727-200)
1964[39]
1980[38]
Boeing 747-100
1970[40]
1976[40]
Convair CV-340/440[18]
1953
Curtiss C-46 Commando
Douglas DC-2
Douglas DC-4
1947[8]
Douglas DC-6
1947[8]
Douglas DC-7
1953
1964
Douglas DC-8 (includes stretched Super DC-8-61)
1960[40]
1975[40]
Lockheed Model 18 Lodestar[14]
1940[13]
1956
Lockheed L-188 Electra
1959[19]
1968[8]
Lockheed L-1049 Super Constellation
1957
Lockheed Model 10 Electra[6]
1937
McDonnell Douglas DC-10 (includes DC-10-10 and DC-10-30)
1971[40]
1980[40]
Ryan ST[8]
1934
Sikorsky S-55 (Helicopter)
1953
1954
Stinson Trimotor[10]
1935

Sun King Club

Domestic

  • Fort Lauderdale
  • Houston
  • Miami
  • Jacksonville
  • Los Angeles
  • New Orleans
  • New York (Kennedy)
  • New York (LaGuardia)
  • Newark
  • Orlando
  • San Francisco
  • Tampa
  • Washington (National)
  • West Palm Beach

International

  • Amsterdam
  • Frankfurt
  • London (Heathrow)
  • Paris (Orly)

Incidents and accidents

Fatal

  • On October 5, 1945 National Airlines Flight 16, a Lockheed Model 18 Lodestar (registered NC18199) crashed into a lake near Lakeland, Florida at 01:05 local time. The scheduled passenger flight had originated in Tampa, when the pilots encountered technical problems during approach of Lakeland Airport, which led to a failed go-around attempt. Of the 15 people on board, two passengers died.[41]
  • On January 14, 1951, 6 of the 28 passengers on board Flight 83 died when the aircraft, a Douglas DC-4 (registered N74685) overshot the runway and crashed into a ditch at Philadelphia International Airport. The pilots of the flight from New York City had tried to land the aircraft too far down the runway, instead of aborting the approach.[42] Frankie Housley, the only stewardess, also lost her life. She has been regarded as a hero, as she had returned to the burning wreckage to lead passengers to safety.[43]
  • On February 11, 1952, Flight 101, a Douglas DC-6, crashed shortly after take-off from Newark Airport due to a failure of a propeller and subsequent loss of control. Of the 59 passengers on board, 26 died, as well as three of the four crew members. Four people on the ground were killed.
  • With 46 fatalities (5 crew and 41 passengers, among them Billy DeBeck's widow), the disaster of Flight 470 on February 14, 1953 marks the worst accident in the history of National Airlines. The aircraft, a DC-6 registered N90893, crashed into the Gulf of Mexico {{convert|20|miles|abbr=on}} off Mobile Point en route from Tampa to New Orleans, after having encountered severe turbulence.
  • On November 16, 1959 at 00:55 local time, a Douglas DC-7 (registered N4891C) crashed into the Gulf of Mexico, the cause of which could not be determined. The 36 passengers and six crew aboard Flight 967 from Tampa to New Orleans died in the accident {{convert|35.6|miles|abbr=on}} off the coast of Pilottown, Louisiana.[44]
  • On January 6, 1960, a bomb exploded aboard the DC-6 registered N8225H Flight 2511 en route from New York to Miami. In the subsequent crash near Bolivia, North Carolina, all 29 passengers and five crew died.[45]
  • On November 3, 1973, a McDonnell Douglas DC-10 (registered N60NA) suffered an uncontained engine failure over Datil, New Mexico while operating as Flight 27 from Houston to Las Vegas. Pieces of the turbine penetrated the fuselage, breaking a window in the passenger cabin and causing subsequent decompression. One passenger was sucked out of the aircraft and died. The flight made a successful emergency landing at Albuquerque.[46]
  • On May 8, 1978 at 21:20 local time, Flight 193 went down in Escambia Bay near Pensacola, in {{convert|12|ft|abbr=on}} deep water. Of the 52 passengers aboard the Boeing 727 registered N4744, three lost their lives. The pilots had attempted to land the aircraft at Pensacola International Airport.[47]

Non-fatal

  • On September 13, 1945, a National Airlines Lockheed Lodestar (registered NC33349) overshot the runway at Peter O. Knight Airport near Tampa in rainy weather and came to a rest in the water of Hillsborough Bay. There were eleven passengers and three crew members on board the scheduled flight from Miami.[48]
  • On October 11, 1945, another Lodestar (NC15555) was involved in a hull-loss accident. The pilots of Flight 23 from Jacksonville to Miami with 14 passengers aboard experienced an engine fire and attempted an emergency landing at Melbourne Airport. The approach was missed, but the pilots did not manage to pull the aircraft up, so it impacted the ground.[49]
  • On October 2, 1950, a cargo-configured Curtiss C-46 Commando (registered N1661M) was substantially damaged in a belly landing at Washington National Airport.[50]
  • On January 10, 1955 at 09:38, Flight 1 with ten passengers and three crew veered off the runway during a takeoff attempt at St. Petersburg-Clearwater Airport. The copilot had lost control of the Lockheed Lodestar (registered N33369) that had been bound for Sarasota.[51]
  • On November 15, 1961 at 17:10, National Airlines Flight 429 (a DC-6 registered N8228H) collided with Northeast Airlines Flight 120 (a Vickers Viscount) on the ground at Logan International Airport in Boston. The pilots of the National aircraft with 25 passengers aboard had commenced with the takeoff run without having been cleared to do so, hitting the landing Northeast plane.[52]

Hijackings

Between 1961 and 1980, 22 (attempted) hijackings on board National Airlines occurred, which involved the aircraft being demanded to be flown to Cuba. In 1969 alone, there were nine such occurrences.[53] These events can be partly attributed to the tense Cuba–United States relations at that time, and the many flights of National Airlines in and to the southeastern United States, near Cuba. See List of Cuba – United States aircraft hijackings for more information.

There were several other criminal acts involving National Airlines aircraft:

  • On March 8, 1971, a hijacker on board Flight 745, a Boeing 727 with 46 occupants en route from Mobile to New Orleans, demanded the aircraft be flown to Canada instead.[54]
  • On July 12, 1972, Michael Stanley Green and Ethiopian national Lulseged Tesfa hijacked National Airlines Flight 496 (a Boeing 727) while en route to New York from Philadelphia.[55]
  • On March 30, 1974, following a hostage taking in Sarasota, the perpetrator tried to hijack a parked National Airlines 727 at Sarasota-Brandenton Airport, but was prevented from doing so by a flight engineer.[56] A similar hijacking attempt happened on January 3, 1975 at Pensacola Airport.[57]

References

1. ^{{cite book |last1=Klee |first1=Ulrich |last2=Bucher |year=1979 |title=JP Airline-Fleets International |edition=79 |location=Switzerland |publisher=Editions JP |isbn=3857581131}}
2. ^Information about National Airlines at the Aero Transport Data Bank
3. ^{{cite news |url= http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F20714F839591B728DDDA80894DA405B808BF1D3 |title= Walkout by 3,500 Cancels All Flights of National Airlines |work= The New York Times |date= February 1, 1970 |page= 58 |access-date= September 24, 2009 |quote= Pickets marched at National's headquarters at Miami International Airport.}}
4. ^National Airlines 1964 timetable, at timetableimages.com
5. ^Image collection of National Airlines timetables, at timetableimages.com
6. ^1937 National Airlines timetable, at timetableimages.com
7. ^10 1962 National Airlines timetable, at timetableimages.com
8. ^10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 National Airlines history, at Nationalsundowners.com, the Organization of Former Stewardesses and Flight Attendants with the Original National Airlines.
9. ^Photos of National Airlines timetables and route maps, at airtimes.com
10. ^NAL: The 1930s, at Nationalsundowners.com, the Organization of Former Stewardesses and Flight Attendants with the Original National Airlines.
11. ^National Airlines 1938 timetable, at timetableimages.com
12. ^American Aviation September 1, 1946 p19
13. ^NAL: The 1940s, at Nationalsundowners.com, the Organization of Former Stewardesses and Flight Attendants with the Original National Airlines.
14. ^Airline to the playgrounds of the world. The Boeing Magazine, January 1964 page 3, page 4, page 5
15. ^National Airlines 1947 timetable, at timetableimages.com
16. ^National Airlines 1952 timetable, at timetableimages.com
17. ^National Airlines 1954 timetable, at timetableimages.com
18. ^National Airlines 1958 timetable, at timetableimages.com
19. ^Image of National Airlines 1959 advert, at airtimes.com
20. ^March 2, 1962 National Airlines system timetable
21. ^March 2, 1962 National Airlines system timetable
22. ^{{cite web|title=Lewis Maytag Jr., Heir And National Airlines Chief|url=http://articles.sun-sentinel.com/1990-09-26/news/9002160111_1_national-airlines-maytag-aircraft-corp-mr-maytag|accessdate=August 22, 2014}}
23. ^July 15, 1969 National Airlines system timetable, Miami-New York and Miami-Los Angeles flight schedules{{dead link|date=February 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}
24. ^Handbook of Airline Statistics (biannual CAB publication)
25. ^Information about the Sundrome by its architects, Pei Cobb Freed & Partners {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061022000531/http://www.pcfandp.com/a/p/6223/s.html |date=October 22, 2006 }}
26. ^NOW criticism of the National Airlines "Fly Me" campaign
27. ^{{cite news |work= The New York Times |url= https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9D06E0DA123EF93BA35752C0A9659C8B63 |title= F. William Free, 74, Ad Man Behind 'Fly Me' |date= January 8, 2003 |first= Stuart |last= Lavietes}}
28. ^http://www.timetableimages.com, May 1, 1973 National Airlines system timetable front cover
29. ^February 1, 1976 Official Airline Guide (OAG), National Airlines flight schedules for EWR, IAH, JFK, LAS, LAX, LGA, MIA, MSY, MCO, PBI, SAN, SFO and TPA.
30. ^https://www.nytimes.com/1975/12/29/archives/national-airlines-shutdown-is-nearing-four-months-national-airlines.html
31. ^{{cite book |first= Christian, J. |last= Scott |title= Bring Songs to the Sky: Recollections of Continental Airlines, 1970–1986 |publisher= Quadran Press |year= 1998}}
32. ^National Airlines 1967 timetable, at timetableimages.com
33. ^National Airlines 1941 timetable, at timetableimages.com
34. ^National Airlines 1978 routemap, at airtimes.com
35. ^National Airlines 1945 timetable, at timetableimages.com
36. ^National Airlines 1969 timetable, at timetableimages.com
37. ^National Airlines 1979 timetable and routemap, at departedflights.com
38. ^{{cite web|title=World Airline Directory|url=http://www.flightglobal.com/pdfarchive/view/1980/1980%20-%201950.html|publisher=Flight International|accessdate=November 8, 2011|date=July 26, 1980}}
39. ^{{cite book |last1=Roach |first1=John |last2= Eastwood |first2= Tony |title=Jet Airliner Production List |year=1992 |publisher=The Aviation Hobby Shop |location=West Drayton, England |pages= |isbn= 0-907178-43-X}}
40. ^National Airlines fleet list at planespotters.net
41. ^Accident report of National Airlines Flight 16 at the Aviation Safety Network>
42. ^Accident report of National Airlines Flight 83 at the Aviation Safety Network
43. ^{{cite news |title= Take Your Time |work= Time |url= http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,888882,00.html |date= January 22, 1951 |accessdate= January 24, 2008 }}
44. ^Accident report of National Airlines Flight 967 at the Aviation Safety Network
45. ^Accident report of National Airlines Flight 2511 at the Aviation Safety Network
46. ^Accident report of National Airlines Flight 27 at the Aviation Safety Network
47. ^Accident report of National Airlines Flight 193 at the Aviation Safety Network
48. ^September 1945 National Airlines accident at the Aviation Safety Network
49. ^Accident report of National Airlines Flight 23 at the Aviation Safety Network
50. ^1950 landing accident at the Aviation Safety Network
51. ^Accident report of National Airlines Flight 1 at the Aviation Safety Network
52. ^Accident report of National Airlines Flight 429 at the Aviation Safety Network
53. ^List of accidents and incidents involving National Airlines, at the Aviation Safety Network
54. ^Report of the hijacking of National Airlines Flight 745 at the Aviation Safety Network
55. ^40 years later: The day a 727 landed at Lake Jackson, at chron.com
56. ^Report of the 1974 National Airlines hijacking at the Aviation Safety Network
57. ^Report of the 1975 National Airlines hijacking at the Aviation Safety Network

Bibliography

{{Portal|Miami|Companies|Aviation}}{{commons category|National Airlines}}
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  • {{cite book |last= Davies |first= R.E.G |orig-year= 1972 |year= 1982 |title= Airlines of the United States Since 1914 |edition= Revised |publisher= Putnam |isbn= 0-370-30942-1 |ref= harv}}
  • {{cite book |last= Davies |first= R.E.G. |author-mask=———|others= Illustrated by Mike Machat |year= 1987 |title= Pan Am: An Airline and Its Aircraft |publisher= Orion |isbn= 0-517-56639-7 |ref= harv}}
  • {{cite book |last= Gandt |first= Robert L. |year= 1995 |title= Skygods: The Fall of Pan Am |location= New York |publisher= Morrow |isbn= 0-688-04615-0 |ref= harv}}
  • {{cite book |author= Pan American Historical Foundation |title= The Clipper Heritage: Pan American World Airways 1927-1991 |year= 2005 |publisher= Pan American Historical Foundation |ref= harv}}
  • {{cite book |title= Pan American World Airways Records |date= June 26, 1996 |publisher= Otto G. Richter Library, University of Miami Archives |ref= harv}}
{{Legacy carrier}}{{DEFAULTSORT:National Airlines (Na)}}

10 : Airlines established in 1934|Airlines disestablished in 1980|Pan Am|Companies based in Miami-Dade County, Florida|Defunct airlines of the United States|National Airlines|Defunct companies based in Florida|1980 mergers and acquisitions|1934 establishments in Florida|1980 disestablishments in Florida

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