Pan Am destinations
This is a list of destinations of Pan American World Airways before closure, or at closure (1991), served by mainline operations.[1]
Refer to Pan Am Express for a full list of regional destinations served between 1981 and 1991.
Americas
Caribbean
- Cayman Islands (United Kingdom)
- Puerto Plata (Gregorio Luperón International Airport)
- San Pedro de Macoris (Higuamo River)
- Santo Domingo (Las Américas International Airport)
- Guadeloupe (France)
- Netherlands Antilles (Netherlands)
- Turks and Caicos Islands (United Kingdom)
- Grand Turk (JAGS McCartney International Airport)
- Providenciales (Providenciales International Airport)
- U.S. Virgin Islands (United States)
Central America
- San Pedro Sula (Ramon Villeda Morales International Airport)
- Tegucigalpa (Toncontin International Airport)
North America
- Mexico
- Cancún (Cancún International Airport)
- Monterrey (Monterrey International Airport)
- Mexico City (Benito Juarez International Airport)
- United States
- California
- Colorado
- Florida
- Georgia
- Illinois
- Louisiana
- Massachusetts
- Michigan
- New Jersey
- New York
- Pennsylvania
- Texas
- Virginia
South America
- Argentina
- Bolivia
- Brazil
- Recife (Guararapes International Airport)
- Rio de Janeiro (Galeão International Airport)
- São Paulo (Guarulhos International Airport)
- Chile
- Colombia
- Barranquilla (Ernesto Cortissoz International Airport)
- Bogota (El Dorado International Airport)
- Medellin (Enrique Olaya Herrera Airport)
- Medellin (Jose Maria Cordova International Airport)
- Santiago de Cali (Alfonso Bonilla Aragon International Airport)
- Ecuador
- French Guiana
- Guyana
- Paraguay
- Peru
- Suriname
- Uruguay
- Venezuela
- Caracas (Simón Bolívar International Airport)
- Maracaibo (La Chinita International Airport)
- Coro
- Maturin/Quiriquire
Europe
- France
Terminated destinations before closure
- Africa
Central Africa
East Africa
North Africa
- Morocco - Casablanca, Rabat [5]
Southern Africa
- South Africa - Johannesburg [5]
West Africa
- Benin - Cotonou
- Côte d'Ivoire - Abidjan [6]
- Ghana - Accra [6]
- Guinea - Conakry
- Liberia - Monrovia [4][6]
- Nigeria - Lagos [4][6]
- Senegal - Dakar [4][6]
- Americas
North America
- Canada - Whitehorse [7]
- Cuba - Camagüey, Havana, Nuevitas, Santiago de Cuba [8] [note 1]
- Mexico - Mérida,[5] Mexico City, Monterrey,[9] Tampico,[10] Tapachula[11]
- United States
- Alaska Fairbanks, Juneau, Ketchikan,[12] Tanacross (flagstop) [13]
- California San Diego [6]
- Colorado Denver [9]
- Connecticut Hartford/Springfield (Massachusetts) [4]
- Florida Fort Lauderdale/Hollywood,[6] Fort Myers,[6] Jacksonville,[9] Melbourne,[6] Pensacola,[14] St. Petersburg/Clearwater.[6] Sarasota/Bradenton,[6] West Palm Beach [6]
- Georgia Savannah [6]
- Hawaii Hilo,[5] Honolulu [15]
- Indiana Indianapolis [9]
- Minnesota Minneapolis/Saint Paul [9]
- Missouri Kansas City,[9] St. Louis [16]
- New York Port Washington (Marine Base)(at Sands Point) [17]
- North Carolina Charlotte,[4][9] Raleigh/Durham [4]
- Ohio Cleveland [9]
- Pennsylvania Pittsburgh
- Rhode Island Providence
- Tennessee Nashville [4]
- Texas Austin,[4] Corpus Christi,[4] San Antonio [4]
- Utah Salt Lake City [9]
- Virginia Norfolk [6]
- Washington Seattle/Tacoma [6]
South America
- Asia
East Asia
- People's Republic of China - Beijing,[15] Shanghai,[15] Guangzhou, Chengdu, Changsha, Chongqing, Hangzhou, Qingdao, Shenzhen, Shenyang, Wuhan, Xi'an, Xiamen
- Hong Kong [15]
- Japan - Naha,[18] Osaka,[6] Tokyo [ex-Hub] [15]
- South Korea - Seoul,[15] Busan
- North Korea - Pyongyang
- Mongolia - Ulan Bator (now Ulaanbaatar)
- Taiwan, Republic of China - Taipei,[15] Kaohsiung
Indian Subcontinent
- India - Bombay (now Mumbai),[4][15] Calcutta (now Kolkata), Delhi [4][15]
- Pakistan - Karachi,[4][15] Lahore, Islamabad
Southeast Asia
- Burma (now Myanmar) - Rangoon (now Yangon)
- Indonesia - Denpasar, Jakarta [5]
- Philippines - Cebu,[4] Manila [15]
- Singapore [15]
- North Vietnam - Hanoi, Nha Trang
- South Vietnam (now Vietnam) - Saigon (now Ho Chi Minh City) [3]
- Thailand - Bangkok [15]
Middle East
- Bahrain [19]
- Iran - Tehran.[19]
- Iraq - Baghdad
- Israel - Tel Aviv [9]
- Lebanon - Beirut [5]
- Qatar - Doha [15]
- Saudi Arabia - Dhahran, Medina, Jeddah[15] Riyadh
- Syria - Damascus [5]
- United Arab Emirates - Abu Dhabi, Dubai[4][15]
- Europe
Central Europe
- Austria - Vienna [9]
- Czechoslovakia (now Czech Republic) - Prague [9]
- Hungary - Budapest [9]
- Poland - Kraków,[9] Warsaw [9]
- Switzerland - Geneva,[9] Zürich [9]
Eastern Europe
- Romania - Bucharest [9]
- Soviet Union (now Russia) - Leningrad (now St. Petersburg),[9] Moscow [9]
- Yugoslavia (now Bosnia and Herzegovina) Sarajevo, (now Croatia) Dubrovnik, Zagreb, (now Serbia) Belgrade [9]
Northern Europe
- Denmark - Copenhagen [9]
- Finland - Helsinki [9]
- Norway - Bergen,[20] Oslo [9]
- Sweden - Stockholm [9]
Southern Europe
- Greece - Athens [9]
- Italy - Milan,[9] Naples, Palermo, Rome [9]
- Portugal - Funchal, Lisbon,[5] Porto, Santa Maria Island,[5] Terceira Island
- Spain - Barcelona,[9] Madrid,[9] Malaga, Valencia
- Turkey - Ankara,[9] Istanbul [9]
Western Europe
- Belgium - Brussels [9]
- France - Nice,[9] Paris-Le Bourget, Paris-Orly
- Germany - Berlin-Tegel,[9] Berlin-Tempelhof,[9] Bremen, Cologne/Bonn,[5] Düsseldorf,[5] Frankfurt [ex-Hub],[9] Hamburg,[9] Hanover,[5] Munich,[15] Nuremberg,[9] Saarbrücken, Stuttgart,[9] Sylt
- Iceland - Reykjavik
- Ireland - Dublin, Shannon [21]
- Netherlands - Amsterdam [9]
- United Kingdom (England) London-Gatwick [9][22] London-Heathrow [ex-Hub],[9][23][24] London-Stansted, (Scotland) Glasgow-Prestwick
- Oceania
- American Samoa (United States) - Pago Pago [5]
- Australia - Melbourne,[15] Sydney [15]
- Fiji - Nadi [5][6]
- French Polynesia - Papeete [5]
- Guam (United States) [6]
- Kiribati - Kanton Island (Trans-pacific stopover)
- New Caledonia (France) - Nouméa [5]
- New Zealand - Auckland [15]
- Wake Island (United States) [5]
References
- ↑ Route Map on October 27, 1991, Pan American World Airways
- ↑ "Pan Am Will Resume Its Flights at Newark," The New York Times
- 1 2 Route Map on March 1, 1959, Pan American World Airways
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Route Map of February 11, 1986, Pan American World Airways
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 Route Map of March 1, 1969, Pan American World Airways
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 Route Map of January 1980, Pan American World Airways
- ↑ PAA System Timetable, 1-31 Jan. 1958. 13: flight 905 Seattle-Ketchikan-Juneau-Whitehorse.
- ↑ https://robertissimus.wordpress.com/tag/pan-american-airways/
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 Route Map of May 1991, Pan American World Airways
- ↑ PAA System Timetable, 1-31 Jan. 1958. 22: flight 507 Houston to Panama City, PA: en route stop.
- ↑ Pan American World Airways System Time Tables, 1 Nov. 1947. Table 15: flight 501 Mexico Clipper : Brownsville to Port of Spain: intermediate stop. (note: airport name listed in timetable as "L. Cer.")
- ↑ Ketchikan reference
- ↑ Pan American World Airways System Time Tables, 1 Nov. 1947. 18: flight 901 Seattle to Nome: en route flagstop.
- ↑ Pan Am/National Schedules, 8 Jul. 1980. 31: flight 47: Pensacola -Mobile.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 Route Map from October 27, 1985, Pan American World Airways
- ↑ Pan Am Schedules, 5 Sep. 1984. 79: flight 539: New York (JFK) -St. Louis -Kansas City.
- ↑ Pan American Airways & Associated Carriers Time Tables - Passenger Information, 4 Apr. 1939. Table 1: Baltimore -Bermuda: en route stop.
- ↑ Pan Am System Timetable Spring/Summer 1978, 30 Apr. 1978. B: flight 841 San Francisco -Taipei: en route stop. Acquired in 1975 as part of route swap with TWA. Service discontinued in 1978 or 1979. Nonstop service to Taipei & Guam.
- 1 2 Route Map of October 25, 1979, Pan American World Airways
- ↑ Official Airline Guide. International. ed. June 1973: T192: flight 76 New York (JFK) -Glasgow (PIK) -Bergen.
- ↑ Pan Am System Timetable, 1-23 Apr. 1966. 6: flight 108: New York (JFK) -Shannon -Brussels.
- ↑ "COMPANY NEWS; UAL to Back Tickets Sold By Pan Am," The New York Times
- ↑ "United Seeks Pan Am Route," Associated Press, March 26, 1991.
- ↑ "U.S. and Britain Still at Odds on Airline Shift at Heathrow," The New York Times, December 22, 1990
Footnotes
- ↑ All Cuban flights were banned in 1961 due to the U.S. embargo against Cuba.
External links
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