SCADTA
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
SCADTA | ||
---|---|---|
IATA ' |
ICAO ' |
Callsign SCADTA |
Founded | December 5, 1919 | |
Fleet size | ||
Destinations | ||
Headquarters | Barranquilla, Colombia | |
Key people | Ernesto Cortissoz, 1st CEO | |
Website: www.avianca.com |
SCADTA (acronym of Sociedad Colombo Alemana de Transporte Aéreo) was Latin America's first airline, operating from 1919 until World War II. After the end of World War II, SCADTA merged with Colombian regional carrier SACO to form the current Colombian Flag Carrier: Avianca.
SCADTA started out as a small airmail carrier in Colombia, working with Junkers hydro-planes that were capable of landing in Colombia's Magdalena River, mostly due to the fact there were very few suitable landing strips in Colombia at the time. The company's German ownership motivated the U.S. government to subsidize Pan American World Airways expansion in Latin America under the Hoover administration. SCADTA was barred from operating flights to the US and the Panama Canal, although it continued to maintain a broad route network in the Andes region. The formation of Panagra in the 1930s further eroded SCADTA's position in the market. Prior to World War II, the principal shareholder, an Austrian called Von Bauer, secretly sold his shares to United States in an attempt to protect acquisition of the airline by the Nazi Government. In 1941, following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, SCADTA was forced to cease operations and its assets were merged by the Colombian government into the state owned airline SACO, forming the modern Colombian national carrier: Avianca.
Avianca • Avianca Cargo • AviancaPlus • Avianca Services • Capital Airlines • Deskubra • Helicol • OceanAir • SAM • VIP • Wayraperú
Timeline of aviation
Aircraft · Aircraft manufacturers · Aircraft engines · Aircraft engine manufacturers · Airports · Airlines
Air forces · Aircraft weapons · Missiles · Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) · Experimental aircraft
Notable military accidents and incidents · Notable airline accidents and incidents · Famous aviation-related deaths
Flight airspeed record · Flight distance record · Flight altitude record · Flight endurance record · Most produced aircraft