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1900 to 19091910 to 19191920 to 19291930 to 19391940 to 19491950 to 19591960 to 19691970 to 19791980 to 19891990 to 19992000 to 2009
Aviation Timeline 1970 to 1979
  January 21, 1970     Pan Am inaugurates commercial service of the Boeing 747 with its New York to London flight. Later that year, TWA would become the first domestic airline to offer 747 service. The 747 would transform the airline industry, allowing more people to fly further and more economically. Over the next three decades, the 747 would fly over 2.2 billion passengers.  
   
   
  March 24, 1971     Congress votes to end further funding for development of an American-produced supersonic transport (SST). Public protests about noise pollution caused by sonic booms, plus concerns about the SST's enormous expense, led to its demise. The project had cost taxpayers over $1 billion and not a single plane had been built.  
   
   
  June 18, 1971     Southwest Airlines Herb Kelleher and Rollin King form Southwest Airlines with service between Houston, Dallas, and San Antonio. Unencumbered by federal regulations, regional airlines like Southwest find success by being able to offer reduced air fares.  
   
   
  August 6, 1971     McDonnell Douglas' DC-10 begins commercial service with American Airlines. Closely resembling the Lockheed L-1011, the DC-10 places one engine under each wing, with the third engine mounted on the tail of the plane.  
   
   
  April 26, 1972     The Lockheed L-1011 TriStar begins service with Eastern Airlines. The L-1011 was Lockheed's entry into the mid-range widebody commercial aircraft market. Remarkably similar in appearance to the DC-10, the L-1011 ran into major production delays due to delivery problems with Rolls-Royce's turbofan engines. L-1011  
   
   
  May 23, 1974     Airbus A300 Air France begins commercial airlines service with the Airbus A300. Formed in the late 1960s in order to compete with American airline industry, Airbus Industrie is comprised of German, French, Spanish and British manufacturers. Airbus reached a historic milestone in April of 1977 when it makes its first sale to a U.S. carrier, Eastern Airlines.  
   
   
  January 21, 1976     The Concorde officially begins commercial service with an Air France flight from Paris to Buenos Aires and a British Airways flight from London to Bahrain. Production of the Concorde would end in 1979 when it becomes clear no other commercial airlines would purchase the supersonic jet. Only 16 are ever produced.  
   
   
  October 24, 1978     Congress approves the Airline Deregulation Act, which allows U. S. airlines to choose their own routes and set their own fares. From this point forward, American airlines would live and die by the demands of the marketplace.  
   
   
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1900 to 19091910 to 19191920 to 19291930 to 19391940 to 19491950 to 19591960 to 19691970 to 19791980 to 19891990 to 19992000 to 2009
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