Purdue Airlines Explained

Purdue University has a history of operating airlines directly or through affiliates, including:

Purdue Airlines was incidentally instrumental in the startup of Southwest Airlines.

History

Purdue's own non-profit airline

Airline:Purdue Aeronautics Corporation
Commenced:1953
Bases:Purdue Airport
Fleet Size:6
Parent:Purdue University
Headquarters:Lafayette, Indiana,
United States

Purdue Aeronautics Corporation was established in 1942 as an affiliate to Purdue University's Aviation Technology program. It was a non-profit corporation dedicated to aeronautical research and education with programs in aviation maintenance, avionics, and the training of professional pilots and aircraft technicians. From 1953, Purdue Aeronautics held charter air service authority from the Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB). The CAB was a now-defunct Federal agency that then tightly regulated almost all airline service in the United States. Purdue Aeronautics primarily provided interstate civilian charter services but in the 1960s also provided some military charters. Purdue Aeronautics operated from Purdue University Airport in Lafayette, Indiana, eventually with DC-3 and later DC-6 aircraft. In 1963 it generated over $1mm in annual revenue (over $10mm in 2024 dollars).[1] It was known for carrying college and professional sports teams.[2] This charter business existed until Purdue Aeronautics contributed its CAB certificate to Purdue Airlines in 1968, as discussed below. Purdue Aeronautics as a corporate entity appears to have been dissolved in 1974.[3]

Scheduled service

In 1949, Purdue Aeronautics was certificated by the CAB to offer scheduled service from Chicago to Lafayette for a three-year period, or until Turner Airlines, the airline that had already received certification for the route, was ready to operate.[4] The operation was to be staffed in part by Purdue University students, including some pilots. The application showed that Purdue at the time had a fleet of 21 aircraft, mainly single engine types, but including at least two twin engine aircraft, a Beech 18 and a Lockheed Electra. Purdue Aeronautics started service from Lafayette to Chicago on 23 November 1949 and operated the shuttle service until Turner Airlines started Lafayette-Chicago service on January 30, 1950.[5] [6] [7] Turner Airlines was a local service carrier that changed its name to Lake Central Airlines later in 1950. In 1968, Lake Central merged into Allegheny Airlines, the ancestor of US Airways, the major airline that purchased American Airlines in 2015.

Ownership of Mid-West Airlines

In November 1951, the CAB approved the purchase by Purdue Research Foundation (PRF), an affiliate of Purdue University, of another local service carrier, Des Moines, Iowa-based Mid-West Airlines.[8] Mid-West was one of the smallest of the CAB airlines, flying single-engine aircraft across Nebraska, South Dakota, Iowa and Minnesota. The CAB approved the purchase over the objections of Lake Central, United Airlines and Mid-Continent Airlines, the latter a trunk carrier that was later folded into Braniff Airways.

PRF planned to invest $1 million into the airline (over $11mm in 2024 dollars) to upgrade Mid-West to fly Douglas DC-3s, the aircraft then becoming prevalent among most local service carriers, and entered into an agreement to purchase 10 DC-3s from Eastern Air Lines. However, in April 1952, less than six months after allowing PRF to buy Mid-West, the CAB voted to decline to renew the certificate of the airline, forcing it to liquidate. The CAB cited two main reasons, economics the bigger of the two: the Federal government subsidized local service carriers and CAB projections showed Mid-West DC-3 service would be far more expensive to subsidize than any other local service carrier. A second reason was that upgraded Mid-West service would provide direct competition to United Airlines on some routes, which was held to be undesirable. The five member Board split 3-2 on the decision and the two members in the minority wrote lengthy dissenting opinions, detailing how, in their view, the PRF plan made sense and that there was ample reason to expect Mid-West's fortunes to recover. However, Mid-West's existing results were even worse than those of Florida Airways, a local service carrier whose certificate the CAB declined to renew in 1949.[9]

PRF's aircraft purchase contracts were contingent on receiving renewal of the Mid-West certificate. The Foundation said that by liquidating the carrier it would be able to easily recoup the money it had spent to acquire it.[10] Mid-West flew its last flight May 15, 1952.[11]

For-profit charter airline

Airline:Purdue Airlines
Bases:Purdue Airport
Fleet Size:3
Parent:Stephens Inc.
Purdue University
Headquarters:Lafayette, Indiana,
United States

In 1968, the CAB approved (including the required signature of President Lyndon B. Johnson) the formation of Purdue Airlines, a for-profit supplemental air carrier - the term the US government uses to denote charter operations. The airline was 80% controlled by Stephens, the Arkansas investment bank, which contributed $800,000, with Purdue Aeronautics Corporation contributing its operating certificate to the airline and retaining a 20% stake. Jackson T. Stephens was chairman of the board, Purdue president Frederick L. Hovde was also a member. At the time, Purdue Aeronautics (which remained a non-profit corporation wholly owned by the university) had four DC-3s and two DC-6 aircraft. Part of the justification was to give Purdue University students access to modern jet equipment, which Purdue Aeronautics could not otherwise afford.[12] Operations started May 1, 1968.[13] The airline's certification authorized it to offer charter services in the United States and Canada. In 1969, the airline took delivery of its first DC-9 aircraft, the first of three it ultimately flew.[14] Under an agreement between Purdue Airlines and the university, Purdue students continued to have the ability to gain technical experience at the airline.[15]

The airline was famous for operating and maintaining Playboy founder Hugh Hefner's private aircraft, also a DC-9, named "The Big Bunny" - painted black with the Playboy bunny logo on the tail, which was based at Purdue University Airport and available (though apparently rarely used) for charter use by the airline.[16] [17]

In early 1971, Stephens made the decision to shutter the airline by April 30. By then, continued investment into the airline by Stephens had reduced the university's stake in the airline to only 3%.[15] The timing was fortuitous for Southwest Airlines, which was working towards its first flight. Southwest hired the entire of the Purdue Airlines pilot corps, over 20 people, and certain other Purdue Airline employees, speeding Southwest's launch.[18] [19]

External links

Web site: The Friendly Skies: Alumnae fondly remember their time as student stewardesses during the golden age of flight. www.purduealumnus.org. 25 December 2017 . Purdue Alumnus Magazine. en. 19 June 2024.

Notes and References

  1. Civil Aeronautics Board Reports. 45. Supplemental Air Service Proceeding. 391–392. July–November 1966. 2027/osu.32437011658214.
  2. https://www.newspapers.com/image/106445779 Athletes At Purdue To Ride Jets In '69, Indianapolis Star, October 27, 1968
  3. https://www.newspapers.com/image/1046469084 Notice of intention to dissolve, Purdue Aeronautics Corporation, legal notice in Lafayette Journal and Courier, August 27, 1974
  4. Civil Aeronautics Board Reports. Purdue Aeronautics Corporation, Lafayette-Chicago Operation. 10. 552–563. January–November 1949. 2027/osu.32437011657588.
  5. https://www.newspapers.com/image/1045491621 Plane Service to Chicago Started, Lafayette Journal and Courier, November 23, 1949
  6. https://www.newspapers.com/image/262085185 Regular Plane Service Starts, Lafayette Journal and Courier, January 30, 1950
  7. https://www.newspapers.com/image/262085797 Purdue Suspends Shuttle Air Service, Lafayette Journal and Courier, February 1, 1950
  8. Civil Aeronautics Board Reports. Acquisition of Mid-West by Purdue Research Foundation. 14. 851–861. May–December 1951. 2027/osu.32437011658628.
  9. Civil Aeronautics Board Reports. Mid-West Certificate Renewal Case. 15. 424–462. January–June 1952. 2027/osu.32435022360598.
  10. https://www.newspapers.com/image/514458125 Purdue Air Line Venture Killed, South Bend Tribune, April 11, 1952
  11. https://www.newspapers.com/image/730820980 Last Flight of Midwest Airlines Left McCook At 12:30 Today, Red Willow County Reporter (Indianola, NE), May 15, 1952
  12. Civil Aeronautics Board Reports. Stephens Inc., Purdue Aeronautics Corporation and Purdue University. 48. 406–418. January–July 1968. 2027/osu.32435022360259.
  13. https://www.newspapers.com/image/1046022778 Purdue Airlines, Inc., Officially Operating, Lafayette Journal and Courier, May 4, 1968
  14. https://archives.lib.purdue.edu/agents/corporate_entities/219 Purdue Airlines: Historical Information
  15. https://www.newspapers.com/image/262882299/ Purdue Airlines To Terminate DC9 Jet Operation April 30, Lafayette Journal and Courier, March 23, 1971
  16. https://www.purdue.edu/newsroom/purduetoday/didyouknow/2013/Q3/did-you-know-the-purdue-airport.html Did You Know?: The Purdue Airport, Purdue Today, September 20, 2013
  17. https://www.playboy.com/big-bunny/learn-more-about-the-big-bunny-playboy-plane The Big Bunny Jet: Past and Present
  18. Dockrey . Christy E. . December 1996 . Southwest Airlines: A Texas Airline in an Era of Deregulation . Master of Arts . Texas Tech University . 68.
  19. Book: Muse, Lamar . Lamar Muse . 2002 . Southwest Passage . Eakin Press . 80–81. 1571687394.