Transatlantic travel

How Trans World Airlines (TWA) helped change the world of aviation.
Transatlantic travel
Transatlantic travel
Updated on
1 min read

Far away places with strange-soundin&rsquo names/Far away over the sea/Those far away places with the strange-soundin&rsquo names/are callin&rsquo, callin&rsquo me, sang Bing Crosby on his round-the-world trip in 1958. The 1950&rsquos were the golden age of aviation&mdashthe jet engine made commercial transatlantic travel feasible, and faster. &ldquoWonder filled names like Kashmir, Delhi and Shalimar&rdquo were now only &ldquo21/2 days by TWA.&rdquo At five miles a minute, the age of the traveler had arrived.

The demand for transatlantic travel picked up after World War II. However, the European airlines were in too weak a position to take advantage of the demand. Here, American carriers, such as Pan Am, AOA and the relative newcomer TWA were able to fill the new needs. On March 1, 1948 Howard Hughes, eccentric billionaire and major stock-holder in TWA received rights to fly to European destinations. The airline changed its name from Transcontinental and Western Airlines to Trans World Airlines. TWA&rsquos Constellation aircraft now competed with Pan Am (which under it charismatic Juan Trippe first dominated transatlantic and then global routes) all the way east to Bombay and the Middle East.

TWA flew thrice a week from New York to Bombay, flying via Europe, North Africa, the Middle East into India and then proceeding to far East, dropping mail en route. Along with Pan Am flights it connected almost all major cities in Europe to the rest of the world. By the late 1950&rsquos the transcontinental route had become the world&rsquos most trafficked route, and the faraway places were just a little more than a day away.

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