Hong Kong Airways
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Hong Kong Airways was an airline in Hong Kong during the late 1940s and 1950s.
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[edit] History
The airline was formed in 1947 by the initiators of the airline were BOAC and Jardine, Matheson & Co.(怡和). Jardines (怡和) were General Sales Agents and became owners before selling to government backed partner BOAC. The Jardine Air Maintenance Company JAMCo had been formed in 1946 as a parallel initiative to Hong Kong Airways. JAMco was merged with Swire/Cathay Pacific maintenance interests, to from HAECO, on 1 November 1950: "On 13 May 1949 an agreement signed by Cathay Pacific (Jock Swire) and BOAC (on behalf of Hong Kong Airways) along Grantham's lines of allocation."[1] In a similar manner Hong Kong Airways ultimately merged with Cathay Pacific on 1 July 1959.
Cathay secured the valuable routes to and from Bangkok, Singapore, Haiphong, Saigon, Sandakan, Jesselton (now Kota Kinabalu) and Labuan, and Rangoon (with an extension possible to Calcutta). That left HKA with Canton, Macao, Shanghai and Tientsin, not, after all, Japan.
[edit] Airwars
The 'Battle of Hong Kong Airways', as Jock called it, did not end here. It dragged on for another ten years. In November 1949 BOAC sold Hong Kong Airways back to Jardines, but it soon ran for cover to another 'big brother', in a charter association with the American company Northwest Airlines on the Taipei and Tokyo services. Absurdly, HKA was still an airline without planes of its own. Then in 1953, the British Government attempted to bring about a merger between Cathay Pacific, BOAC and Hong Kong Airways to form a single regional airline. This came to nothing for two reasons: first, disaster hit BOAC in the quick succession of two Comet jets and a Constellation, and, secondly, Hong Kong Airways was doomed to be a dead loss in anyone's hands. Later still, BOAC came back having decided to try once more to bring Hong Kong Airways to profitable life. Two new short-range Viscounts arrived in Hong Kong in an attempt to make something of the Tokyo route. But there was still no profit in that, and finally Lord Rennell of BOAC meekly approached Jock Swire to ask if he would be willing to swap Hong Kong Airways for a parcel of Cathay Pacific shares. Jock said he considered Hong Kong Airways worthless and a liability, but nevertheless, as of 1 July 1959, Cathay Pacific took over Hong Kong Airways though spurning the two Viscounts - and BOAC got 15 per cent of Cathay Pacific's shares and a seat on the Board."
From pg 236 of "The Thistle & the Jade" Keswick, Maggie Ed. 1982: "Characteristically, Jardines was a pioneer of air travel in the Far East. As early as the 1918 Armistice, CH Ross (then in charge in London) commissioned a feasibility study for a Jardine air service to run in conjunction with Vickers - for whom the firm were agents - from Hong Kong to Shanghai via the coastal ports. And later, when Imperial Airways - the precursor of British Airways - opened their first service to Shanghai with flying boats, they appointed Jardines general agents, although they did not use agents at any other major city on their routes. After World War II, in association with BOAC, Jardines also successfully launched Hong Kong Airways, which held the rights to fly from Hong Kong into China, to Taipei and Osaka, and - jointly with Cathay Pacific to the Philippines. With the great political change in China they lost the key route: Hugh Barton, later Taipan, flew from Shanghai on the last Hongkong Airways plane. And, after trying other ventures, including two Viscounts on the Philippine flights, Jardines eventually gave up Hong Kong Airways and sold off the rights to Cathay Pacific."
[edit] Legacy
Jardines (怡和) remained involved in aviation through Jardine Airways which was the exclusive General Sales Agent in Hong Kong for many major airlines including British Airways from the 1940s until the year 2000. After the merger of JAMCo to form HAECO Jardine did received a parcel of HAECO shares but this gradually waned. Another Jardine affiliate Eupo Air (欧亞) chartered seats for distribution primarily amongst the Chinese community on British Airways flights on the Hong Kong to London route from 1983 to 2002, in the same manner Hong Kong Airways chartered seats on Northwest Airlines. Today (2006) Jardines' aviation interests in Hong Kong are principally ground handling under the banner of Jardine Aviation Services, however, a small Eupo Air/Jardine Travel office does act as GSA for British Airways Holidays.
[edit] Fleet
Hong Kong Airways operated a fleet of British built aircraft including:
[edit] See also
[edit] Notes
- ^ Gavin young, "Beyond Lion Rock", 1988, p. 117
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