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Trans-Texas Airways, also a local service airline, began service from Amarillo to Houston in 1963 with stops in Lubbock, Abilene, and Austin. Douglas DC-3, Convair 240, and Convair 600 aircraft were used.
These are the airports served by American Airlines' American Eagle brand, composed of six FAA and DOT certificated regional airlines. Three regional airlines, Envoy Air , PSA Airlines , and Piedmont Airlines , are wholly owned subsidiaries of American, but whose aircraft are in American Eagle livery. [ 1 ]
Texas International also flew direct, multi-stop DC-9s to Denver and Los Angeles and nonstop Convair 600 turboprops to Houston in addition to its DC-9 service on the route. By 1979, Texas International was flying McDonnell Douglas DC-9-30s and DC-9-10s and all airline flights from Mueller were operated with mainline jets. [12]
The flights will operate daily starting on Nov. 17 and initially be available through Nov. 29. American Airlines adding seasonal flights between Palm Springs and Austin Skip to main content
Amarillo: AMA: AMA KAMA Rick Husband Amarillo International Airport: P-N 303,904 Austin: AUS: AUS KAUS Austin–Bergstrom International Airport: P-L 6,666,215 Beaumont: BPT: BPT KBPT Jack Brooks Regional Airport (was Southeast Texas Regional) P-N 21,914 Brownsville: BRO: BRO KBRO Brownsville/South Padre Island International Airport: P-N 167,957 ...
Airline firms with certificated air carriers, headquartered, directed and operated from Texas. The following is a list of individual passenger, charter, and cargo airlines - U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) United States Department of Transportation (DOT) Certificated airlines, their parent company firms, consortium firms, private equity firms, or other business operating schemes ...
Conquest Airlines was an American regional airline initially headquartered in Jefferson County, Texas, and later headquartered in Austin, Texas. Conquest operated primarily on routes within Texas from its hub in Austin (at the now closed Robert Mueller Municipal Airport ).
Trans-Texas Airways became Texas International in 1969 and began jet service with DC-9's on a Denver-Amarillo-Lubbock-Austin-Houston route. [11] By 1976 all scheduled passenger airline flights at Lubbock were jets: Braniff Boeing 727-100s and Boeing 727-200s, Continental 727-200s and Texas International Airlines Douglas DC-9-10s. [12]