- Air Anglia
Air Anglia was a wholly privately owned, Independent regional British airline formed in 1970. It was based at Norwich Airport. Created as a result of a merger of three smaller operators, the new
entity became an important regional scheduled carrier during the 1970s, serving the Eastern half of Britain. In 1980 Air Anglia merged with three regional rivals to formAir UK .History
Air Anglia was the result of a three-way
merger in 1970 between Anglian Air Charter, Norfolk Airways and Rig Air, three localair taxi operators based in the East ofEngland . The new airline established its corporate headquarters as well as its main operational and engineering base atNorwich inEast Anglia . At the time of formationNorwich Union became its controlling shareholder.Air Anglia established itself as an important regional scheduled operator as well as one of the main
fixed wing operators supporting theNorth Sea oil and gas industry during the 1970s.In 1980 Air Anglia merged with British Island Airways (BIA), Air Wales and Air Westward to form Air UK, at the time the UK's biggest
regional airline and its third-largest scheduled operator.Aircraft operated
Air Anglia operated the following aircraft types at one point or another during its ten-year existence:
* Britten-Norman BN-2A Islander
*Cessna 404
* Douglas DC-3
* Fokker F-27 Friendship 100/200 series
* Fokker F-28 Fellowship 1000/4000 series
* Piper PA-23 Aztec
* Piper PA-31 Navajo Chieftain
*Piper PA-30 Twin Comanche .Commercial developments
Air Anglia commenced operations with a small fleet of Douglas DC-3 "Dakota"
piston -engined airliners as well as a number of smaller, "executive" type of aircraft inherited from its predecessors. With these aircraft it mainly operated oil and gas industry support flights from Norwich andAberdeen as well asHumberside .In 1974 Air Anglia added a pair of Fokker F-27 "Friendship"
turboprop s to its fleet. The introduction of these turboprops into the airline's fleet coincided with the launch of the company's first year-round scheduled services from its Norwich base to Aberdeen via Humberside andTeesside as well as from Norwich toAmsterdam . The scheduled services between Norwich, Humberside, Teesside and Aberdeen allowed Air Anglia to commercially exploit the regular positioning flights it had been operating between these points since its inception. Oil and gas industry related business travellers constituted a high proportion of this traffic. The launch of Air Anglia's first international scheduled service to Amsterdam also led to the conclusion of a jointmarketing agreement with Dutch flag carrierKLM , at the time the biggest resident operator and dominant scheduled airline at Amsterdam'sSchiphol Airport. Under this agreement KLM agreed to host Air Anglia's new Norwich-Amsterdam scheduled service, as well as any subsequently launched scheduled services linking regional UK airports not served by the KLM group with Amsterdam Schiphol, in its reservations computer. This gave travel agents worldwide instant access to Air Anglia's connecting flights to/from Amsterdam via KLM's Global Distribution System (GDS), thereby enabling Air Anglia to improve its passenger loads on these services as well as helping KLM to boost its long-haul loads by delivering it additional transfer traffic from the UK regions to its Schiphol base.In addition to these year-round scheduled services, Air Anglia also operated seasonal, summer only scheduled services from Norwich, Humberside and Aberdeen to
Jersey . Air Anglia's seasonal Aberdeen-Jersey scheduled service was the longest non-stop scheduled operation utilising a turboprop in theBritish Isles at the time. (The F-27's scheduled flight time on that route was 2 hours and 45 minutes.)The addition of further Fokker "Friendship" turboprops to the airline's fleet over the coming years led to the introduction of year-round scheduled services from
Aberdeen ,Edinburgh , Humberside andLeeds /Bradford to Amsterdam, as well as from Edinburgh via Leeds to Paris Orly and from Aberdeen toStavanger andBergen .During the second half of the 1970s Air Anglia also added a pair of Piper PA-31 "Navajo Chieftain" executive aircraft to its fleet. One of these aircraft was used to launch a new, year round "cross-country" scheduled service linking the airline's Norwich base with
Newquay inSouthwest England viaBirmingham in the EnglishMidlands andSwansea inWales .In 1979 Air Anglia extended its domestic, year-round scheduled services to Stansted. 1979 also saw the introduction of the first
jet aircraft into Air Anglia's fleet, when the airline inaugurated daily, year-round scheduled jet operations between Aberdeen, Edinburgh and Amsterdam as well as between Edinburgh, Leeds andParis with a pair of brand-new Fokker F-28 "Fellowship" 4000 series aircraft.At the time of Air Anglia's merger with BIA, Air Wales and Air Westward to form Air UK in January 1980 its core fleet consisted of two Fokker F-28 "Fellowship" jets and ten Fokker F-27 "Friendship" turboprops. This core fleet was supplemented with additional turboprop capacity temporarily leased in from other operators such as British Midland during the annual summer peak travelling season, as well as during periods when its own fleet was undergoing maintenance.
Air Anglia hoped that the merger with BIA as well as Air Wales and Air Westward to form Air UK would help improve the merged entity's competitive position vis-à-vis its rivals by giving it a bigger network covering all parts of the UK, which would result from combining Air Anglia's year-round scheduled services linking important oil and gas industry centres in the Eastern half of Britain with BIA's scheduled operations across the Western half of the British Isles. This, in turn, would result in a significant marketing advantage over its rivals. Air Anglia also hoped that this would ultimately translate into a better financial performance as well by enabling the new airline to take advantage of the resulting greater
economies of scale , which would permit it to spread itsfixed costs over a greater level of activity. In addition, Air Anglia's amalgamation with BIA, a wholly ownedsubsidiary of British and Commonwealth (B&C), presented an opportunity for Norwich Union to sell its shareholding in Air Anglia to B&C.Incidents and accidents
There were no recorded accidents or incidents during Air Anglia's ten year existence from 1970 until 1980.
Code data
* IATA Code: AQ
* Callsign:Notes
References
* ("World Airline Directory", 1970-1980)
External links
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