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  2. FlightAware - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FlightAware

    On March 17, 2004, FlightAware was officially founded and began processing live flight data. [4] It earned over one million dollars in revenue in its first 18 months. [ 5 ] FlightAware has been profitable since 2006 and is growing at the rate of 40–50% per year, as of April 2014. [ 6 ]

  3. Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ronald_Reagan_Washington...

    The April 1957 Official Airline Guide shows 316 weekday departures: 95 Eastern (plus six per week to/from South America), 77 American, 61 Capital, 23 National, 17 TWA, 10 United, 10 Delta, 6 Allegheny, 6 Braniff, 5 Piedmont, 3 Northeast and 3 Northwest. Jet flights began in April 1966 (727-200s were not allowed until 1970). [20]

  4. American Airlines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Airlines

    American Airlines ordered 25 DC-10s in its first order. [16] [17] The DC-10 made its first flight on August 29, 1970, [18] and received its type certificate from the FAA on July 29, 1971. [19] On August 5, 1971, the DC-10 entered commercial service with American Airlines on a round-trip flight between Los Angeles and Chicago. [20]

  5. Dallas Fort Worth International Airport - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dallas_Fort_Worth...

    The first flight to land was American Airlines Flight 341 from New York, which had stopped in Memphis and Little Rock. [21] The surrounding cities began to annex the airport property into their city limits shortly after the airport was developed. [7] The name change to Dallas/Fort Worth International did not occur until 1985.

  6. US Airways - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/US_Airways

    On that date, US Airways made its final flight: Flight 1939 (originally named Flight 434, changed for the year the airline was founded), using an Airbus A321 registered N152UW, [91] [92] and would take off as US Airways Flight 1939 and land as American Airlines Flight 1939.

  7. Philadelphia International Airport - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philadelphia_International...

    The status of Philadelphia as an international gateway and major hub for American Airlines and the growth of Southwest Airlines and other low-cost carriers have increased passenger traffic to record levels in the mid-2000s; in 2004 28,507,420 passengers flew through Philadelphia, up 15.5% over 2003. [23]

  8. Minneapolis–Saint Paul International Airport - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minneapolis–Saint_Paul...

    On March 7, 1950, Northwest Orient Airlines Flight 307, a Martin 2-0-2 diverted from Rochester International Airport crashed 5 km northwest of MSP after first hitting a 70 foot high flagpole with its left wing on final approach, 8/10 of a mile from the touchdown point, in blinding snow. The left wing eventually detached and the aircraft dived ...

  9. American Airlines Flight 1 (1941) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Airlines_Flight_1...

    American Airlines Flight 1, [a] dubbed "the New Yorker", [3] was a regularly scheduled passenger flight. On October 30, 1941, when the route was a multiple stop flight from La Guardia Airport to Chicago Municipal Airport with intermediate stops at Newark, New Jersey; Buffalo, New York; Detroit, Michigan; and South Bend, Indiana, on the flight's leg between Buffalo and Detroit, the American ...