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America West Airlines

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Defunct airline of the United States (1981–2007)

America West Airlines
An America WestA319-100
IATAICAOCall sign
HPAWECACTUS
FoundedFebruary 1981; 44 years ago (1981-02)[1]
Commenced operationsAugust 1, 1983; 41 years ago (1983-08-01)[1]
Ceased operationsSeptember 25, 2007; 17 years ago (2007-09-25)
(merged intoUS Airways)
HubsPhoenix–Sky Harbor
Secondary hubs
Frequent-flyer programFlightFund
SubsidiariesAmerica West Express(1985–2007)
Parent company
HeadquartersTempe,Arizona,United States
Key people
Founders

America West Airlines was an airline in theUnited States that operated from 1981 until it merged withUS Airways in 2007. It was headquartered inTempe, Arizona. Its main hub was atPhoenix Sky Harbor International Airport, with secondary hubs atHarry Reid International Airport inLas Vegas,Nevada andJohn Glenn Columbus International Airport inColumbus, Ohio. The airline merged withUS Airways in 2005 and adopted US Airways as their brand name.[2] America West served about 100 cities in the US, Canada, and Mexico; flights to Europe were oncodeshare partners. In September 2005, the airline had 140 aircraft, with a single maintenance base atPhoenix Sky Harbor International Airport. Regional jet and turboprop flights were operated on acode sharing basis byMesa Airlines andChautauqua Airlines asAmerica West Express.

Beginning in January 2006, all America West flights were branded as US Airways, along with most signage at airports and other printed material, though many flights were described as "operated by America West." Apart from two heritage aircraft, the only remaining America West branding on aircraft were found on some seat covers and bulkheads. The merged airline used America West's "CACTUS"callsign and ICAO code "AWE", but retained theUS Airways name. As part of a merger betweenAmerican Airlines and US Airways in February 2013,[3] which led to American becoming the world's largest airline, the call sign and ICAO code name was later retired on April 8, 2015, when the FAA granted a single operating certificate for both US Airways and American Airlines.[4] The US Airways brand continued until October 17, 2015, when it merged with American Airlines.

History

[edit]
de Havilland Canada DHC-8 Dash 8 series 100 in 1991

The airline was established in February 1981 and began operations August 1, 1983, using three leasedBoeing 737s flying out of its base inPhoenix, Arizona (PHX), withEd Beauvais, a well-known airline industry consultant, as CEO.[5] In the early years, passengers could purchase their tickets on the aircraft.

The airline quickly expanded, with 11 737s flying to 13 cities; in 1984, America West's fleet grew to 21 aircraft flying to 23 cities. The June 1984 timetable shows 71 weekday departures from Phoenix, non-stop to 18 cities; from 1985 to 1986, it established a second hub at Las Vegas.[6]

Confident in its expansion, the increasingly-dominant carrier atPhoenix Sky Harbor influenced the development of Terminal 4. America West requested that the construction include an auxiliary power facility and an underground cavity to accommodate a future rail station, to which the airport ultimately agreed.[7]

America West was one of the first airlines to use extensive "cross-utilization", in which employees were trained in a variety of airline jobs, such as pilots trained in dispatch, and bothbaggage handlers andflight attendants trained as gate agents. America West started as a "full-service" airline, in contrast withSouthwest Airlines, a discount air carrier competing in many markets. America West used an aggressive employee stock-ownership program, in which new employees were required to invest 20% of their salary in company stock, providing a steady flow of cash as the company grew. America West pilots and other employees were paid wages far below those of competitors[8]

Revenue Passenger-Kilometers, in millions
YearTraffic
19842006
19853675
199017869
199521420
200030753
200539036
Source:Air Transport World
Former logo

By 1985 America West had outgrown their gate space atPhoenix Sky Harbor International Airport and during the construction of Terminal 4, approved in 1986, a temporary concourse was added to the southwest corner of Terminal 3 to give them six more gates (growing to eleven by 1990).

The airline's growth continued in 1986 and the airline expanded its fleet, mainly withBoeing 757-200s purchased fromNorthwest Airlines (following Northwest's acquisition ofRepublic Airlines) and a number ofde Havilland Canada DHC-8 Dash 8s. (Unusually, the Dash 8 flights were not code-shares and Mesa code-shares replaced them in 1992–93.) The airline startedred-eye flights from Las Vegas to improve aircraft utilization.

Boeing 747-200 atPhoenix Sky Harbor in 1991
Boeing 737-300 atAdelaide Airport,Australia in 1989, during theAustralian pilot's dispute

America West's rapid growth led to large losses and by 1986 the company was on the verge ofbankruptcy. Originally slated to occupy the vast majority of the gates in Terminal 4, the airline had to reduce their commitment to the city of Phoenix to just 28 gates, with the growing Southwest Airlines agreeing to lease the remainder of Terminal 4.

In June 1987Ansett Transport Industries purchased a 20% stake in America West, increasing it to 26% in April 1991.[9][10]

In 1988, Patrick Thurston, Vice-President of Operations, Bob Russell, Chief of Pilots, and Carl Wobser, a captain, all pleaded guilty to multiple counts of narcotics trafficking.[11]

Three America West Airlines aircraft operated services in Australia withAnsett Australia during the1989 Australian pilots' dispute.[10]

Boeing 737-112 atSan Jose International Airport in 1993

As they explored destinations beyond the United States, America West filed withDepartment of Transportation for a Phoenix toSydney route to connect withAnsett Airlines in Australia. The proposal was rejected and theReagan Administration awarded the route to another airline. In 1989, America West leased fourBoeing 747-200s (formerly operated byKLM) and began non-stop 747 flights between Phoenix andHonolulu, Hawaii, and non-stop between Honolulu andNagoya, Japan. The 747 was the only wide-body aircraft America West used for long-haul flights. The airline also expanded narrow-body jet service toMexican destinations.

In 1990, America West moved into the new Terminal 4 at Phoenix and took delivery of severalAirbus A320s originally destined for now-defunctBraniff Airways. Braniff had purchased the order rights fromPan Am, another troubled carrier, and the A320s were sold to America West at a steep discount. Annual revenue reached a billion dollars, the threshold for the Department of Transportation to categorize America West as amajor airline.[5] The July 1990 timetable shows 182 weekday departures from Phoenix non-stop to 46 airports and 132 departures from Las Vegas to 39 airports. (24 LAS departures were between midnight and 01:40.)

The airline continued to lose money: operating expenses at Terminal 4 were far higher than in the temporary Terminal 3 concourse; the Nagoya route carried almost no passengers; tensions before theGulf War caused fuel costs to rise. America West filed for bankruptcy in June 1991.

In June 1995,W. Douglas Parker joined America West as senior vice president and chief financial officer; he would be elected chairman, president and CEO in September 2001.[12] The airline was fined $2.5 million for maintenance violations in July 1998, and in August 2000 the FAA was reportedly prepared to ground the airline for these violations.[13][14]

Bankruptcy

[edit]
America WestBoeing 737-300 andAmerica West ExpressBeechcraft 1900D at Sky Harbor (1995)

America West operated under bankruptcy from 1991 to 1994; as part of the restructuring, employee stock became worthless, the airline's 747s and Dash8s were sold and the fleet was pared down to 87 aircraft. Hawaii and Nagoya routes were scrapped and America West feeder service to smaller cities and local markets was contracted toMesa Airlines, which began flying turboprops and regional jets asAmerica West Express.

On the management side, FounderEd Beauvais was removed as CEO, remaining on the board of directors, and was replaced with Mike Conway, who had been with the airline since the start. Conway left the airline in 1994, replaced as CEO by A. Maurice Myers.

America West's flight attendants unionized in 1993, ending cross-utilization betweencustomer service agents, flight attendants and ground agents. Several maintenance and training functions previously operated in-house by America West were outsourced during the bankruptcy.

Reorganization

[edit]
America West AirlinesAirbus A319 departingPortland International Airport

In 1994, America West was finally able to secure a reorganization allowing it to come out of bankruptcy, with a large portion of the airline owned by a partnership includingMesa Airlines andContinental Airlines, resulting incode sharing agreements with these airlines.

To help reinvigorate the airline as they emerged from bankruptcy, a number of changes occurred, including a new color scheme and logo (used until the merger with US Airways), newlivery,E-tickets, and online ticket purchasing in 1996. The airline continued ordering Airbus A320s and began gradually retiring their olderBoeing 737-200s.

In 1993, America West opened a hub atPort Columbus International Airport inColumbus, Ohio, usingChautauqua Airlines andMesa Airlines to provide commuter and regional flights viacode sharing agreements in addition to mainline jets. AnAmerica West Club was at the hub in an area previously used for aTWA Ambassadors' Club.

In late 2001, America West was the first airline to apply for and receive a loan from theAir Transportation Stabilization Board.[15] As of April 2005, the remaining balance on the loan was $300 million. The ATSB loan and its guarantees were paid back by US Airways and the debt refinanced by other lenders during the merger.[16]

On May 1, 2002, America West ended its partnership with Continental Airlines, citing low code-shared flight sales.[citation needed]

In 2003, America West Airlines closed its Port Columbus hub, reducing scheduled daily flights from almost 50 to 4.[citation needed]

US Airways

[edit]
Main article:America West merger with US Airways
AnAirbus A320 in the 2005-2015 America West /US Airways livery atSan Diego International Airport
A traveler boards anAmerica West ExpressCRJ-200 regional jet operated byMesa Airlines

In the second quarter of 2005, America West entered merger negotiations with then-bankrupt US Airways. It was structured as a purchase of US Airways byAmerica West Holdings; however, the internal structure was areverse merger, with legacy US Airways operations taken over by those of America West.

As the holding companies merged, brand conversion began. The America West Club was renamed the US Airways Club in October 2005. All-new America West aircraft were delivered in thenew US Airways livery, and older aircraft repainted (while retaining America West interiors). Gates and ticket counters were consolidated at airports where both airlines had operated, aided by the March 2007 transfer of all US Airways reservations to the Shares computer system used by America West (US Airways had previously used a very differentSabre system).

All express flights were branded as US Airways Express and aircraft were no longer confined to operations out of their pre-merger hubs (America West aircraft could fly from Philadelphia to cities other than Phoenix and Las Vegas, for example). The two airlines' operating certificates were merged on September 25, 2007. After initially using the "CACTUS" callsign for the west fleet and "USAIR" for the east fleet, all aircraft began flying under a single "CACTUS" callsign and ICAO code "AWE" in September 2008. Meanwhile, US Airways abandoned Las Vegas as its hub. Former America West aircraft were distinguished apart from US Airways pre-merger aircraft by their use of registrations ending in "-AW", while pre-merger US Airways aircraft used registrations ending in "-US". US Airways would later merge withAmerican Airlines in 2013, with the former America West callsign and ICAO code retired in 2015 (alongside with the US Airways brand). America West's Phoenix hub has remained intact with American Airlines.

Fleet

[edit]

Final fleet

[edit]
America West Airlines757-200 in 2006

As of September 27, 2005, at the time of the merger, America West Airlines' fleet consisted of the following aircraft:[citation needed]

America West Airlines fleet
AircraftIn
service
PassengersNotes
CYTotal
Airbus A319-1003412112124All were transferred toUS Airways and laterAmerican Airlines.
Airbus A320-2005712138140
Boeing 737-300368126134All were transferred toUS Airways and later retired in 2012.
Boeing 757-2001314176190All were transferred toUS Airways and later retired byAmerican Airlines in 2020.
Total140

Retired fleet

[edit]

America West Airlines previously operated the following aircraft:[citation needed]

America West Airlines retired fleet
AircraftTotalIntroducedRetiredNotes
Boeing 737-100519841999
Boeing 737-2006219832005
Boeing 747-200B419891994
de Havilland Canada Dash 8-1001219871993Transferred toMesa Airlines.

America West Express aircraft

[edit]
Main article:America West Express § Fleet

America West Express services primarily operated byMesa Airlines via acode sharing agreement with America West utilized the following regional jet and turboprop aircraft.

Cancelled and planned orders

[edit]

In 1991, America West had plans for purchasing 4Boeing 747-400 aircraft to replace the aging747-200s in Honolulu service, but an order of 10 furtherBoeing 757-200s was also mentioned.[17] Furthermore, it was in the plans to purchase 15Airbus A318s in the late 1990s aside with their new orders of A320s at the time but this never came to fruition.[18] America West had also planned on announcing an order of 60 aircraft on September 12, 2001, but this was quickly retracted after theSeptember 11th attacks.[19]

FlightFund

[edit]

The airline had afrequent flyer program calledFlightFund.[20] In 2006, FlightFund was merged into the US AirwaysDividend Miles program, which in turn merged into the American AirlinesAAdvantage program in 2015.

Destinations

[edit]

The following is a list airports that America West Airlines flew to as of September 24, 2007 (at the time of merger withUS Airways).

CountryCityAirportNotesRefs
Canada (Alberta)CalgaryCalgary International Airport
EdmontonEdmonton International Airport
Canada (British Columbia)VancouverVancouver International Airport
CranbrookCanadian Rockies International AirportCharter
Canada (Ontario)TorontoToronto Pearson International Airport
Costa RicaSan JoséJuan Santamaría International Airport
JapanNagoya[a]Nagoya AirfieldTerminated[21]
Mexico (Baja California)Los CabosLos Cabos International Airport
Mexico (Colima)ManzanilloPlaya de Oro International AirportSeasonal
Mexico (Federal District)Mexico CityMexico City International Airport
Mexico (Guerrero)AcapulcoAcapulco International Airport
Ixtapa/ZihuatanejoIxtapa-Zihuatanejo International AirportSeasonal
Mexico (Jalisco)GuadalajaraGuadalajara International Airport
Puerto VallartaLicenciado Gustavo Díaz Ordaz International Airport
Mexico (Nuevo León)MonterreyMonterrey International AirportTerminated
Mexico (Quintana Roo)CancúnCancún International Airport
Mexico (Sinaloa)MazatlánMazatlán International Airport
Mexico (Sonora)GuaymasGuaymas International Airport
HermosilloHermosillo International Airport
United States (Alaska)AnchorageTed Stevens Anchorage International Airport
United States (Arizona)Grand Canyon National ParkGrand Canyon National Park AirportTerminated
FlagstaffFlagstaff Pulliam AirportTerminated
PhoenixPhoenix Sky Harbor International AirportHub
TucsonTucson International Airport
YumaYuma International AirportTerminated
United States (California)BurbankHollywood Burbank Airport
CarlsbadMcClellan–Palomar Airport
FresnoFresno Yosemite International Airport
Long BeachLong Beach Airport
Los AngelesLos Angeles International Airport
OaklandOakland International Airport
OntarioOntario International Airport
Palm SpringsPalm Springs International Airport
PalmdalePalmdale Regional AirportTerminated
SacramentoSacramento International Airport
San DiegoSan Diego International Airport
San FranciscoSan Francisco International Airport
San JoseSan Jose Mineta International Airport
San Luis ObispoSan Luis Obispo County Regional Airport
Santa AnaJohn Wayne Airport
Santa BarbaraSanta Barbara Municipal Airport
United States (Colorado)Colorado SpringsColorado Springs Airport
DenverDenver International Airport
Stapleton International AirportAirport Closed
DurangoDurango-La Plata County Airport
Eagle/VailEagle County Regional AirportTerminated
Grand JunctionGrand Junction Regional Airport
Hayden/Steamboat SpringsYampa Valley AirportTerminated
MontroseMontrose Regional AirportTerminated
PuebloPueblo Memorial AirportTerminated
United States (Connecticut)HartfordBradley International Airport
United States (Florida)Fort LauderdaleFort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport
Fort MyersSouthwest Florida International AirportSeasonalTerminated
MiamiMiami International Airport
OrlandoOrlando International Airport
TampaTampa International Airport
West Palm BeachPalm Beach International Airport
United States (Georgia)AtlantaHartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport
United States (Hawaii)HonoluluDaniel K. Inouye International Airport
United States (Idaho)BoiseBoise Airport
Sun Valley[b]Friedman Memorial AirportTerminated
United States (Illinois)ChicagoMidway International AirportTerminated
O'Hare International Airport
MolineQuad Cities International AirportTerminated
United States (Indiana)IndianapolisIndianapolis International Airport
United States (Iowa)Cedar RapidsThe Eastern Iowa AirportTerminated
Des MoinesDes Moines International AirportTerminated
Sioux CitySioux Gateway AirportTerminated
United States (Kansas)WichitaWichita Dwight D. Eisenhower National AirportTerminated
United States (Louisiana)New Orleans[c]Louis Armstrong New Orleans International AirportTerminated
United States (Maryland)BaltimoreBaltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport
United States (Massachusetts)BostonLogan International Airport
United States (Michigan)DetroitDetroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport
United States (Minnesota)Minneapolis/Saint PaulMinneapolis-Saint Paul International Airport
United States (Missouri)Kansas CityKansas City International Airport
SpringfieldSpringfield–Branson National AirportTerminated
St. LouisSt. Louis Lambert International Airport
United States (Montana)KalispellGlacier Park International Airport
United States (Nebraska)LincolnLincoln Municipal AirportTerminated
OmahaEppley Airfield
United States (Nevada)Las VegasMcCarran International AirportHub
RenoReno–Tahoe International Airport
United States (New Jersey)NewarkNewark Liberty International Airport
United States (New Mexico)AlbuquerqueAlbuquerque International Sunport
United States (New York)New York CityJohn F. Kennedy International Airport
LaGuardia AirportTerminated
United States (North Carolina)Raleigh/DurhamRaleigh–Durham International Airport
United States (Ohio)ClevelandCleveland Hopkins International Airport
ColumbusJohn Glenn Columbus International AirportHub
United States (Oklahoma)Oklahoma CityWill Rogers World Airport
United States (Oregon)PortlandPortland International Airport
United States (Pennsylvania)PhiladelphiaPhiladelphia International Airport
PittsburghPittsburgh International Airport
United States (Tennessee)MemphisMemphis International Airport
United States (Texas)AustinAustin–Bergstrom International Airport
Dallas/Fort WorthDallas Fort Worth International Airport
El PasoEl Paso International Airport
HoustonGeorge Bush Intercontinental Airport
LubbockLubbock Preston Smith International AirportTerminated
Midland/OdessaMidland International Air and Space PortTerminated
San AntonioSan Antonio International Airport
United States (Utah)Salt Lake CitySalt Lake City International Airport
United States (Virginia)Washington, D.C. areaDulles International Airport
Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport
United States (Washington)Seattle/TacomaSeattle–Tacoma International Airport
SpokaneSpokane International Airport
United States (Wisconsin)MilwaukeeMilwaukee Mitchell International Airport

Codeshare agreements

[edit]

Throughout its existence, America West hadcodeshare agreements with the following airlines:

Headquarters

[edit]
The headquarters of America West Airlines inTempe, which also served as the headquarters for US Airways post-acquisition

America West had its headquarters inTempe, Arizona from the airline's start in 1983 and it retained the same location when it merged with US Airways and retained the US Airways name.[25] The airline used the nine-story[26] 225,000-square-foot (20,900 m2) building as its headquarters once America West and US Airways merged,[27] but the building has since been vacated when US Airways' management team took overAmerican Airlines in an acquisition. Jahna Berry of theArizona Business Gazette said in 2005 that the building "is one of the dominant buildings in downtown Tempe."[25] The City of Tempe gave America West $11 million in incentives and tax breaks so it could occupy the headquarters, which cost $37 million to construct.[28] The construction of the building began in January 1998; the groundbreaking ceremony was held on February 19 of that year.[29] The previous America West headquarters were demolished.[30]

Other commercial interests

[edit]

America West had promotional partnerships with thePhoenix SunsNBA team, the 2001World Series championArizona Diamondbacksbaseball team, and theArizona CardinalsNFL team.

In 1992, America West paid $26 million for the 30-year naming rights of thePhoenix Suns' home court, which it namedAmerica West Arena. Since the merger with US Airways, the arena was calledUS Airways Center (not to be confused with theUSAir Arena inPrince George's County, Maryland, razed in 2002), until it was renamed to Talking Stick Resort arena.

Accidents and incidents

[edit]

America West had four in-flight incidents on its aircraft, but never had an accident resulting in a fatality. Two accidents resulted in hull losswrite-offs.

FlightDateAircraftLocationDescriptionsInjuries
America West Airlines Flight 450December 30, 1989737-200Tucson, ArizonaA fire in the wheel well burned through hydraulic conduit; consequently, during landing, braking was ineffective and the aircraft overran the end of the runway. After colliding with a concrete structure, the plane came to a stop. The aircraft was written off.NTSB probable cause10 minor
America West Airlines Flight 727January 16, 1990737-300Austin, TexasOn January 16, 1990, America West Flight 727 was hijacked en route to Las Vegas from Houston. The hijacker forced the pilot to land the aircraft in Austin, Texas, so it could be refueled and flown to Cuba. Austin police overpowered and arrested the hijacker.none
America West Airlines Flight 556July 1, 2002A319-100Miami, FloridaThe flight was halted byTransportation Security Administration and local police after a tip that the pilots appeared to be drunk. Sobriety tests showed that the pilots were legally intoxicated and they were eventually sentenced to prison for operating an aircraft while intoxicated.none
America West Flight Airlines 794August 28, 2002A320-231Phoenix, ArizonaThe pilot failed to maintain directional control during landing, causing the aircraft to veer off the side of the runway onto a dirt infield, where the nose gear strut collapsed. The aircraft was written off.NTSB brief1 serious, 9 minor

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^According to theUS Airways page, in 1991 as the United States entered theGulf War, thePrime Minister of Japan told the Japanese people not to fly on United States airlines, thus causing a drop in traffic. America West then ceased flyingBoeing 747 service the Nagoya-Honolulu route and sold the traffic rights toNorthwest Airlines.
  2. ^America West was the only airline ever to serve Sun Valley withBoeing 737 jet aircraft.
  3. ^Service was abruptly halted in the aftermath ofHurricane Katrina in August 2005 and the Phoenix-New Orleans route never resumed following the merger withUS Airways.

References

[edit]
  1. ^abNorwood, Tom; Wegg, John (2002).North American Airlines Handbook (3rd ed.). Sandpoint, Idaho: Airways International.ISBN 978-0965399388. RetrievedNovember 4, 2020.
  2. ^Alexander, Keith L. (May 20, 2005)."US Airways To Merge, Move Base To Arizona".The Washington Post. RetrievedNovember 4, 2020.
  3. ^Bartz, Diane; Jacobs, Karen (July 1, 2013)."State Attorneys General Join Probe Of American Airlines, U.S. Airways Merger".The Huffington Post. RetrievedJuly 1, 2013.
  4. ^Gilbertson, Dawn (April 10, 2015)."'Cactus' call sign fades into US Airways history".The Arizona Republic. Phoenix.
  5. ^ab"America West Holdings Corporation".Funding Universe. Archived fromthe original on October 6, 2008. RetrievedAugust 23, 2008.
  6. ^Timetable maps showing America West routes in 1983, 1984, and 1991
  7. ^Beauvais, Ed (2016).Up, Up And Away, From The Beginning to My Journey's End 1981-1992. Scottsdale, AZ: Ed Beauvais. p. 28.ISBN 978-0-692-45268-4.
  8. ^Pilot salary history, MIT Study
  9. ^Ansett gets 20pc of American airlineCanberra Times June 19, 1987, page 14.
  10. ^abThe Story of the Rise and Fall of Ansett 1936-2002. Fyshwick: Stewart Wilson Aerospace Publications. 2002. pp. 19, 21, 34, 37, 38.ISBN 978-1875671571.
  11. ^Quig, Brian Downing (September 1, 1991)."The Phoenix-Bangkok Heroin Connection".Monetary and Economic Review. Archived fromthe original on March 4, 2016. RetrievedDecember 20, 2015.
  12. ^Bounds, Jeff (July–August 2015)."How Doug Parker Has Transformed American Airlines".D Magazine.
  13. ^Wald, Matthew L. (July 15, 1998)."America West Airline Fined $2.5 Million for Violations".The New York Times. p. A16. RetrievedNovember 4, 2020.
  14. ^"FAA May Ground America West".ABC News. January 7, 2006.
  15. ^"Air Transportation Stabilization Board Conditionally Approves Application By America West" (Press release). Department of The Treasury. December 28, 2001. Archived fromthe original on September 8, 2008.
  16. ^US Air Uses Cash To Buy Back ATSB StockAviation Week October 2005.Archived March 13, 2017, at theWayback Machine
  17. ^"America West Reconsidering $1.5 Billion in Boeing Orders".AP NEWS. RetrievedMay 22, 2021.
  18. ^"America West to Sign For Up to 77 Airbus Aircraft Airline Joins Growing List of Customers for A318".www.defense-aerospace.com. Archived fromthe original on June 24, 2021. RetrievedJune 24, 2021.
  19. ^"History of America West".Archived from the original on September 1, 2018.
  20. ^"Welcome to FlightFund".America West Airlines. Archived from the original on October 22, 1996. RetrievedOctober 1, 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  21. ^"US Airways: A Heritage Story,"US Airways
  22. ^"British Airways ends code-share with America West".Cheapflights. September 9, 2005. Archived fromthe original on February 27, 2007.
  23. ^"Continental Ends Ticket Alliance With America West".The New York Times.Bloomberg News. March 28, 2002.
  24. ^"America West Airlines route map". October 23, 2020.
  25. ^abBerry, Jahna (June 2, 2005). "Tempe breathes a sigh on AmWest merger plan."Arizona Business Gazette. Retrieved March 1, 2010.
  26. ^"Phoenix mostly shrugs at prospect of Delta merger."Atlanta Journal-Constitution. November 19, 2006. A1. Retrieved on March 1, 2010. "More than 700 people work at US Airways' nine-story headquarters."
  27. ^"Article: Carey Diversified Finances America West Headquarters; $25 Million Non-Recourse Mortgage Secured by Recently Completed Facility.[dead link]"PR Newswire. July 27, 1999. Retrieved on March 1, 2010.
  28. ^"United-America West Deal Has Implications Across The West".Lodi News-Sentinel.Associated Press. January 22, 1999. p. 13. RetrievedNovember 4, 2020.
  29. ^"America West Completes Financing of New Corporate Headquarters[dead link]."PR Newswire. February 19, 1998. Retrieved on March 1, 2010.
  30. ^Lehman, William. "Part VII - America West."US Airways. Retrieved on February 18, 2010.

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