In the decades leading up to the 1970s, passenger air transport was the
preserve of the well-to-do who flew on airliners driven by propellers.
Over the next few years all this was about to change. The passenger air
transport industry underwent a great transformation with the
introduction of many innovations that established the foundations for
today. The state airlines, BEA and BOAC, were merged to form British
Airways in 1974. Throughout the decade they were far and away the most
important operator of scheduled services in the country. To provide
competition, however, the independent carrier British Caledonian was
created. The first Boeing 747 jumbo jet was delivered to BOAC in 1970.
This wide-body airliner enabled fares to be reduced and opened up air
travel to many people who could not previously afford it. Laker Airways
pioneered the concept of the low-cost airline. It was the first British
independent airline to operate wide-bodied jets in the form of DC-10s,
which entered service in 1972. Most of the other British independent
airlines had to make do with a motley collection of old airliners, many
of them turboprops. The charter and holiday market was the main market
for a large number of these carriers. They were regular visitors to the
main airports throughout Britain, particularly at weekends. There were,
however, few scheduled passenger air services to foreign countries from
airports other than Heathrow and Gatwick. Almost all were either flown
by British Airways or a state-owned carrier from another country.
Overseas independent airlines, like their British equivalents, generally
only served the holiday market. In this book, Malcolm Fife uses his
excellent collection of colour photographs to illustrate the airliners
in commercial use that could be seen at airports during the 1970s.