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Archive for the ‘History’


SkyTeam Celebrates Its 10th Anniversary

Today we are celebrating the 10th anniversary of the SkyTeam global airline alliance.  Executives of SkyTeam’s 13 member airlines, including Delta, are wrapping up a two-day meeting in New York to discuss future growth of the alliance and reflect on our past.

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Ten years ago, our alliance was a fledgling entity with only four founding members – AeroMexico, Air France, Delta and Korean Air.  Since then, SkyTeam membership has more than tripled and our flights and destinations have nearly doubled.  SkyTeam carriers today offer more than 13,000 daily flights to 898 destinations in 169 countries, up from 6,402 daily flights to 451 destinations in 98 countries at its inception.

At this week’s meeting alone, we chalked up a number of new growth milestones.  China Eastern has signed an agreement to formally begin the process of joining the alliance. Air Europa, TAROM and Kenya Airways became full SkyTeam members.  And, for the first time, Vietnam Airlines joined our meeting as a member.

We hope you’ll allow us to indulge a little as we look back at the first 10 years of the alliance in a video that was produced especially for today’s meeting in New York .   And we ask that you keep watching for more new developments in the years to come as we look for more ways to connect you to virtually any point on the globe.

Where have you traveled with SkyTeam? Tell us your favorite destinations @deltablog or post your comments here.

Charlie Pappas

Managing Director – Global Alliances

Flickr: San Diego Air & Space Photo Archives

Love nostalgic photos of old planes? Check out one of the largest online aviation image collections in the world now live on Flickr. The San Diego Air & Space Museum has opened its vast archives, and posted over 64,000 aviation photos for us to enjoy.

Doing a quick browse, I found a number of Delta images, like this one of a DC-3 in the snow, and some from our airline family, including a Northwest Airlines’ Lockheed Electra. I also saw some great factory photos of Convair 340s under construction and early Ryan mail plane operations.

The San Diego Air & Space Museum plans to have 100,000 images online by end of this year, including including foreign and domestic military and civilian aircraft, the Flying Tigers, the Ryan Aeronautical Archive and the entire Pacific Southwest Airline (PSA) archive. For more details, see the Museum’s press release.

Happy browsing!

Marie Force

Archives Manager

Celebrating 40 years of service at Raleigh-Durham

Original NC Route Map

When Delta began service on June 15, 1970, people came to the airport in their best Sunday clothes –men wore suits with ties and women donned their best dresses. The RDU operation was a two-bedroom house trailer parked on the ramp, complete with kitchen and laundry room. The station manager was Fred West and his office was the master bedroom.  We used the second bedroom for storage, and the living room for operations and load planning. Back then, load planning was done manually using large volumes of black binders and an adding machine. The trailer was always noisy with teletype machines clacking-out weather and ops information like flight plans – which had to be called-in or “filed” by the load planner – to support our six daily flights to Chicago’s O’Hare airport, Miami and Atlanta routes.

Our ticket counter – banished to the concourse area due to a lack of space in the terminal – was equipped with two high-tech IBM model 1977 “computers” that looked just like electric typewriters.  You typed in an entry and then stood back and waited for the typewriter to respond, always a mystery to passengers waiting for their tickets.  Ticket agents thumbed through thousands of pages in the OAG to look up flight schedules, and manually computed fares using a fares tariff.  There was no baggage conveyor; bags were slid down a short wood & aluminum shoot into the bag room.

There were no security checks, so ticket counter to gate took about 30 seconds. Customers presented their ticket, nicely packaged in a ticket jacket to the gate agent who used a rubber stamp and ink pad to imprint the flight number, date and city pair, and pulled “sticky tabs” from a seating chart, locking-in each customer’s assigned seat.  In 1970, not only was smoking allowed on airplanes there were no designated areas.

After a hard day’s work employees frequently gathered at the terminal’s “Dobbs House” restaurant where a cup of coffee and a slice of their famous strawberry pie was just the ticket.

Flash forward 40 years to today at RDU and Delta has a state-of-the-art operation, brand new ticket counter space with self-service kiosks for customers and an airport experience that rivals some of the best airports in America. Last December we even opened our newest Delta Sky Club with 4,000 square feet of space and provides members and their guests with complimentary Wi-Fi, beverages and snacks, personalized flight assistance, a full-service bar and satellite TV.

Congratulations RDU on a great, first 40 years…

Jim L.

1970 RDU ramp agent

80 Years Serving Atlanta!

This week marks 80 years of Delta service to Atlanta, our corporate home and largest operational hub. It all started with trial service on June 12, 1930. Five-passenger Travel Air planes flew one daily nonstop to and from Birmingham, Alabama. Regular service started June 18th.

If you took the Delta morning flight out of Atlanta in 1930, you could reach Birmingham in an hour and a half, and Ft. Worth, Texas, by mid afternoon. The fare to Birmingham cost $9.80 (half as much as railroad fare at the time). For more, check out this Atlanta Journal article describing the new service.

Delta headquarters moved to Atlanta in 1941, and we are the oldest continuous tenant at the Atlanta airport (since 1934). We’ve grown with this “transportation hub” city,  and over the years celebrated many firsts in service here:

  • Early pioneer of the hub-and-spoke air traffic system, starting in Atlanta.
  • First jet service in Atlanta (to New York on September 18, 1959).
  • First service to Europe from Atlanta in 1964, in interchange operations with Pan Am. (Pan Am crews flew the international segments).
  • First nonstop service from Atlanta to California (1961).
  • First nonstop trans-Atlantic service from Atlanta (to London-Gatwick in April 1978).
  • First airline in the world to board one million passengers in one city in one month (in Atlanta in August 1979).
  • First airline to board 2 million passengers in one city in one month (in Atlanta in 1997).
  • First commercial flight to land on the new fifth runway at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, hailed as “The Most Important Runway in America” when it opened (May 27, 2006).

Congratulations on 80 years of partnership!

Marie Force

Archives Manager

From the Delta Museum: DC-3 Ship 41 Restoration Photos

The Delta Museum marks 15 years of preserving and sharing Delta history this May 23.  To celebrate, we just launched a slide show of over 80 photos showing the amazing, 5-year restoration of Delta’s DC-3 Ship 41, from rusty freighter to 1940s passenger plane with modern flight capability.  Check out the slide show!



You can also view the photos on Flickr.

Marie Force

Archives Manager