Nordair

Nordair
IATA ICAO Callsign
ND NDR Nordair
Founded 1947
Ceased operations 1987
Fleet size 21+
Destinations Canada, United States
Headquarters Dorval, Quebec
Key people Fernand “Frank” Henley, Founder and VP Operations

Nordair (IATA: ND, ICAO: NDR, Call sign: Nordair) was a Quebec-based regional airline founded in 1947 from the merger of Boreal Airways and Mont Laurier Aviation.

History

The airline operated from the 1940s to the 1980s. Initially, most of its business was international and transatlantic passenger and freight charters and other contracts. It also operated scheduled flights to a number of destinations in the Northwest Territories. Nordair initially flew out of Montreal's two airports: Dorval Airport (now Montréal-Pierre Elliott Trudeau International Airport) and Montréal-Mirabel International Airport. It was headquartered in Montreal (operations at Dorval, Quebec and head office at 1320 Boulevard Graham in Mont Royal).[1]

Merger and aftermath

Lockheed L-1049H Super Constellation of Nordair at Manchester Airport England on a freight charter in 1966
Nordair DC-4 Inflight
Nordair Grumman G-73 Mallard at Montreal Dorval in 1973
Nordair Boeing 737 at the airline's base in Montreal.
Nordair McDonnell Douglas DC-8 at the operations base.

Nordair was purchased by Canadian Pacific Air Lines. On March 27, 1987, Pacific Western Airlines purchased Canadian Pacific Air Lines and emerged as Canadian Airlines, which was acquired by Air Canada in 2000. The jet operation was absorbed into Canadian Airlines, while the turboprop operations were absorbed into Inter-Canadien.

Another company called Nordair Quebec 2000 Incorporated operated in 2000 as a domestic regional carrier and cargo operator in Quebec, but the licence and licence applications for the airline were suspended in 2006 by Transport Canada and once again the Nordair name disappeared from the airline industry

Destinations

Some of the following destinations were flown by Nordair during the airline's existence, mostly in Canada:

Canada

Outside Canada

Many of the flights to the US and Europe were chartered flights, as Nordair had few scheduled flights outside of Canada.

Non-revenue

Nordair was contractor to the Canadian Forces (reconnaissance) and United States Air Force (flights to DEW stations from Alaska to Baffin Island.[2]

Fleet

Nordair aircraft types operated
Aircraft
Boeing 737-242 and 2Q8, 2H4, 212, 296, 2T4, 242C, 2Q9, 2E1
Convair 990-30A-5
C-46-1CU Commando
Douglas DC-6B
Douglas DC-3
Douglas DC-4
Douglas DC-8-52, 71
Fairchild FH-227D, 227B, 227E
Lockheed L-1049H-03 Super Constellation
Lockheed L-188C Electra
Douglas DC-8-61CF
BAC One-Eleven
Short SC.7 Skyvan
Total about 24 aircraft

Accidents and incidents

References

  1. World Airline Directory. Flight International. March 20, 1975. "495.
  2. http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:OTN8yb5Kb2sJ:www.flightglobal.com/pdfarchive/view/1986/1986%2520-%25200773.html+Nordair+Toronto+to+Orlando&cd=6&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=ca&client=firefox-a&source=www.google.ca Flight International 1986 - p113
  3. "CF-HTH Hull-loss description". Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved 26 August 2010.
  4. "C-FCSC Hull-loss description". Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved 21 August 2010.

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Nordair.
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