LAC Colombia
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Founded | 1974 | ||||||
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Commenced operations | 1974 | ||||||
Ceased operations | 1996 | ||||||
Focus cities | Barranquilla | ||||||
Parent company | 6 | ||||||
Key people | Luís Carlos Donado Velilla |
LAC Colombia (Lineas Aereas del Caribe) was a Colombia airline that was founded in Barranquilla, Colombia in the year 1974.[2]
History
By an initiative of Captain Luís Carlos Donado Velilla, who wanted to withdraw from Aerocosta and set up a new airline only from his family, he was born on February 28, 1974. LAC started as a limited company and Luis's first partners were, his wife María Fajardo de Donado and his two brothers Orlando and Raúl Donado Velilla. Captain Lucho Donado already had experience in the creation and development of airlines, as he had co-founded LATCO, Aerocóndor and Aerocosta. Barranquilla companies in history were good at achieving positioning and leadership in the air passenger and cargo market. The time to start a company alone was very hard to do however given the conditions of focusing almost all your time on the business. In 1972, and despite being Aerocosta at its best, Captain Luis Carlos Donado (one of the majority shareholders) was tired of non-family members and decided to sell this airline to Floramerica. The new managers of this company did not like the C-46 much and that is how Lucho Donado made a proposal to buy them for a price slightly higher than what they had acquired, but with the condition that they let them operate under the banner of Aerocosta until LAC had the approval of the Aerocivil. This was the case and the Donado Velilla brothers flew their two Curtiss planes through the Eastern Plains with the Aerocosta flag, but billing the flights as Donado Velilla Brothers (DOVEL) until February 28, 1974, when they already start operating with the Colombian Aerocivil as Caribbean Airlines Ltd.
"If the cargo does not speak and presents so many problems, how will one be passengers?" - Captain Donado Velilla said once wisely.
The company was born with two Curtiss C-46 airplanes which were painted purple and the Barranquilleros nicknamed them "The Bishops." These planes covered national routes between the Atlantic Coast, the Eastern Plains and the Capital of the Republic. In mid-September of the same year 74, the company became closed anonymous and the wives and children of the Donado Velilla brothers were included as partners. Raúl Donado Velilla moved to Bogotá with his family and Carlos Alberto Donado Fajardo (finishing his university studies) is linked to the company in Barranquilla. In August 1974, the company acquired a Douglas DC-6 (HK-1706) aircraft in Damascus (Syria) and began international operations to Panama, Margarita Island (Venezuela) and some Caribbean Islands. In the middle of that year, LAC signed an important agreement with the Dutch KLM by means of which Colombian flowers were transported from Bogotá to Curaçao where they made connections to Amsterdam. At that time the leading freight agencies in the market were Colcarga (today UTI) and Florcarga (today DHL Danzas).
Routes
LAC signed an important contract with El Tiempo and El Espectador to transport the press every night from Bogotá to Barranquilla, Cali and Medellín. In August 1977, LAC sold the Curtiss and renewed its fleet by acquiring four DC-6s in auction in Tucson (Arizona) of which two were operated (HK-1702 and HK-1703) and the rest were scrapped for spare parts. With these two new Douglas DC-6B, the newly approved route to Miami began operating in October with three new weekly frequencies, weekly flights to Panama are increased to three, and the new route to Caracas is opened. In March 1978 the fifth DC-6B arrives and the company restructures its flying routes:
- Three weekly frequencies on the Bogota-Barranquilla-Miami route
- Three weekly frequencies to Caracas
- Four weekly frequencies to Panama
- Three weekly frequencies to Curaçao
- A weekly flight to Pointe-a-Pitre
- Six weekly flights Bogota-Cartagena-Barranquilla-Bogota
- Six weekly flights Bogota-Medellin-Bogota [3]
Fleet
Reg |
Aircraft |
Description |
---|---|---|
HK-805
|
Douglas DC-3 | Only one was leased from an unknown airline and that was the only DC-3 in their entire fleet. |
Multiple plane numbers
|
Douglas DC-6 | A total of 6 were bought and operated in Santa Marta, Bogota, Subachoque, and Sierra Cucuy [4] |
N524SJ
|
Boeing 707 | Only one was bought from Southern Air and was leased from 1986–1988. |
HK-1282
|
Curtiss C-46 Commando | Commissioned from 1975 to 1976. |
Multiple plane numbers
|
Douglas DC-8 | DC-8 mainly operated out of Medellin, Barranquilla, and Asuncion.[5] |
See also
References
- ^ "LAC Colombia - Lineas Aereas Del Caribe Fleet Details and History". Planespotters.net.
- ^ "LAC (Lineas Aereas del Caribe)". airlinehistory.co.uk/.
- ^ Christian Volpati. "Líneas Aéreas del Caribe - LAC". aviacol.net.
- ^ "Líneas Aéreas del Caribe - LAC Colombia". aviation-safety.net.
- ^ "FLOTTE". aerobernie.blaced.net.