Nations Air


Nations Air was a new start up airline in the United States that began operating in 1995 that was established as Miami Air Charter in 1987 and ceased operations in 1999. An airline based in Canada with a similar name, Nationair, operated during the late 1980s and early 1990s.

History

Nations Air began as a passenger airline with three Boeing 737-200 jetliners. Scheduled services were operated between Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, Boston, and Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. The airline quickly faced aggressive competition as well as safety questions that led the FAA to ground the airline briefly in July 1995.
The demise of scheduled service for Nations Air occurred after the Valujet crash in the Florida Everglades created a huge backlash against small start-up carriers and the perception that they were unsafe from a standpoint of maintenance and training. Nations Air's CEO Mark McDonald discontinued scheduled service and, instead, used his 737s to service Atlantic City and Gulfport/Biloxi hotel and casino markets.
Nations Air Express ceased operations on September 1, 1999.

Service in 1995

According to the December 1, 1995 Nations Air system timetable, scheduled service was being operated on a linear Boston -Philadelphia -Pittsburgh routing with several flights being operated each day although none of these flights was operated on daily basis. Fares were as low as $39 one way BOS-PHL and PHL-PIT.

Service in 1999

According to the June 1, 1999 Official Airline Guide, the airline was flying scheduled nonstop service between Gulfport, MS and Atlanta four times a week.

Fleet