Republic Airlines
Republic Airlines was a United States airline formed by the merger of North Central Airlines and Southern Airways on July 1, 1979. Their headquarters were at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport, in what is now Fort Snelling in unincorporated Hennepin County, Minnesota. The former headquarters is now Delta Air Lines Building C. Republic was acquired by and merged into Northwest Airlines in 1986.
History
Republic Airlines began in 1979 with the merger of North Central Airlines andSouthern Airways, the first under airline deregulation. The new airline's headquarters were at Minneapolis-Saint Paul International Airport, though their largest hub was at Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport. Following their buyout of Hughes Airwest in 1980, Republic became the largest airline in the U.S. by number of airports served.
The company operated the world's largest Douglas DC-9 fleet, with DC-9-10, DC-9-30 and DC-9-50s and also flew Boeing 727-200, Boeing 757-200, and McDonnell Douglas MD-80 jets. In addition, Republic operated Convair 580 turboprops previously flown by North Central.
After the merger, losses mounted and service reductions followed. Saddled with debt from two acquisitions and new aircraft, the airline struggled in the early 1980s, and even introduced a human mascot version of Herman the Duck. They reduced service to Phoenix, a former hub of Hughes Airwest, citing their inability to compete with non-union airlines there and eventually dismantled the former extensive route system operated by Hughes Airwest in the western U.S.
Republic Frequent Flyer Program
In October 1984 Republic introduced a new frequent flyer program called the Republic Frequent Flyer Program. The new program eliminated the need to place a frequent flyer account number sticker on each flight ticket coupon, with earned mileage automatically being assigned to accounts if the reservation was booked directly with Republic. Each flight segment earned a minimum of 1,000 miles or the actual mileage, if greater. A domestic round trip reward ticket was automatically issued every 20,000 miles. The new program included a partnership with Pan American World Airways for earning and redeeming mileage awards. In January 1986, Western Airlines was added as a partner. Effective October 1, 1986, the Republic Frequent Flyer Flyer was merged into the new Northwest Airlines WorldPerks program.Northwest Airlines
In 1986, Northwest Orient Airlines announced on January 23 that they would buy Republic for $884 million in response to United Airlines' purchase of the Pacific routes of Pan American World Airways and to provide domestic feed. Opposed by the Justice Department, the Northwest-Republic merger was approved by the Transportation Department on July 31 and was completed on October 1, with Northwest dropping the word Orient from their name after the merger. Republic's hubs at Minneapolis, Memphis, and Detroit became the backbone of Northwest's domestic network.Northwest later merged with Delta Air Lines in 2008; the deal was finalized in January 2010, with Delta as the surviving air carrier. Republic's hubs in Detroit and the Twin Cities have remained intact with Delta; Memphis was dehubbed in 2013.
Fleet
- 133 Douglas DC-9-14; Douglas DC-9-15; McDonnell Douglas DC-9-31; McDonnell Douglas DC-9-32; McDonnell Douglas DC-9-51
- 22 Boeing 727-2M7; Boeing 727-2S7; Boeing 727-277
- 8 McDonnell Douglas MD-82
- 6 Boeing 757-2S7
- 24 Convair CV-580 turboprop aircraft
Destinations in 1986
Domestic
Alabama- Birmingham
- Huntsville/Decatur
- Mobile
- Montgomery
- Phoenix
- Tucson
- Little Rock
- Los Angeles — Los Angeles International Airport
- Orange County
- Sacramento
- San Diego
- San Francisco — San Francisco International Airport '
- Denver — Stapleton International Airport
- Hartford — Bradley International Airport
- Fort Lauderdale
- Fort Walton Beach
- Miami
- Orlando
- Atlanta — Hartsfield–Jackson Atlanta International Airport '
- Chicago — O'Hare International Airport
- Fort Wayne
- Indianapolis
- South Bend
- Cedar Rapids
- Des Moines
- Wichita — Wichita Dwight D. Eisenhower National Airport
- Louisville
- Baton Rouge
- New Orleans '
- Shreveport
- Baltimore
- Boston — Logan International Airport
- Detroit — Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport - Hub
- Grand Rapids
- Kalamazoo
- Lansing
- Saginaw
- Duluth
- Hibbing
- International Falls
- Minneapolis — Minneapolis–Saint Paul International Airport - Hub & airline headquarters
- Rochester
- Gulfport/Biloxi
- Meridian
- Pascagoula - served via Mobile, AL
- Kansas City
- Saint Louis
- Omaha
- Las Vegas — McCarran International Airport
- Albany
- Buffalo
- New York City — John F. Kennedy International Airport / LaGuardia Airport
- Rochester
- Syracuse
- White Plains
- Bismarck
- Fargo
- Grand Forks
- Minot
- Akron/Canton
- Cincinnati — Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport
- Cleveland — Cleveland Hopkins International Airport
- Columbus
- Dayton
- Oklahoma City
- Tulsa
- Portland
- Erie
- Philadelphia
- Pittsburgh
- Rapid City
- Sioux Falls
- Chattanooga
- Knoxville
- Memphis — Memphis International Airport - Hub
- Nashville
- Dallas — Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport
- Houston — William P. Hobby Airport / George Bush Intercontinental Airport
- Salt Lake City — Salt Lake City International Airport '
Washington state
- Seattle — Seattle–Tacoma International Airport
- Appleton
- Eau Claire
- Green Bay
- La Crosse
- Madison
- Milwaukee
- Wausau
International
- Calgary, Alberta — Calgary International Airport
- Edmonton, Alberta — Edmonton International Airport
- Montreal, Quebec — Montreal–Pierre Elliott Trudeau International Airport
- Toronto, Ontario — Toronto Pearson International Airport
- Winnipeg, Manitoba — Winnipeg James Armstrong Richardson International Airport
- Grand Cayman
- Cancun
- Puerto Vallarta
- Mazatlan
- Guadalajara
Incident