Sunbird Airlines

Sunbird Airlines, "The Carolina Connection", was a United States airline founded by Ralph Quinlan in Denver, North Carolina on November 15, 1979.

Operating the Cessna 402, and later the Cessna 404 aircraft, the company shared equipment, operations, maintenance and facilities with parent company Mountain Air Cargo founded by Ralph Quinlan. In 1983, Sunbird acquired the Beechcraft C99 turboprop aircraft, and was the launch customer for the -C model (larger baggage pod, etc.). Also in 1983, Mountain Air acquired Atlanta Express, and merged this operation with that of Sunbird.

Sunbird was only marginally successful those initial years, managing only because of the shared facilities of the parent. Through the various cycles of the parent company, the decision was made in late 1983 to divest the Sunbird operation to Roy Hagerty. Mr Hagerty had financing, and previous airline experience, he being one of the creators of Southeastern Airlines. That company later was absorbed into the company now known as Atlantic Southeast Airlines. On the completion of the Sunbird purchase, Hagerty moved the entire Sunbird operation to the Charlotte/Douglas International Airport in Charlotte, NC.

Under the period of Hagerty ownership, the Company was known as Sunbird Airlines 1984, Inc. With the Hagerty leadership, a program of aggressive growth began. New cities were added, and the acquisition of Short 330 aircraft began. 1n 1985, a code-sharing agreement was reached with Piedmont Airlines for Sunbird to begin operations as Piedmont Commuter at the Charlotte Piedmont hub. At this time, the "Sunbird" radio callsign was lost to history, and the Sunbird/Piedmont Commuter flights were under the "Carolina" call. In 1987, the company was renamed CCAir.[1]

Destinations

[2][3]

Fleet

  • 10 Beechcraft C99 Airliner
  • 3 BAe Jetstream31
  • 1 Short SD-330[4]
gollark: It appears that greenology has been taken.
gollark: 503 would be if the server had turned into bees due to too many requests.
gollark: Some of the 500 codes also imply different actions; "service unavailable" means maybe "slow down and try again later".
gollark: It's more convenient for me and useful to users than me having to check the log.
gollark: Well, osmarks.tk sends 502s in case of a backend server failing.

See also

References

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