Fort Worth Airlines


Fort Worth Airlines was a low-fare airline headquartered at Meacham Field in Fort Worth, Texas, United States. It was founded and largely operated by former executives from recently-dissolved Texas-based Braniff International Airways. Flights between Fort Worth and three Texas cities commenced in December 1984 and additional Oklahoma and Texas destinations were added in 1985; however, the airline was unable to operate profitably, and it ceased operations and filed for bankruptcy in September of that year.

History

Fort Worth Airlines was founded by Thomas B. King, a former vice president of Braniff International. Fort Worth Airlines was the first federally certificated interstate carrier based at Meacham Field in more than 30 years. Local news reports remarked on the airline's strong ties to Braniff: two-thirds of the airline's executives came from Braniff, its office furniture was bought at Braniff's liquidation sale, and walls were decorated with original artwork by Alexander Calder, who had previously done design work for Braniff. The airline used turboprop-powered 56-seat NAMC YS-11 aircraft leased from Mid Pacific Air, claiming that larger jetliners could not support the frequency of flights that the carrier wanted to offer.
Flights to Austin, San Antonio, and William P. Hobby Airport in Houston began on 14 December 1984. In February 1985, Mid Pacific Air became one of the airlines' largest shareholders, and it was announced that Fort Worth flights to Houston Intercontinental Airport would begin in April. In June 1985, an interline ticketing arrangement with Continental Airlines was signed. Fort Worth Airlines began flights to Oklahoma City and Tulsa in August 1985 and announced that flights to Abilene, Texas would begin the following month.
On 22 September 1985, Fort Worth Airlines halted flights and filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, claiming that ticket revenues were not covering operating costs and that it had run out of cash. The carrier had unit costs 61 percent higher than Southwest Airlines, which offered comparable low-fare flights to the same destinations from nearby Dallas Love Field. The airline's board had forced Thomas King to resign as president and CEO nine days earlier due to the carrier's poor financial performance; he was replaced by Sheldon Srulevitch, who announced that most of the airline's 150 employees were being laid off immediately.

Destinations

Fort Worth Airlines served the following destinations during its existence: