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  1. A United Airlines Boeing 787-9 in the most recent livery landing at Beijing Capital International Airport in April 2020. As of July 2024, the United Airlines fleet consists of 967 mainline aircraft, making it the third-largest commercial airline fleet in the world.

  2. United Airlines, Inc. is a major American airline headquartered at the Willis Tower in Chicago, Illinois. [9] [10] [11] United operates an extensive domestic and international route network across the United States and all six inhabited continents [12] primarily out of its eight hubs, with Chicago–O'Hare having the largest number of daily flights [13] and Denver carrying the most passengers ...

  3. United Airlines, commonly referred to as United, is a major American airline. It was founded in Boise, Idaho in 1926 and it is currently the second largest airline in the United States to date. It is headquartered in Chicago, Illinois.

  4. Get important details on our current and new fleet. Learn more about our aircraft’s seat map, capacity, speed and more.

    • History
    • Predecessors
    • Brand History
    • Former Hubs
    • References
    • External Links

    Beginnings

    United Airlines was the creation of aviation pioneer William Boeing, who started out in the airplane business in 1916. His Boeing Airplane Company, as it was then called, achieved the first international postal delivery in 1919, and he went on to establish United Aircraft Corp. in 1928. It was this UAC that acquired mail and passenger service operator Pacific Air Transport on January 1, 1928, then renamed Boeing Aircraft & Transport Co., merged with Pratt & Whitney Aircraft in early 1929 to f...

    Expansion into a national carrier

    United's early routes, formed by connecting airmail routes, was east-to-west from New York City via Chicago and Salt Lake City to San Francisco, and north–south along the West Coast. The early connections became the basis of United hubs in Chicago and San Francisco, and later in Denverand Washington, D.C.; these remain United's principal hubs. In 1933, United introduced the Boeing 247; for the first time, passengers could fly across the United States without an overnight stop or changing plan...

    Deregulation

    United sought overseas routes in the 1960s, but the 1969 Transpacific Route Case denied it this expansion; it did not gain an overseas route until 1983, when United began flights to Tokyo from Portland and Seattle. United became a proponent of deregulation due to its perception that regulation, as it then existed, was a major constraint on United's ability to profitably grow. After years of focused work to bring about deregulation, the 1978 Airline Deregulation Actbecame law. During the 1970s...

    United Airlines is a combination of a number of air carriers that have merged with each other starting in the 1930s, with the most recent being Continental Airlines (which had previously merged with or acquired several airlines during its history) thus reflecting changes in focus of both United and the U.S. air transport market. United was original...

    Historical logos

    United adopted a red, white and blue shield logo in 1936, but its use varied widely and was eventually abandoned altogether in the early 1970s. Before 1974 and after the use of the shield logo was discontinued, United advertisements and signage usually advertised to customers to "Come Fly the Friendly Skies of United" in a font identical to the "United" font on the "Friendship" livery of the early 1970s. In 1973,[citation needed] the airline commissioned designer Saul Bass to develop a new lo...

    Slogans

    The early slogan "The Main Line Airway," emphasizing its signature New York-Chicago-San Francisco route, was replaced in 1965 with "Fly the Friendly Skies." The "friendly skies" taglinewas used until 1996, yet revived on September 20, 2013. Other United Slogans include: 1. "The Extra Care Airline (1963–1964) 2. "When you're friendly you do things for people" (1971) 3. "The Great Wide Way to New York" (1971–1972) 4. "Your Land is Our Land" (1972) 5. "The Friendly Skies of your land" (also know...

    Cleveland Hopkins International Airport – United Airlines maintained a secondary East Coast hub at Cleveland until 1985, when it began a move to Washington Dulles. By the time the transition finish...
    Miami International Airport – with the acquisition of Pan Am's international routes from Miami to Europe and Latin America in 1991, Miami became a hub for the airline. In May 2004, MIA was dehubbed...
    Stapleton International Airport – Both United and Continental operated hubs at Denver International Airport's predecessor airport, with both hubs active from 1972 until the airport closed in 1995....

    Bibliography

    1. Eastwood A.B. and Roach J.R. Jet Airliner Production List Volume 1 - Boeing. 2003. The Aviation Hobby Shop. ISBN 0-907178-97-9.

    "Making the World's Largest Airline Fly." BusinessWeek. February 2, 2012.
  5. The largest airlines in the world can be defined in several ways. As of 2023, Delta Air Lines was the largest by revenue, assets, market capitalization and brand value; American Airlines Group by passengers carried, fleet size and employees; FedEx Express by freight tonne-kilometers; Southwest Airlines by routes; and Turkish Airlines by ...

  6. Current Fleet. Historic Fleet. United Airlines (IATA: UA / ICAO: UAL) is an airline based in Chicago, United States founded in 1926 currently operating a fleet of 964 aircraft with an average age of 16.24 years.

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