AB Aerotransport

AB Aerotransport (ABA) was a Swedish government-owned airline which operated during the first half of the 20th Century and was merged into what would become the SAS Group. ABA was established on 27 March 1924 under the name Aktiebolaget Aerotransport by Carl and Adrian Florman together with Ernst Linder, John Björk och Johan Nilsson.[1] Its first flight was on 2 June 1924 between Stockholm, Sweden and Helsinki, Finland.[2][3] Needing more funds, it became government-owned in 1935.[1] ABA was merged with Swedish Intercontinental Airlines (SILA) in 1948 and airline operations would ultimately be merged into the international SAS Group in 1950.

AB Aerotransport
FoundedMarch 27, 1924 (1924-03-27)
Commenced operationsJune 2, 1924 (1924-06-02)
Ceased operationsOctober 1, 1950 (1950-10-01)
Advertisement of 1937

History

In 1925 the company started a route between Stockholm and Berlin in co-operation with Lufthansa and a mail route connecting Stockholm with Malmö, Sweden, Amsterdam, Netherlands and London, England. Passenger service to Moscow, USSR was begun in the late 1930s.

During World War II ABA tried to maintain their network, but in 1941 the route to Moscow was closed, and the route to Berlin ceased in 1945. During the war ABA had a courier flight between Stockholm and Scotland. After the German occupation of Europe ABA started new routes to Paris, Oslo and Prestwick.

In June 1948, after a Swedish report, the government-owned ABA and privately owned SILA were merged on a 50-50 basis, to form a new airline named ABA. SILA had become the Swedish part of SAS in 1946, which at that time only a co-operation between DDL in Denmark and DNL in Norway. However, on October 1, 1950, representatives from the three airlines signed a consortium agreement where they appointed SAS to run the airline operations and the three national airlines only to be holding companies.

Fleet

ABA was the first airline with three-engine passenger aircraft when in 1925, ABA bought three Swedish Junkers G.24 from AB Flygindustri. During the following years ABA used and bought several different aircraft (e.g. Junkers F.33, F.34, G.23, G.24). For the longer routes a Fokker F.XII was used.

In 1937 ABA became the second European operator of the Douglas DC-3 after KLM. This opened opportunities to fly "longer flights" for example to Moscow. In 1939 ABA started to mark their aircraft with Swedish Air Lines.

Manufacturer[4] Model Quantity Introduced Retired
JunkersF.131019241938
JunkersG.24519251932
JunkersW 33219291931
JunkersJu 52819321948
FokkerF.XII119321946
NorthropDelta119341937
NorthropGamma119341936
FokkerF.VII119341942
FokkerF.XXII119351936
JunkersW 34219351940
DouglasDC-31019371948
JunkersJu 86119381940
BoeingB-17919441948
DouglasDC-4319461948

The aircraft used in the airline's first flight, a Junkers F.13 registered as S-AAAC and later as SE-AAC, is now on display at the National Museum of Science and Technology in Stockholm.

Accidents and incidents

August 31, 1932
An AB Aerotransport Junkers G.24me (SE-AAE, Svealand) crashed at Tubbergen, Netherlands while attempting a forced landing following engine failure, killing the two crew.
June 9, 1936
An AB Aerotransport Fokker F.XXII (SE-ABA, Lappland) crashed while attempting an emergency landing at Bulltofta Airport following triple engine failure, killing one of 13 on board.
August 27, 1943
An AB Aerotransport Douglas DC-3-268 (SE-BAF, Gladan) crashed 70 km (43 mi) off Hirtstals, Denmark, killing all seven on board; the aircraft was probably shot down by a German fighter.
October 22, 1943
An AB Aerotransport Douglas DC-3-268 (SE-BAG, Gripen) was shot down by a Luftwaffe Junkers Ju 88; the pilot attempted a forced landing at sea, but the aircraft struck cliffs of Hallo Island, killing 13 of 15 on board.
August 9, 1947
An AB Aerotransport Douglas DC-3F (SE-BAY) overran the runway on landing at Bulltofta Airport, killing one of five on board.
October 26, 1947
AB Aerotransport Flight 1629, a Douglas DC-4-1009 (SE-BBG, Sunnan), struck Mount Hymettus while on approach to Hassani Airport, killing all 44 on board.

See also

References

  1. Fälting, Lars. "Högtflygande planer i debatten om Arlanda 1946". Working papers in transport and communication history, 1104-6988 ; 1995:4. Research Group "Transports and Communications in Perspective", Depts. of Economic History, Umeå Univ. and Uppsala Univ.
  2. "ABA - AB Aerotransport - Swedish Air Lines - SILA - Swedish Intercontinental Airlines". www.timetableimages.com. Retrieved 2019-02-11.
  3. "AB Aerotransport". www.hugojunkers.bplaced.net. Retrieved 2019-02-11.
  4. "Fleet list of AB Aerotransport (1924 – 1945) | European Airlines". Retrieved 2019-02-11.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.