Magazine articles on Eastern Airlines, 1984

Business Atlanta ""Mayday! Mayday!"", Panama City Tour Guide ""Eastern Metro Express"", Air International ""Scottish Accent on the North Atlantic"". The Eastern Airlines Collection, 1927-2008 (bulk 1965-2008), consists of news clippings, pr...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wills, Carolyn Lee
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Georgia State University Library 1984
Subjects:
Online Access:http://digitalcollections.library.gsu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/eastern/id/51204
id ftgeorgiastunidc:oai:digitalcollections.library.gsu.edu:eastern/51204
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection Georgia State University Library Digital Collections
op_collection_id ftgeorgiastunidc
language English
topic Airlines
Aeronautics
Commercial
Airlines--Public relations
Eastern Air Lines. Southern Region Public Relations Office
Eastern Air Lines
spellingShingle Airlines
Aeronautics
Commercial
Airlines--Public relations
Eastern Air Lines. Southern Region Public Relations Office
Eastern Air Lines
Wills, Carolyn Lee
Magazine articles on Eastern Airlines, 1984
topic_facet Airlines
Aeronautics
Commercial
Airlines--Public relations
Eastern Air Lines. Southern Region Public Relations Office
Eastern Air Lines
description Business Atlanta ""Mayday! Mayday!"", Panama City Tour Guide ""Eastern Metro Express"", Air International ""Scottish Accent on the North Atlantic"". The Eastern Airlines Collection, 1927-2008 (bulk 1965-2008), consists of news clippings, press releases, newsletters, annual reports, monthly reports, correspondence, memoranda, photographs, slides, an early scrapbook (or day book), artifacts (promotional items) and audiovisual materials. This collection mainly provides insight into publicity and outreach efforts at Eastern Airlines, but also its history, charitable work, and day-to-day operations. The materials were accumulated by Carolyn Lee Wills, who worked in the Public Relations Department of Eastern's Southern Regional Office from 1965 until 1987. Carolyn Lee Wills graduated from Georgia State University, where she studied journalism, history and speech. She also participated in many extra-curricular activities including Panhellenic Council, Delta Zeta Sorority, and yearbook. Before she began her work at Eastern Airlines, she traveled extensively throughout Europe, Asia, North and South America, Jamaica, the Bahamas, and Bermuda.; In 1965, Wills joined Eastern Airlines as a Representative of Women's Activities. In this role, she interpreted the company's program to women by working in the fields of fashion, radio, television, public relations, and promotions. In 1971, Wills became made Regional Manager of Public Relations. Eastern Airlines closed its Atlanta offices in November 1973, but found it difficult to cover their public relations needs in Atlanta from their headquarters in Miami. Four months after closing, Wills was re-hired by Eastern to manage the Southern Division covering Atlanta to Tokyo. While employed by Eastern Airlines, Wills served on many boards including American Women in Radio and Television, Georgia State University Alumni Association, and was a national representative of Delta Zeta Sorority. In 1966, she married attorney Charles H. Wills. The earliest incarnation of Eastern Airlines was Pitcairn Aviation, founded in 1927, which was the U.S. Postal Service contractor flying from New York to Atlanta. In 1930, the carrier was sold to North American Aviation owner Clement Keys and was renamed Eastern Air Transport. It soon added passenger routes and adopted the name Eastern Air Lines. Throughout the pre-World War II era, Eastern dominated passenger travel and air transport along the Atlantic coast, including the introduction of one-day service from New York to Miami in 1932. Famed pilot Eddie Rickenbacker bought the company in 1938 and was closely identified with it until his 1963 retirement. During the air travel boom of the 1950s and 1960s, Eastern Airlines grew into one of the ""Big Four"" United States carriers, enhancing its status as the lead air travel carrier on domestic east coast flights with the introduction of air shuttle service in 1961. Shuttle service was created as an alternative to bus routes and included hourly flights from Atlanta to Washington D.C., New York, and Boston. During this time, Eastern Airlines also expanded international service to Mexico, Bermuda, Puerto Rico, and Canada. Under the leadership of former astronaut Frank Borman (hired as an advisor in 1969, he became Chief Executive Officer in 1975), Eastern Airlines enjoyed continued successes in the industry until the enactment of the Airline Deregulation Act of 1978.; Beginning with Eastern's early U.S. Postal Service government contract, the company had relied upon the regulated and protective policies governing the airline industry. Without government protection, Eastern's profits began to make a downward turn that eventually culminated in the selling of the company to Texas Air International, headed by Frank Lorenzo. Following deregulation, Lorenzo was able to purchase multiple airlines including Continental, Frontier, New York Air, and Eastern. To cut costs in the midst of declining profits, Lorenzo asked Eastern's union employees to take massive pay cuts in wages and benefits. Union workers refused to accept Lorenzo's demands and opted to go on strike. By claiming bankruptcy in 1989, Lorenzo was able to hire non-union workers to fill the jobs of striking employees. Lorenzo took his demands a step further when he asked the machinists' union to take a pay cut, which resulted in another strike that dealt the final blow to any hope that Eastern Airlines would recover lost profits. In 1991, Eastern Airlines was permanently grounded. Eastern's main hubs in Atlanta and Miami were taken over by various competitors and its concourses in New York and Newark were demolished. Information not pertaining to Eastern Air Lines has been redacted from this item.
format Text
author Wills, Carolyn Lee
author_facet Wills, Carolyn Lee
author_sort Wills, Carolyn Lee
title Magazine articles on Eastern Airlines, 1984
title_short Magazine articles on Eastern Airlines, 1984
title_full Magazine articles on Eastern Airlines, 1984
title_fullStr Magazine articles on Eastern Airlines, 1984
title_full_unstemmed Magazine articles on Eastern Airlines, 1984
title_sort magazine articles on eastern airlines, 1984
publisher Georgia State University Library
publishDate 1984
url http://digitalcollections.library.gsu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/eastern/id/51204
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_source Carolyn Lee Wills collection of Eastern Airlines' Southern Region Public Relations Office records
op_relation SERIES III: Publicity, 1951-2008
Southern Labor Archives
https://archivesspace.library.gsu.edu/repositories/2/resources/421
L1986-27_11_06
http://digitalcollections.library.gsu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/eastern/id/51204
op_rights These materials, gathered by the donor from many sources, have been digitized for preservation purposes and are being made available on the Internet for scholarship, educational, and personal use only. These materials document a thematic assemblage of manuscript, photographic, and printed research materials, and neither the donor nor Georgia State University claims ownership of the intellectual property rights for printed materials not created by the donor or Georgia State University. If you are a copyright holder of any part of the content and believe that that content should not be made publicly available, please contact Special Collections and Archives.
L1986-27_11_06, Carolyn Lee Wills collection of Eastern Airlines' Southern Region Public Relations Office records, Southern Labor Archives. Special Collections and Archives, Georgia State University.
_version_ 1766137531515011072
spelling ftgeorgiastunidc:oai:digitalcollections.library.gsu.edu:eastern/51204 2023-05-15T17:37:32+02:00 Magazine articles on Eastern Airlines, 1984 Wills, Carolyn Lee 1984 files (document groupings) application/pdf http://digitalcollections.library.gsu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/eastern/id/51204 English eng Georgia State University Library SERIES III: Publicity, 1951-2008 Southern Labor Archives https://archivesspace.library.gsu.edu/repositories/2/resources/421 L1986-27_11_06 http://digitalcollections.library.gsu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/eastern/id/51204 These materials, gathered by the donor from many sources, have been digitized for preservation purposes and are being made available on the Internet for scholarship, educational, and personal use only. These materials document a thematic assemblage of manuscript, photographic, and printed research materials, and neither the donor nor Georgia State University claims ownership of the intellectual property rights for printed materials not created by the donor or Georgia State University. If you are a copyright holder of any part of the content and believe that that content should not be made publicly available, please contact Special Collections and Archives. L1986-27_11_06, Carolyn Lee Wills collection of Eastern Airlines' Southern Region Public Relations Office records, Southern Labor Archives. Special Collections and Archives, Georgia State University. Carolyn Lee Wills collection of Eastern Airlines' Southern Region Public Relations Office records Airlines Aeronautics Commercial Airlines--Public relations Eastern Air Lines. Southern Region Public Relations Office Eastern Air Lines Text 1984 ftgeorgiastunidc 2019-05-12T15:04:13Z Business Atlanta ""Mayday! Mayday!"", Panama City Tour Guide ""Eastern Metro Express"", Air International ""Scottish Accent on the North Atlantic"". The Eastern Airlines Collection, 1927-2008 (bulk 1965-2008), consists of news clippings, press releases, newsletters, annual reports, monthly reports, correspondence, memoranda, photographs, slides, an early scrapbook (or day book), artifacts (promotional items) and audiovisual materials. This collection mainly provides insight into publicity and outreach efforts at Eastern Airlines, but also its history, charitable work, and day-to-day operations. The materials were accumulated by Carolyn Lee Wills, who worked in the Public Relations Department of Eastern's Southern Regional Office from 1965 until 1987. Carolyn Lee Wills graduated from Georgia State University, where she studied journalism, history and speech. She also participated in many extra-curricular activities including Panhellenic Council, Delta Zeta Sorority, and yearbook. Before she began her work at Eastern Airlines, she traveled extensively throughout Europe, Asia, North and South America, Jamaica, the Bahamas, and Bermuda.; In 1965, Wills joined Eastern Airlines as a Representative of Women's Activities. In this role, she interpreted the company's program to women by working in the fields of fashion, radio, television, public relations, and promotions. In 1971, Wills became made Regional Manager of Public Relations. Eastern Airlines closed its Atlanta offices in November 1973, but found it difficult to cover their public relations needs in Atlanta from their headquarters in Miami. Four months after closing, Wills was re-hired by Eastern to manage the Southern Division covering Atlanta to Tokyo. While employed by Eastern Airlines, Wills served on many boards including American Women in Radio and Television, Georgia State University Alumni Association, and was a national representative of Delta Zeta Sorority. In 1966, she married attorney Charles H. Wills. The earliest incarnation of Eastern Airlines was Pitcairn Aviation, founded in 1927, which was the U.S. Postal Service contractor flying from New York to Atlanta. In 1930, the carrier was sold to North American Aviation owner Clement Keys and was renamed Eastern Air Transport. It soon added passenger routes and adopted the name Eastern Air Lines. Throughout the pre-World War II era, Eastern dominated passenger travel and air transport along the Atlantic coast, including the introduction of one-day service from New York to Miami in 1932. Famed pilot Eddie Rickenbacker bought the company in 1938 and was closely identified with it until his 1963 retirement. During the air travel boom of the 1950s and 1960s, Eastern Airlines grew into one of the ""Big Four"" United States carriers, enhancing its status as the lead air travel carrier on domestic east coast flights with the introduction of air shuttle service in 1961. Shuttle service was created as an alternative to bus routes and included hourly flights from Atlanta to Washington D.C., New York, and Boston. During this time, Eastern Airlines also expanded international service to Mexico, Bermuda, Puerto Rico, and Canada. Under the leadership of former astronaut Frank Borman (hired as an advisor in 1969, he became Chief Executive Officer in 1975), Eastern Airlines enjoyed continued successes in the industry until the enactment of the Airline Deregulation Act of 1978.; Beginning with Eastern's early U.S. Postal Service government contract, the company had relied upon the regulated and protective policies governing the airline industry. Without government protection, Eastern's profits began to make a downward turn that eventually culminated in the selling of the company to Texas Air International, headed by Frank Lorenzo. Following deregulation, Lorenzo was able to purchase multiple airlines including Continental, Frontier, New York Air, and Eastern. To cut costs in the midst of declining profits, Lorenzo asked Eastern's union employees to take massive pay cuts in wages and benefits. Union workers refused to accept Lorenzo's demands and opted to go on strike. By claiming bankruptcy in 1989, Lorenzo was able to hire non-union workers to fill the jobs of striking employees. Lorenzo took his demands a step further when he asked the machinists' union to take a pay cut, which resulted in another strike that dealt the final blow to any hope that Eastern Airlines would recover lost profits. In 1991, Eastern Airlines was permanently grounded. Eastern's main hubs in Atlanta and Miami were taken over by various competitors and its concourses in New York and Newark were demolished. Information not pertaining to Eastern Air Lines has been redacted from this item. Text North Atlantic Georgia State University Library Digital Collections Canada