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Pan Am: Around the world with the blue globe

  • December 02, 2021

It’s been three decades since Pan Am closed up shop. Its last flight, PA436, from Bridgetown, Barbados to Miami took place on December 4, 1991, ending the global aviation icon’s 64-year saga.

It’s a saga that is still remembered today all over the world, but especially in the once-divided city of Berlin, where the blue Pan Am globe on the tail of the airline’s Clipper aircraft was always seen as a symbol of hope and freedom during the Cold War.

“No other airline has influenced aviation nearly as much, and no other carrier understood it so well the importance of letting the public participate in these achievements,” said Berlin-based real estate developer Matthias Hühne, Pan Am expert and author of an extensive homage to the airline. “That’s how a myth formed: the freedom to be transported to almost any place on Earth within just a few hours.”

Thanks to its huge network reaching even remote corners of the globe, Pan Am was able to do just that; no other airline had the same reach.

Humble beginnings

It all started on October 19, 1927, with a short hop in a rented floatplane from Key West in Florida to Havana, Cuba. This was Pan Am’s first flight. By the time he retired in 1968, visionary entrepreneur and New Jersey native Juan Trippe had established Pan American World Airways, a unique aviation empire that, under Pan Am’s famous blue globe logo, brought the world together like no other venture had.

Trippe came up with his master plan in November 1935 when Pan Am’s Martin M 130 flying boat, the “China Clipper,” completed the first trans-Pacific air mail service between San Francisco and Manila. The four-engine flying boat covered the distance of roughly 8,000 miles (12,875 kilometers) in seven days, beating the fastest connection by ship at the time by more than two weeks.

Within two years, the first trans-Atlantic routes to Europe followed. London and Paris were the first destinations to be connected by flying boat to the new world. Within just 10 years, Pan Am had brought the continents significantly closer together.

Pan American World Airways welcomed umpteen famous people on board like these Wightman Cup tennis players flying to England

Postwar takeoff

Although privately owned, after World War II Pan Am became the de facto US national carrier in international aviation. In January 1946, Pan Am established the first trans-Atlantic flights using land-based aircraft. The scheduled DC-4 services from New York to Hurn near London took 17 hours and 40 minutes including stops. To Lisbon, it was just a little under 21 hours.

Since 1948, Pan Am’s predecessor, AOA, had been present in postwar Germany as the first international airline, long before 1955, when the Germans were permitted to operate their own air traffic again. The presence of the Americans was decisive in air traffic to West Berlin as the then divided city could only be served by allied carriers. Pan Am assumed that role from 1950.

Initially, four-engine DC-4s were deployed on the air corridors to six West German cities.

“It didn’t have a pressurized cabin. I often got sick,” recalled Jutta Cartsburg from Berlin, who was hired in 1958 as a Pan Am stewardess fresh from language school. “We mostly flew refugees at the time.”

Pan Am was the biggest international player and carried almost 2.6 million passengers in 1956. But Trippe wanted more. He wanted to make flying accessible to more people, not just the rich.

  • 5 decades of flying high: Boeing 747

    A wide-body wonder

    Though its maiden flight was on February 9, 1969, the Boeing 747 actually entered commercial service nearly a year later with a Pan Am flight from New York to London. This first flight was originally scheduled for the 21st, but was delayed due to mechanical problems. With a nearly seven-hour delay — and replacement plane — history was made when on January 22, 1970 the 747 took off at 1:52 a.m.

  • 5 decades of flying high: Boeing 747

    A fabulous interior

    The first Boeing “jumbo jet” had a list price of $23 million according to contemporary reports. It was a true American invention and was assembled just outside Seattle in Everett, Washington, had 11 doors and room for up to 362 passengers. But it was the amazing roomy interiors with high ceilings that captured the imagination of travelers from around the world and made it so special.

  • 5 decades of flying high: Boeing 747

    Glamour in the skies

    Within a month of its first flight, Pan Am added more flights connecting San Francisco, Los Angeles, Tokyo and Hong Kong. Soon other international airlines rolled out their own 747s. By June 1970, Boeing had orders for nearly 200 of the aircraft. The comfortable planes attracted the rich and famous. Here Gloria Swanson is seen in the 1974 disaster film “Airport 1975” also staring Charlton Heston.

  • 5 decades of flying high: Boeing 747

    Designing for the blue beyond

    At the time not everyone was sold on the idea. Many feared there was no market for such a large plane and that it would be impossible to sell so many tickets to fill all the seats. Others worried that airports were unfit to handle the increased number of passengers all at once; how could so much luggage be loaded and unloaded? Still Joseph Sutter, head of the 747 design team, stuck to his plans.

  • 5 decades of flying high: Boeing 747

    Powered by four turbofans

    To start the “second jet age” the new 747s needed to be big, but also powerful. Its four engines were not made by Boeing but by Pratt Whitney, a subsidiary of United Aircraft Corporation. They were the most powerful jet engines ever produced up until that time and generated an amazing 46,000 pounds of thrust to propel it 600 miles an hour — just what was needed for long transatlantic flights.

  • 5 decades of flying high: Boeing 747

    Is bigger always better?

    At first most airports were not prepared for such a massive jet, one that was well over twice the size of the Boeing 707. Runways needed to be lengthened and reinforced for the plane’s 350 tons. Others needed to invest millions in new, bigger check-in areas, more waiting room and baggage capacity. One consequence of bigger planes was the entrenchment of the hub-and-spoke model for airlines.

  • 5 decades of flying high: Boeing 747

    The most famous 747

    Air Force One, the American president’s wings, is the most famous 747 to ever take off. In reality two 747-200s, the aircraft is only called AFO when the president steps onboard. Delivered in 1990, the planes are specially equipped and can be used as a flying White House. Though their paintjob is instantly recognizable, they are soon to be replaced with new 747-8s at a cost of over $3 billion.

  • 5 decades of flying high: Boeing 747

    An icon through and through

    Over the years the plane has gone through updates. Gone are the bars and many of the other luxuries that once filled parts of the jet like grand pianos. Versions were lengthened and seats were reconfigured. The 747-400 can squeeze in 524 passengers. Still airlines looked elsewhere. In the US Delta was the last company to fly the passenger giants and even they retired the last one in December 2017.

  • 5 decades of flying high: Boeing 747

    A slow decline

    In other parts of the world, the 747 is still in commercial service. British Airways has the largest fleet in operation. Yet slowly but surely after years of setting passenger records, the original jumbo jet also known as the “Queen of the Skies,” has continued to fall out of favor compared with newer, more fuel efficient planes. In the last decade orders have been low even for cargo versions.

  • 5 decades of flying high: Boeing 747

    Pan Am lives on in Berlin

    In 2019, no new 747s were ordered at all, though seven were still delivered. In all, over 1,550 have been made in the past five decades. Nonetheless, the heyday of the second jet age and Pan Am’s double-deck glamour days is still alive at the Pan Am Lounge in Berlin. Still decorated in its classic 1970s style, today it’s a private club full of nostalgia and can be rented out as a party location.

    Author: Timothy Rooks


Jet age player

Trippe had an unbeatable instinct for technical innovations. In the mid-1950s, he decided the time was ripe for the start of the jet age. In October 1955, he put in simultaneous ordes for two competing plane models of the early jet era: 20 four-engine 707s from Boeing and 25 DC-8s from Douglas.

Trippe and the head of Boeing, William Allan, were close friends. Risky deals worth billions of dollars always came about like this: “You’ll build it, I’ll buy it.” Without the vision and financial strength of Pan Am, it’s likely aircraft manufacturing and air traffic would have developed at a slower pace.

On October 26, 1958, the jet era began with the inaugural flight of a Boeing 707 from New York to Paris. The jetliner became a roaring success. In the process, Pan Am became the most glamorous airline in the world.

In the 1960s, business was booming at Pan Am, with annual passenger growth of 15%. Trippe was ready for the next quantum leap. On April 13, 1966, in what was arguably his most visionary move, he ordered 25 Boeing 747s.

It was an aircraft of unmatched dimensions at the time. Designed to carry up to 490 passengers, it was later dubbed the “jumbo jet”. Again, this important step in aviation development  arguably wouldn’t have happened without the courage of Juan Trippe. His retirement was followed by many hectic management changes and ill-fated mergers.

Back in 1986, Pan American World Airways saw its last flight from Tokyo’s international airport

What goes up must come down?

From there, the downward spiral continued. The glamour on board became but a wistful memory. With the 747, however, Trippe’s objective to make flying affordable to the masses had been achieved.

During the 1980s, Pan Am’s financial situation became ever more dire. Then there was the Lockerbie bombing in 1988 in which 270 people died on a 747 and on the ground in Scotland. Flight bookings collapsed and on December 4, 1991, Pan Am filed for bankruptcy.

“There was this constant hope, but then always something new happened, and it is still a mystery for me how Pan Am could have gone under,” said Jo Haselby, a late Pam Am pilot who has remained in Berlin.

“Thirty years after its bankruptcy, the legacy of Pan Am endures,” Deborah Cattano Gaudiose, a board member of the Pan Am museum in New York, told DW. “It defined commercial aviation, and its influence is still evident today.”

Edited by: Kristie Pladson, Hardy Graupner

Article source: https://www.dw.com/en/pan-am-around-the-world-with-the-blue-globe/a-59944962?maca=en-rss-en-bus-2091-xml-atom

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