Pan American Airways (1996–1998)

This article is about the airline of 1996-1998. For the airline of 1927-1991 known as Pan American Airways until 1950, see Pan American World Airways. For other airlines of the name, see Pan American Airways (disambiguation).
Pan American Airways
IATA ICAO Callsign
PN - Clipper
Commenced operations 1996
Ceased operations February 1998
Fleet size 1
Destinations See Destinations below
Parent company Pan Am Corporation
Headquarters Doral, Florida, United States
Key people Charles E. Cobb
Martin Shugrue

Pan American Airways (IATA: PN, ICAO: N/A, Call sign: N/A) was founded in 1996 after an investment group including Charles Cobb, the former Ambassador to Iceland, purchased the rights to the venerable Pan American brand after the original carrier declared bankruptcy. It was headquartered in an unincorporated area in Miami-Dade County (now a part of the City of Doral), near Miami.[1]

In September 1996, Pan Am II was started with an Airbus A300 named the Clipper Fair Wind. The goal was to provide low-cost, long-distance travel to major U.S. and Caribbean cities. The new airline was led by the last Vice Chairman and Chief Operations Officer of Pan Am, Martin Shugrue, who also helped in the creation of the WorldPass frequent flyer program and who served as President of Continental Airlines and later trustee of the Eastern Air Lines estate.

In September 1997, Pan Am Corporation, the airline operation's holding company, bought Carnival Air Lines. However, the rapid expansion and economic troubles of the two companies were too much for the new Pan Amit only survived for two years before declaring bankruptcy. Before Pan Am and Carnival could fully merge, the holding company and its two independently operated airlines, Pan Am and Carnival, filed bankruptcy and ceased scheduled flight operations in February 1998. The operating certificate used for the first reincarnated Pan Am was abandoned in favor of the acquired Carnival's operating certificate. Pan Am, now operating with the Carnival certificate, quickly resumed limited charter operations while new owner Guilford Transportation Industries acquired certain assets of the bankrupt companies after court approval. The company emerged from bankruptcy in June 1998 forming a third incarnation of Pan Am.

Destinations

In 1997, Pan American Airways flew to the following destinations:[2]

References

See also

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