Seaboard World Airlines

Seaboard World Airlines
IATA ICAO Callsign
SB SEW SEABOARD
Founded September 16, 1946 (as Seaboard & Western Airlines)
Ceased operations October 1, 1980 (merged with Flying Tiger Line)
Focus cities
Fleet size 81 (Historically)
Headquarters New York City, New York
Key people
  • Arthur Norden (Founder)
  • Raymond Norden (Other Founder)
Seaboard Boeing 747-200F in 1977.

Seaboard World Airlines was an international all-cargo airline based in the United States. Its headquarters were on the grounds of John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York City.[1]

History

Seaboard World Airlines (ICAO Code: SEW; IATA Code: SB; Callsign: Seaboard) was founded on September 16, 1946, as Seaboard & Western Airlines. It initially operated Douglas DC-4 aircraft, followed by Lockheed Super Constellation airliners. It adopted the name Seaboard World Airlines in April 1961. Jet cargo service started in 1964 with the introduction of the Douglas DC-8.

Seaboard World Airlines DC-8 N868F taken in 1974.

The airline played a prominent role in the Vietnam War during the late 1960s, using Douglas DC-8-63 jets to connect McChord Air Force Base, Washington with Cam Ranh Bay, Vietnam, fairly close to the front lines with North Vietnam. In 1968, one of these flights operating as Seaboard World Airlines Flight 253A was forced to land in the Soviet Union with 214 American troops on board. On 30 April 1969, a Seaboard World Airlines DC-8 with 219 passengers and 13 crewmembers landed by mistake at Marble Mountain Air Facility, when it had actually been cleared to land at the nearby Da Nang Air Base.[2][3] After fuel and passengers were offloaded, the plane was towed to the north overrun and departed five hours after the landing incident.

Seaboard was the first airline to fly a 747 Freighter service from the UK to the USA.

The airline merged with Flying Tiger Line on October 1, 1980, resulting in the loss of its corporate identity.[4]

Fleet

Seaboard World Airlines fleet
Type Number
Douglas DC-4 14
Curtis C-46 Commando 2
Douglas DC-3 1
Canadair CL-44 8
Lockheed L-1049D "Super Constellation" 4
Lockheed L-1049G "Super Constellation" 1
Lockheed L-1049H "Super Constellation" 4
Douglas DC-8-54F 3
Douglas DC-8-55F 9
Douglas DC-8-63CF 6
Boeing 747-245F 4
Boeing 747-251F 4
Boeing 747-273C 1
Boeing 707-345C 2

References

External links

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