Skyways Coach-Air Limited
Skyways Coach-Air Limited was the world's first low-cost airline.
Skyways launched the first commercial coach-air operation in late-September 1955, involving a coach trip from Central London to Lympne, a cross-Channel Lympne—Beauvais air sector and another coach journey from Beauvais to the centre of Paris.
Skyways Coach-Air, which had remained a separate entity following the sale of sister airline Skyways Ltd to Euravia, got into financial difficulties in 1970. This resulted in a management buyout and the following year's formation of a new company trading as Skyways International to succeed the defunct Skyways Coach-Air. Skyways International was taken over by Dan-Air in 1972.
History
Skyways Coach-Air
On 30 September 1955, Skyways inaugurated the world's first combined coach-air low-fare scheduled service between London and Paris. On that day, a 36-seat Skyways Douglas DC-3 took off from Lympne for a 55-minute cross-Channel flight to Beauvais with fare-paying passengers for the first time. This air service formed part of a combined coach-air-coach journey between the city centres of London and Paris. For passengers travelling from London to Paris, the journey began on a 32- or 36-seater East Kent Road Car Company coach that took them from London's Victoria Coach Station to Lympne Airport near Hythe where they transferred to a Skyways DC-3. This aircraft flew them across the Channel to Beauvais Tillé Airport where passengers transferred to a Transports Renault coach, which took them to République Coach Station in Paris. At the time of launch, total travelling time was just under seven hours. The initial frequency was one round-trip per day, and the inaugural return fare was £7 14s for off-peak travel while the peak-time fare was £8.75. These not only undercut the direct London Heathrow—Paris Orly/Le Bourget standard tourist class air fares of British European Airways and Air France by about 45% but were also cheaper than the corresponding fares of competing surface travel modes.London—Paris coach-air services launched with a single DC-3 configured in a high-density, 36-seat layout. A second DC-3 sourced from the fleet of sister company Skyways Ltd and a third aircraft leased from Airwork were added for the 1956 summer season. This fleet subsequently expanded through the addition of further aircraft.
Following the successful introduction of the world's first, daily coach-air service between London and Paris on a year-round basis, Eric Rylands Ltd, the Skyways group holding company, purchased Lympne Airport in 1956.
During the 1957 summer season, Skyways Coach-Air increased the frequency to up to 16 daily round-trips and launched its second coach-air route from London to Vichy.
In 1958, Skyways Coach-Air Ltd was formed as a dedicated low-fare coach-air-coach subsidiary of Skyways Ltd.
A London—Brussels coach-air service operated during the 1958 summer season for the duration of Expo 58. Also in 1958, further seasonal coach-air services from London to Lyons, Montpellier and Nice launched while coach-air services to Clermont-Ferrand began in June 1964. Services from London to Tours and from East Midlands to Beauvais started in 1965. Operations from London to Ostend commenced in 1970. The airline also applied for traffic rights to extend its coach-air network to Basle, Palma, Barcelona and Tenerife.
Lympne's persistent waterlogging problem forced many flights to divert to Gatwick, especially in winter. During the late-1950s and early-1960s, Skyways Coach-Air's DC-3s also operated regular charter flights from Gatwick.
Following an announcement in 1959 to replace its ageing piston airliners with state-of-the-art turboprops that resulted in a competition between Avro and Fokker where the former's 748 was pitched against the latter's F-27, Skyways Coach-Air became the launch customer for the Avro 748 in 1961.
Meanwhile, Skyways Coach-Air had assumed the ownership of the lease for Lympne Airport, which entailed taking on all operational responsibilities, including the provision of air traffic control services.
Delivery of the first of three 48-seat Avro 748s on 2 November 1961 was followed by the type's first revenue flight on 17 April 1962, when it began replacing the 36-seat DC-3s on the daily Lympne—Beauvais coach-air service. Two more 748s and a fifth DC-3 for cargo and supplemental work joined the fleet during summer 1965. By 1967, Skyways Coach-Air operated the original London—Paris coach-air service exclusively with the new 748 turboprops at a frequency of five daily round-trips in summer, with additional services operating on Mondays, Fridays and Sundays. In winter, frequency dropped to between one and two round-trips per day. Typical London—Paris return fares ranged from £9 8s to £12 17s.
To take advantage of the burgeoning market for all-inclusive holiday charter packages and increase the 748s' utilisation, Skyways Coach-Air began operating a series of inclusive tour charter flights to the Mediterranean from the grass airfield at Lympne in summer 1967. This soon overstretched the airline's small fleet and led to frequent delays and diversions, exacerbated by the airport's waterlogging problem. As a result of knock-on effects, it also resulted in a deterioration of the company's punctuality on the coach-air network.
Nineteen-sixty-seven was also the year the state-owned Transport Holding Company had acquired a 50% stake in Skyways Coach-Air for £27,000. This made it a semi-public entity.
To address Lympne's waterlogging problem ahead of the 1968 summer season, Skyways Coach-Air's management decided to have a 4,500 feet concrete runway laid. This work was executed during the lean months in winter 1967/8. The new runway became operational in April 1968. As the concrete layer proved to be too thin to withstand regular operations by aircraft in the Avro 748 weight category, cracks soon started to appear.
In 1969, the Ford Motor Company awarded Skyways Coach-Air the Stansted—Cologne corporate shuttle contract. This resulted in one of the airline's 748s being permanently based at the Essex airport.
This was also the time Lympne Airport was renamed Ashford Airport.
Although Skyways Coach-Air seemed to have initially succeeded in establishing itself as a profitable short-haul specialist serving a niche market for those looking for the cheapest way to travel between London and Paris, the business began losing money in its latter years as a result of overreaching itself.
Initially, the airline attempted to turn around its deteriorating financial situation by dropping underperforming routes from its network, terminating operations to Ostend, Tours and Vichy. However, these measures proved inadequate to deal with the company's growing financial difficulties. In addition, Britain's then Conservative government's was unwilling to lend it any more money through half-shareholder THC. This resulted in the latter putting
Skyways Coach-Air into receivership at the beginning of 1971. Following its grounding, Skyways Coach-Air went into liquidation on 20 January 1971.
Fleet Details
Skyways Coach-Air Ltd operated the following aircraft types:- Avro/Hawker Siddeley 748
- Douglas DC-3
Fleet in 1962
Aircraft | Total |
Avro 748 Series 1 | 3 |
Douglas DC-3 | 4 |
Total | 7 |
Fleet in 1970
In March 1970, the Skyways Coach-Air fleet comprised 8 aircraft.Aircraft | Total |
Hawker Siddeley 748 Series 1 | 5 |
Douglas DC-3 | 3 |
Total | 8 |
Skyways Coach-Air employed 320 people at this time.
Skyways International
In February 1971, a group of former Skyways Coach-Air senior managers led by John Knox, the erstwhile airline's last commercial manager, formed International Skyways Ltd as a successor to the failed company. With the backing of London merchant bank Sterling Industrial Securities, the new management team purchased defunct Skyways Coach-Air's assets. These included aircraft and routes. Following the successful management buyout, the new entity began trading as Skyways International. It resumed the ex-Skyways Coach-Air year-round route from Ashford to Beauvais on 8 February 1971 with four 748s that had been grounded at Ashford Airport since the cessation of operations three weeks earlier. This was followed by the reintroduction of routes from Ashford to Ostend, Clermont-Ferrand and Montpellier, as well as from Luton to Ostend and from East Midlands to Beauvais.In February 1972, Sterling Industrial Securities sold International Skyways to Dan-Air for £650,000. Dan-Air completed the deal to take over International Skyways from Sterling Industrial Securities in April of that year, following which it integrated most of the former Skyways International routes into its own network of regional, short-haul scheduled services. Initially, these routes were operated by a separate subsidiary named Dan-Air Skyways. Dan-Air Skyways fuselage titles were applied to the four HS 748s Dan-Air inherited from Skyways International.
By 1974, Dan-Air Skyways was fully integrated with the rest of Dan-Air's scheduled operation, as a result of which it ceased to exist as a separate entity and the full Dan-Air livery had been applied to all former Skyways International aircraft.
Fleet Details
International Skyways Ltd operated the following aircraft types:- Hawker Siddeley 748
- Douglas DC-3
Fleet in 1971
Aircraft | Total |
Hawker Siddeley 748 Series 1 | 4 |
Douglas DC-3 | 3 |
Total | 7 |
Skyways International employed 303 people at this time.
Accidents and incidents
There are two recorded accidents/incidents involving Skyways Coach-Air. These are listed below.- On 11 July 1965, Avro 748-101 Series 1 of Skyways Coach-Air arriving from Beauvais was written off at Lympne when its nosewheels dug into soft ground on the grass runway following a heavy landing. The aircraft flipped over, losing its port wing in the process. Aided by the flight attendant, all 48 passengers managed to escape unhurt.
- On 17 December 1965, Douglas C-47B of Skyways Coach-Air was written off when it made an emergency landing on the beach at Le Tréport, Seine-Maritime, France. The aircraft was operating a scheduled international passenger flight from Beauvais to Gatwick, when it turned back to Beauvais due to radio failure shortly before it was scheduled to land at Gatwick. There were no fatalities among the 32 occupants as a result of this incident.