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Hawaiian Airlines. Hawaiian Airlines (Hawaiian: Hui Mokulele o Hawaiʻi [huwi mokulele o həˈʋɐjʔi]) [6][7] is a commercial U.S. airline, headquartered in Honolulu, Hawaii [8][9] and a subsidiary of Alaska Air Group. It is the largest operator of commercial flights to and from the island state of Hawaii, and the tenth largest commercial ...
Daniel K. Inouye International Airport[3] (IATA: HNL, ICAO: PHNL, FAA LID: HNL), also known as Honolulu International Airport, is the main and largest airport in Hawaii. [4] The airport is named after Honolulu native and Medal of Honor recipient Daniel Inouye, who represented Hawaii in the United States Senate from 1963 until his death in 2012.
KHON 2 News. December 8, 2020. Retrieved December 8, 2020. ^ "Hawaiian Airlines adds Boston service from April 2019". RoutesOnline. 16 September 2018. ^ "Hawaiian Airlines Begins Ticket Sales for Salt Lake City-Honolulu Flights, Nonstop Service Between Sacramento and Lihuʻe and Kona". Categories: Lists of airline destinations. Hawaiian Airlines.
The lead airline at the Boise Airport plans to acquire Honolulu-based Hawaiian Airlines, possibly paving the way for nonstop flights between the Treasure Valley and Hawaii’s capital. Alaska ...
Hawaiian Holdings' (HA) subsidiary, Hawaiian Airlines, is set to resume Honolulu-Auckland nonstop service in July after more than two years of suspension due to pandemic-led travel restrictions.
Meantime, in the summer of 1983 there were three airlines operating nonstop service on the interisland route between Hilo and Honolulu including Aloha Airlines with Boeing 737-200 jets, Hawaiian Airlines with McDonnell Douglas DC-9-50 jets and de Havilland Canada DHC-7 Dash 7 turboprops, and Mid Pacific Air with NAMC YS-11 turboprops with the ...
Honolulu remains another, and the chances of securing the nonstop flight to Hawaii’s capital may have just gone up with the completion of Alaska’s acquisition of Hawaiian Airlines.
Hawaiian Airlines is the only major airline serving Pago Pago International Airport. In 2004, with assistance from the American Samoan government to promote and bring additional air carriers to Pago Pago, Aloha Airlines opened a Honolulu / Pago Pago / Rarotonga route. However, the airline lasted 11 months and eventually pulled out of Pago Pago ...