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{{Short description|Former Chicago,
{{For|the North Carolina-based Midway Airlines|Midway Airlines (1993–2003)}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Midway Airlines (1976-1991)}}▼
▲{{Use mdy dates|date=April 2024}}
{{Infobox airline
| airline = Midway Airlines
| image = Logomidwayairlines1985.png
| image_size =
| alt =
| IATA = ML
| ICAO = MDW
| callsign = MIDWAY
| founded =
| commenced = {{start date|1979|
| ceased = {{end date|1991|11|13
| aoc =
| bases =
| hubs = [[Chicago Midway International Airport
| secondary_hubs =
| focus_cities =
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| company_slogan =
| parent =
| headquarters = [[Chicago, Illinois]], U.S.
| key_people = [[David R. Hinson]]
| website =
}}
'''Midway Airlines''' was a [[United States]] airline based in [[Chicago, Illinois]]. It was
The airline was intended to breathe new life into [[Midway International Airport]], then called Chicago Midway Airport, which had lost most of its scheduled flights to [[O'Hare International Airport]]. The airline took its name from this airport. Midway Airlines and the revitalized airport were advertised as a trouble-free alternative to O'Hare, and both of these spurred re-development and growth{{citation needed|date=June 2023}} on [[Chicago's South Side]]. The airport was billed as a convenient ten- to fifteen-minute drive from downtown Chicago.
The airline went bankrupt in 1991 and was dissolved in 1992. A group of investors bought the airline's name and started a new separate company called Midway Airlines, which flew from 1993 to 2003.▼
The airline went bankrupt in 1991 and was dissolved in 1992. A group of investors
==History==
[[File:Douglas DC-9-15 N1065T Midway Als DCA 26.06.82 edited-2.jpg|thumb|right|[[Douglas DC-9|Douglas DC-9-15]] of Midway Airlines in 1982 wearing the
Following the [[Airline Deregulation Act]] of 1978, Midway first emerged as a discount carrier. It was noted for its low fares and ease of connections at Midway Airport. The airline purchased three [[Douglas DC-9]]s from [[Trans World Airlines]] and began service on October 31, 1979,<ref name=history/> flying to [[Cleveland]], Ohio's [[Cleveland Burke Lakefront Airport]], [[Kansas City, Missouri|Kansas City]], Missouri, and Detroit, Michigan.<ref name=history/> The scheduled service was an instant success. In 1980, Midway bought five more DC-9s and added flights to [[St. Louis, Missouri|St. Louis]], Missouri, New York City's [[La Guardia Airport]], and [[Washington National Airport]] in [[Arlington, Virginia|Arlington]], Virginia, outside Washington, D.C.; it also shifted its Cleveland service to [[Cleveland Hopkins International Airport]]. The airline also briefly served [[Minneapolis]], Minnesota, but dropped this service shortly after it began.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://timetableimages.com/ttimages/ml.htm|title=MSA - Malaysia Singapore Airlines - Malaysian Airways - Malayan Airways|website=timetableimages.com}}</ref>
During the 1980s, the airline adopted a combination of all-leather two-by-two seating to business markets and all-coach seating to vacation destinations. It eventually dropped this idea due to the impact on revenue caused by eliminating seats, and the confusion it created in the minds of connecting passengers.
The carrier expanded into the [[Caribbean]] via the purchase in 1984 of the assets of [[Air Florida]], which had gone into bankruptcy. It proved to be good mix of business and vacation travel revenue. Midway flourished under the leadership of [[David R. Hinson]], who was its chief executive officer from 1985 to 1991. In 1984, [[Boeing 737-200]] flights to the Caribbean were being operated by subsidiary '''Midway Express''' while [[DC-9]] domestic jet service was flown '''Midway Metrolink'''.<ref name="auto">http://www.departedflights.com, October 15, 1984 Midway Airlines system timetable</ref>
[[File:Midway Airlines Boeing 737-200 JetPix.jpg|thumb|Midway Airlines Boeing 737-200]]▼
In 1986 the company assisted in setting up a successful regional affiliate, '''Midway Connection''', as a feeder operating commuter turboprop aircraft with service to small communities in Illinois, [[Indiana]], [[Wisconsin]], and Michigan. This carrier was established following the bankruptcy of [[Chicago Air]], a regional carrier which attempted a similar, but independent, feeder operation earlier in 1986.
▲[[File:Midway Airlines Boeing 737-200 JetPix.jpg|thumb|Midway Airlines Boeing 737-200]]
On a June 1988 weekday, Midway scheduled 116 nonstop flights into Midway Airport from 25 airports, along with 75 Midway Connection nonstops from 17 other airports. They flew Chicago Midway (MDW) - Miami (MIA) - Saint Croix (STX) - St. Thomas (STT) round trip as well as Chicago Midway (MDW) - Fort Lauderdale (FLL) - Nassau (NAS) round trip ; aside from those, all Chicago flights were nonstop to and from Midway Airport. Midway Airlines′ peak year was 1989, when it flew 10.1 billion revenue passenger-kilometers, compared to 0.6 billion in 1981.<ref>''Air Transport World''</ref>
Midway Airlines was noted for friendly employees and attentive service, and its Chicago South Side passengers were fiercely loyal to their hometown airline. Some of the signature in-flight service items were after-dinner chocolate wafer mints and hot hand towels for the entire cabin, both of which had originally caught on with Midway's business clientele.{{Citation needed|date=April 2014}}
In June 1989, Midway Airlines agreed to purchase a hub operation at [[Philadelphia International Airport]] in [[Philadelphia]], Pennsylvania, for $100 million along with $100 million worth of DC-9 jets from the bankrupt [[Eastern Air Lines]].<ref>{{cite news|last=Salpukas|first=Agis|title=Eastern to Sell Operations in Philadelphia to Midway|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1989/06/17/business/eastern-to-sell-operations-in-philadelphia-to-midway.html|access-date=April 10, 2014|newspaper=New York Times|date=June 17, 1989}}</ref> The company began hub operations in Philadelphia in November 1989.<ref name=ChiTrib1989PhlHubLaunch>{{cite news|last=Jouzaitis|first=Carol|title=Midway Fills Out Philly Slate|url=http://articles.chicagotribune.com/1989-10-12/business/8901210438_1_midway-airlines-philadelphia-hub-chicago-hub|access-date=April 10, 2014|newspaper=Chicago Tribune|date=October 12, 1989}}</ref> However, less than a year later, competition with the [[US Airways]] Philadelphia hub, coupled with rising jet fuel prices following the August 1990 IraqI [[invasion of Kuwait]], caused the company to quit its Philadelphia hub. In October 1990 it sold its Philadelphia assets to USAir for $67.5 million.<ref name=NYTquitPHLin1990>{{cite news|last=Berg|first=Eric N.|title=Midway Air Leaving Philadelphia|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1990/10/20/business/midway-air-leaving-philadelphia.html|access-date=April 10, 2014|newspaper=New York Times|date=October 20, 1990}}</ref>
[[File:Southwest 737-200 N702ML.jpg|thumb|As the hybrid livery attests, Southwest picked up some ex-Midway aircraft]]▼
▲[[File:Southwest 737-200 N702ML.jpg|thumb|
Citing the high price of jet fuel during the 1991 [[Gulf War]] and a drop in passengers in the recession that followed, the airline filed [[Chapter 11, Title 11, United States Code|Chapter 11]] in March 1991.<ref name=LAT1991bkptC11>{{cite news|last=Dallos|first=Robert E.|title=Midway Airlines Seeks Chapter 11 Shield|url=http://articles.latimes.com/1991-03-27/business/fi-915_1_midway-airlines|access-date=April 10, 2014|newspaper=Los Angeles Times|date=March 27, 1991}}</ref> In reorganization, Midway attempted to sell itself to Northwest Airlines. Northwest pulled out of negotiations on November 12, 1991, however, and Midway ceased operations the next day.<ref name=NYTShutDown1991>{{cite news|last=Salpukas|first=Agis|title=Midway Air Shuts Down After Buyout Is Abandoned|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1991/11/14/business/midway-air-shuts-down-after-buyout-is-abandoned.html|access-date=April 10, 2014|newspaper=New York Times|date=November 14, 1991}}</ref> Its bankruptcy was re-filed as a liquidation under [[Chapter 7, Title 11, United States Code|Chapter 7]] bankruptcy laws.
▲The airline
==Destinations==
'''Canada'''
* [[Montreal]] ([[Montréal-Dorval International Airport]])
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* [[Omaha]] ([[Eppley Airfield]])
* [[Orange County, California|Orange County]] ([[John Wayne Airport]])
* [[
* [[Philadelphia]] ([[Philadelphia International Airport]])
* [[Phoenix, Arizona|Phoenix]] ([[Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport]])
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* [[West Lafayette, Indiana]] ([[Purdue University Airport]])
* [[West Palm Beach]] ([[Palm Beach International Airport]])
==Fleet==
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|}
==Midway
From 1983 to 1985 Midway experimented with a one-class business service called "Midway Metrolink" on some of its flights.<ref name="history"/> Seating was 2x2 on DC-9s, which typically have 2x3 seating.
==Midway Express==
After its initial acquisition of [[Air Florida]], Midway Airlines operated a stand-alone service named "Midway Express", which flew some of Air Florida's former tourist routes. In 1984, Midway Express was serving four airports in Florida, including Ft. Lauderdale, Miami, Orlando and West Palm Beach as well as St. Thomas and St. Croix in the Caribbean.<ref name="auto"/> The airline initially operated [[Boeing 737-200]] jets which had been formerly operated by Air Florida.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://articles.sun-sentinel.com/1985-08-14/business/8502020885_1_air-florida-plane-sale-gpa-group, | title=Midway Completes Air Florida Buy }}</ref> By 1990, Midway had added service to Fort Myers, Jacksonville and Sarasota in Florida as well as to Nassau and Freeport in the Bahamas.<ref>http://www.departedflights.com, October 1, 1990 Midway Airlines system timetable</ref>
==Midway Connection==
In 1987 Midway Airlines purchased commuter air carrier '''Fischer Brothers Aviation''' based in Galion, Ohio, and moved the entire operation to Springfield, Illinois. Fischer Brothers Aviation had previously operated [[Allegheny Commuter]] service for [[Allegheny Airlines]] and successor [[USAir]] and then began operating [[Northwest Airlink]] service on behalf of [[Northwest Airlines]]. The initial move consisted of the Fischer Brothers management team (including Vice President of Operations Armando Cardenas, Chief Pilot Mark Zweidinger, Vice President of Customer Service Mark Fisher, Director of Maintenance Craig Anderson and Personnel Manager Cynthia Baldwin) and was led by Midway Airlines executive Richard Pfennig. Offers of employment were extended to the pilots and maintenance team that wanted to relocate. Gordon Jones, Vice President of Maintenance and Jerry Turpstra, Chief Inspector joined the management group in June 1987. Mr. Pfennig took control of the operation and was able to quickly get the company through certification flights. In May 1987 the commuter started scheduled passenger flights. The initial operation consisted of 21 employees, the original seven [[Dornier 228]] turboprop aircraft and eventually ended with 125 employees, 28 Dornier aircraft and 13 [[Embraer EMB-120 Brasilia]] turboprop aircraft. Midway Connection operated to cities in the Midwest states, including Wisconsin (Milwaukee, Madison, Green Bay, Oshkosh), Michigan (Traverse City, Grand Rapids, Muskegeon, Lansing, Kalamazoo), Indiana (South Bend, Ft. Wayne, Indianapolis, Lafayette), Illinois (Bloomington, Champaign, Moline-Quad Cities, Peoria and their home base Springfield, Illinois), and Ohio (Toledo). This Midway Connection service was a wholly owned subsidiary of Midway Airlines, and although it was an independent operation, it was completely operated as a "feeder" for the "mainline" operation via a [[code sharing]] agreement. Dispatch and Maintenance for the airline was conducted in Springfield, Illinois, while reservations were supported through Midway Airlines in Chicago utilizing the SABRE reservations system.
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{{Commons category|Midway Airlines}}
{{Commons category|Midway Connection}}
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20150509041732/http://routemapsonline.com/ routemapsonline.com] has several Midway timetables and route maps including timetable of routes purchased from Eastern Airlines.
*{{cite magazine |issn=0015-3710 |magazine=Flight International |title=Midway between the majors |url=https://www.flightglobal.com/pdfarchive/view/1988/1988%20-%203702.html |date=December 24–31, 1988 |given=David |surname=Learmount |pages=28–31 |location=Chicago, Illinois |volume=134 |number=4145}}
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▲{{DEFAULTSORT:Midway Airlines (1976-1991)}}
[[Category:Airlines established in 1976]]
[[Category:Airlines disestablished in 1991]]
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