Although monochrome and devoid of detail, this mail is another crisp example of the European first-day cover tradition. The first flight from Copenhagen to Abidjan's Port Bouet, on 6 June 1972, may have been non-stop as there is no routing information on the envelope other than upper-left text and the cancellation stamp, which both only list origin and destination. Its such a shame that the Scandinavian carrier has no routes to Africa to present.
Thursday, January 28, 2010
SAS: Copenhagen-Abidjan
Although monochrome and devoid of detail, this mail is another crisp example of the European first-day cover tradition. The first flight from Copenhagen to Abidjan's Port Bouet, on 6 June 1972, may have been non-stop as there is no routing information on the envelope other than upper-left text and the cancellation stamp, which both only list origin and destination. Its such a shame that the Scandinavian carrier has no routes to Africa to present.
Sunday, January 24, 2010
Iberia: Western Hemisphere, February 2006
Iberia: Eastern Hemisphere, February 2006
Saturday, January 23, 2010
Air Botswana, 2006
Thursday, January 21, 2010
Antrak Air: Domestic Timetable, Autumn 2009
Wednesday, January 20, 2010
UTA: The African Routes c.1980

UTA French Airlines was one of aviation's more unique carriers: from its eggplant colored airplanes to its roster of destinations-- if you saw one its widebodies, you knew your were someplace exotic (or maybe just in Paris). Its really a shame UTA didn't survive, its individual spirit has never been matched by any other intercontinental carrier since. One question on the advert: did it really serve Nouadhibou, Mauritania's secondary port and surely one of the most remote cities in the world, and not its capital, Nouakchott? Can't stop admiring the curious carrier; its a shame its reputation didn't survive the 1989 Bombing.
Sunday, January 17, 2010
TWA: New York-Dar Es Salaam, 1967
Its somewhat incredible to contemplate that in several decades ago, not one (Pan Am) but two (TWA) U.S. carriers departed New York for East Africa. It would take some research to determine just how long this route lasted, but it seems to have routed via Rome, Athens and Cairo variously, stopping next at Entebbe and then on to Nairobi and terminating at Dar Es Salaam.
Saturday, January 16, 2010
British Airways: Concorde visits Monrovia, 1976
25 March 1976 must have been quite a day at Roberts International Airport: likely the only time in Liberia's history that it was visited by a supersonic jet (although the craft was not unknown in West Africa, as Air France was known to run a Paris-Dakar-Rio de Janeiro service). Its not clear from this jubilant cover whether passengers were even on board, much less if any deplaned at Monrovia. From the red cancellation stamp, it suggests that it was a corporate test flight for the British Aircraft Corporation (BAC).
Friday, January 15, 2010
KLM: Amsterdam-Accra
A typically colorful first day cover from KLM in 1960, although a bit dull (the woman with the basket on her head could easily represent any African destination) considering the significance of the Amsterdam-Accra flight. This route holds a particular importance for both countries: it can easily be forgotten that, although the Gold Coast was a British Crown Colony at independence in 1959, it was the Dutch that held the area for the longest period of time, and other than South Africa, Ghana is the closest to an African territory that the Netherlands ever had. The Dutch imprint is still with Ghana, most visibly at the high-end Golden Tulip hotel in the center of town (with another property in Kumasi) and the nearby Royal Netherlands Embassy, arguably the most gorgeous modern building in the country. The KLM flight also has particular importance in Ghana's gold exports; each KLM jet is reportedly loaded with bullion.
Thursday, January 14, 2010
Brussels Airlines: The African Routes, Summer 2009
Wednesday, January 13, 2010
Northwest Orient: Cleveland-Seoul, 1973
Its not entirely clear what to make of this; its celebrating a route that began June 1973 from Cleveland to Seoul via Chicago, Anchorage and Tokyo. The question is, could one really board a Northwest Orient DC-10 at Cleveland Hopkins airport, and not deplane until reaching Kimpo? If so, this is a wonderful, overlooked triumph of Cleveland's aviation history. But it is also entirely likely that the service included a "change of plane" and was really just another connection through a hub. It is true that both United and Northwest used widebodies to connect to Cleveland; United used a DC-10 to shuttle Monday morning commuters from Hopkins to O'Hare up until the 1990s.
Sunday, January 10, 2010
Swissair: Geneva-Harare
Saturday, January 9, 2010
TWA: Detroit-Paris-Rome
Friday, January 8, 2010
VASP to Osaka-Kansai (KIX), 1998

Sometimes evidence for erstwhile air connections is only uncovered in uncommon sources. Here are a few still frames from a 1998 episode of the series Superstructures, viewable on the excellent online video service Hulu. The man interviewed is discussing the trials of constructing the massive off-shore island airport (doesn't he seem a bit senior to be on a construction diving crew?)Thursday, January 7, 2010
Sabena: Brussels-Douala
Wednesday, January 6, 2010
Sabena: Brussels-Tunis, November 1965
A first day cover, nearly identical to the previous post, celebrating Sabena's jet launch to Tunis.
Sabena: Brussels-Abidjan, December 1965
KLM: Tunis-Abidjan
Tuesday, January 5, 2010
Sabena: Brussels-Dar Es Salaam
Monday, January 4, 2010
Pan Am: New Orleans-Managua
Speaking of New Orleans's international service, here is a relic from June 13, 1943: Pan Am from New Orleans to Managua. Long before it was overshadowed by Houston, Atlanta, and even Memphis, New Orleans was a major gateway to Mesoamerica, as this attests.
Sunday, January 3, 2010
BMI: Worldwide, Spring 2006
Saturday, January 2, 2010
British Caledonian: London (Gatwick)-Recife

British Caledonian had an interesting history, as evidence by its lengthy, detailed Wikipedia entry. It had to contend with its giant rival BOAC/British Airways (and by extension, the UK government, both its regulator and major BA shareholder) for route rights; a similar sort of competition can be seen more recently with BMI's ventures in Saudi Arabia and Sierra Leone, Azerbaijan and Asmara. BR itself was absorbed into the BA behemoth in the 1980s.
This handsome graphical first day cover celebrates a Gatwick-Recife service, a DC-10-30 plunging southward in 1977 (curious to know how long this lasted).
This is but one example of how British Caledonian lifted the celebratory first flight cover to new heights of art form and informational presentation. There's no way Timetablist can compete with the substantial and beautifully-presented British Caledonian Tribute site's FCC page, which shows the airline spent 1977 using its new DC-10s to extend to Sao Paulo, Santiago, Houston, Los Angeles, Lagos, and Algiers.
Friday, January 1, 2010
Lufthansa Worldwide, 1971
This sharp web is a unique delineation of the standard route map that Lufthansa employed in its Streckenatlas for many years. City names are clustered together where possible, and the red lines themselves only vaguely suggest the actual flight paths,






