Airflight
Former British charter and cargo airline From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Former British charter and cargo airline From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Airflight Limited was a British charter, and cargo airline from 1948 to 1950.
Commenced operations | 1948 |
---|---|
Ceased operations | April 1950 |
Fleet size | 2 Avro Tudor |
Destinations | Berlin, Germany |
Key people | Don Bennett |
The airline was formed by former Air Vice-Marshal Don Bennett at Langley Airfield, Berkshire, to operate in the Berlin Airlift with two long-fuselage Avro Tudor aircraft.[1][2] These were flown by Bennett and a single other pilot, WWII RAF veteran Stanley Sickelmore, Bennett having the only night flight licence made all the nighttime trips himself with Sickelmore as co-pilot.
One of the Tudor aircraft had operated 85 sorties carrying over 9 tons of supplies per flight between Wunsdorf and Gatow.[2]
At the end of the Berlin Airlift the aircraft were used for trooping charters to the Canal Zone for the British government and ad hoc charters. One of the charters was to end in disaster when G-AKBY was used for a rugby charter and crashed on approach to RAF Llandow in Wales on 12 March 1950.[1] The month after the disaster the company merged into one of Bennett's other companies Fairflight Limited on 28 April 1950.[3]
In 1951, Bennett sold Airflight on to Air Charter, a small company operating out of Luton under Freddie Laker.[4]
Airflight Ltd was dissolved in 1965[5] and Fairflight was formally wound up in 1966.[6]
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