Freddie Laker (Entrepreneur) – Overview, Biography

Name:Freddie Laker
Occupation: Entrepreneur
Gender:Male
Birth Day: August 6,
1922
Death Date:Feb 9, 2006 (age 83)
Age: Aged 83
Country: England
Zodiac Sign:Leo

Freddie Laker

Freddie Laker was born on August 6, 1922 in England (83 years old). Freddie Laker is an Entrepreneur, zodiac sign: Leo. Nationality: England. Approx. Net Worth: Undisclosed.

Trivia

In Laker’s honor, Virgin Atlantic named one of its airplane models “The Spirit of Sir Freddie.”

Net Worth 2020

Undisclosed
Find out more about Freddie Laker net worth here.

Does Freddie Laker Dead or Alive?

As per our current Database, Freddie Laker died on Feb 9, 2006 (age 83).

Physique

HeightWeightHair ColourEye ColourBlood TypeTattoo(s)
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Before Fame

After being forced to leave the Simon Langton Grammar School for Boys, he worked for an aviation company called Short Brothers before joining the Air Transport Auxiliary during the World War II years.

Biography

Biography Timeline

1947

Freddie Laker founded Aviation Traders in October 1947. It was based at Southend Airport, Essex, England and specialised in converting numerous war-surplus bombers and transporters into freighters. This included the conversion of Handley Page Halifax bombers into freighters, six of which were sold to Bond Air Services, an early post-war British independent airline. Bond Air Services based these planes at Wunstorf aerodrome in West Germany to carry essential supplies into West Berlin during the Berlin Blockade of 1948–49. Bond Air Services furthermore contracted Aviation Traders to service these planes. In return, Aviation Traders got half of Bond Air Services’ freight charges.

1949

Following the end of the Berlin Airlift in 1949, Laker had most of the Halifaxes he had supplied to various independent airlines during the Airlift scrapped at its Southend facilities. He also made use of these facilities for the subsequent conversion of several DC-4/C-54 Skymaster airframes into Carvairs for various operators around the world.

1951

In 1951, Aviation Traders (Engineering), a sister company of Aviation Traders, won a contract from Bristol Aircraft to manufacture wing centre sections for Bristol Freighters. Between the beginning of 1952 and the end of 1955, Aviation Traders (Engineering) built 50 wing sections for Bristol Aircraft.

This was his first airline venture, which he took over in 1951. Since its inception in 1947, Air Charter had been based at London’s old Croydon Airport. The airline participated in the 1948–49 Berlin Airlift. (Following the end of the Airlift in 1949, Laker sold the Air Charter Yorks that were still airworthy to other independent airlines, two of which were acquired by Dan-Air in 1956).)

1954

By 1954, Channel Air Bridge, his second airline venture, was flying cars and their owners in Bristol Freighters from Southend Airport (Rochford) to Calais.

His second airline venture began flying cars and their owners across the English Channel in 1954, initially using a fleet of Bristol Freighter twin-engined, piston-powered planes. These were later supplemented and eventually superseded by the larger-capacity, four-engined Carvairs. The Carvair design was based on the Douglas DC-4 piston-engined airliner. It involved raising the aircraft’s cockpit “above” the fuselage in a 747-style bulge so as to create more space for vehicles and/or passengers on the main deck. It also involved replacing the DC-4’s original tail fin with a newly designed, larger DC-7-style fin as well as equipping the aircraft with a Bristol Freighter-type nose-loading cargo door, more powerful brakes and a stronger undercarriage.

1955

On 14 April 1955, Air Charter inaugurated its first vehicle ferry service between Southend and Calais using a Bristol 170 Mark 32 Super Freighter.

1958

In 1958, he sold Air Charter, Aviation Traders and Channel Air Bridge to Airwork. All three companies joined the Airwork group in 1959. Following the Airwork–Hunting-Clan merger in 1960, he became managing director of British United Airways.

In 1958, Laker announced his decision to sell both Aviation Traders and Air Charter to Airwork for £600,000 cash plus a further £200,000, subject to the valuation of stock. The deal became effective in January 1959, when Aviation Traders and Air Charter joined the Airwork group.

In 1958, Laker announced his decision to sell both Air Charter and Aviation Traders to Airwork for £600,000 cash plus a further £200,000, subject to the valuation of stock.

1959

In January 1959, Air Charter became a subsidiary of the Airwork group.

Following a rationalisation of Air Charter’s flight crew and ground staff in February 1959, Laker decided to transfer all vehicle ferry services along with the Bristol 170 fleet to the newly formed Channel Air Bridge.

At the end of 1958, he sold Channel Air Bridge together with his other two companies – Air Charter and Aviation Traders – to Airwork. All three officially became part of the Airwork group in January 1959. In June 1960 Airwork and Hunting-Clan merged to form British United Airways. Channel Air Bridge continued operating under its own identity for more than two years.

1960

Air Charter was absorbed into British United Airways in June 1960, as a result of Airwork’s merger with Hunting-Clan and several other contemporary, British independent operators.

1961

In 1961, British United became the launch customer for the BAC One-Eleven short haul jetliner when it placed an order for ten series 200 aircraft. Laker had personally negotiated this deal with the manufacturer. This was the first time that an independent airline had placed an order for brand-new jets. The first of the new One-Elevens entered service on 9 April 1965, on the airline’s scheduled London Gatwick—Genoa route. Laker also placed an order for Vickers VC10 series 1103 long-haul jets on behalf of British United. The first two aircraft were delivered towards the end of 1964. (These aircraft differed from other operators’ VC10s by having a large cargo door on the left-hand side of the forward fuselage where the aircraft’s first class section was located. They also had extended wingtips that were slightly bent downwards to reduce the aircraft’s cruise drag as well as to help it overcome the instability encountered when entering a stall.)

1963

On 1 January 1963, Channel Air Bridge merged with Silver City Airways, which had pioneered commercial cross-Channel vehicle ferry flights in 1948. The merged entity traded as British United Air Ferries.

1964

Laker was furthermore instrumental in securing the transfer of the traffic rights for BOAC’s loss-making South American routes to Argentina, Brazil, Chile and Uruguay to British United. The airline commenced service on these routes in November 1964 using its brand-new VC10s and managed to make them profitable within five years.

1965

He left British United in 1965 and formed his own Laker Airways, in 1966, initially operating charter flights with a pair of turboprop planes acquired second-hand from British Overseas Airways Corporation (BOAC). The livery was a mixture of black and red with a bold LAKER logo on the tailplane. He offered a new, revolutionary concept of economic air travel requiring passengers to purchase their tickets on the day of travel as well as to buy their own food. These flights were operated by Laker Airways and marketed under the Skytrain trademark.

In 1965, Laker decided to leave British United to set up his own airline following an alleged disagreement with British United’s chairman Myles Wyatt.

1966

Laker Airways was formed in 1966. This was Laker’s third and most prominent airline venture. Laker Airways commenced commercial airline operations that July with a fleet of two ex-BOAC Bristol Britannias. These were subsequently supplemented and eventually replaced with a brand-new fleet of BAC One-Eleven jetliners as well as a pair of second-hand Boeing 707 jets.

1969

In 1969, Laker Airways announced its intention to buy the proposed BAC Three-Eleven, an all-British widebodied jet powered by two rear-mounted Rolls-Royce RB211 engines. The airline’s letter of intent was for four aircraft to be delivered in 1974. It was anticipated that these 250-seaters would replace the entire narrow-bodied fleet, which was envisaged to comprise two 158-seat Boeing 707s and four 84-seat BAC One-Elevens by that time. Following the project’s cancellation in 1971 due to a lack of Government funding, Laker remarked that this would force him to spend the £3 billion he had planned to invest by 1986 in a fleet of British-built widebodied airliners (including options) on competing foreign models.

1971

On 15 June 1971, Laker Airways submitted an application to the UK’s Air Transport Licensing Board (ATLB), one of the forerunners of today’s Civil Aviation Authority (CAA), to launch the world’s first daily transatlantic, low-fare scheduled service between London and New York City, charging a then incredibly low one-way fare of £32.50 in winter and £37.50 in summer. This was one third of what the major, established “flag carriers” were charging at the time. The proposed service was to be marketed using the Skytrain trademark and was to be initially operated with 158-seat, single-class Boeing 707-138Bs that were acquired second-hand. Skytrain was to be a “walk-on”, “walk-off” operation that did not require any advance reservations. Instead, seats were to be sold to the travelling public at each end of the route on a “first come, first served” basis only.

1972

Laker Airways eventually became the first independent British airline to actually operate widebodied equipment when it introduced its first two McDonnell Douglas DC-10-10 series aircraft into commercial airline service in November 1972, the first European operator to do so. These aircraft were the first UK-registered DC-10s.

The ATLB rejected Laker’s application before the year was out, and Laker appealed the ruling. The appeal was successful, and the ATLB eventually granted Laker the requested licence in February 1972.

However, on 30 March 1972, the UK government revoked Laker’s licence and instructed him to reapply to the CAA, which came into being on 1 April 1972.

The newly formed CAA approved Laker’s application on 5 October 1972, granting a ten-year licence. However, it specified Stansted rather than Gatwick as the service’s UK departure/arrival point and limited the number of seats that could be sold in winter to 189 per trip, the maximum number of passengers a Boeing 707 could accommodate in a high-density, all-economy configuration. The unexpected change of the UK departure/arrival point for Laker’s Skytrain service as well as its capacity limit during the lean winter season were intended not to undermine the planned launch of a daily British Caledonian (BCal) Gatwick—JFK full-service scheduled operation, for which the ATLB had already granted that airline a 15-year licence, along with another 15-year licence for a daily Gatwick—Los Angeles International Airport full-service scheduled operation, during the so-called “cannon ball” hearings earlier the same year.

1973

In 1973, Laker Airways operated the world’s first Advance Booking Charter (ABC) flight. By the mid-1970s it had become the undisputed, global ABC flight market leader.

The UK government designated Laker Airways as a scheduled transatlantic UK “flag” carrier on 11 January 1973.

1975

However, under intense pressure from the established airlines, including Laker’s archrival and next-door Gatwick neighbour BCal, against a backdrop of huge losses and overcapacity on the North Atlantic in the aftermath of the global energy crisis caused by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries’ oil embargo, the UK’s Labour government of that era decided to revoke Laker’s licence on 29 July 1975.

1976

In the meantime, Peter Shore, the then Secretary of State for Trade, had conducted a review of the government’s aviation policy and in 1976 announced a new “spheres of influence” policy that ended dual designation for British airlines on all long-haul routes. As a result of this new aviation policy, BA and BCal were no longer permitted to run competing scheduled services on the same long-haul routes and the latter was forced to withdraw from the London—New York and London—Los Angeles routes, resulting in the suspension of BCal’s Gatwick—JFK and Gatwick—Los Angeles licences. The same year, Edmund Dell, Peter Shore’s successor, renounced the original Bermuda air services agreement of 1946 and initiated bilateral negotiations with his US counterparts on a new air services agreement, which resulted in the Bermuda II treaty of 1977.

A closer analysis comparing the figures for October 1977 compared with those of the same month in 1976 had shown an increase of 31.8% (37,902 passengers) for all airlines. A further breakdown of these figures had shown that Laker’s “Skytrain” accounted for 15% (17,501 passengers) of the overall increase while competing services of rival airlines accounted for the remaining 16.8% (20,401 passengers). The latter included IATA members British Airways, Pan Am, and TWA, which had initially opposed “Skytrain” but subsequently matched its low fares. (Statistics for November and December 1977, as well as for January—June 1978, had also shown that the overall monthly growth in the London—New York market was maintained at that level for the remainder of this period while Skytrain managed to grow its share of the overall monthly increase to 50% and keep up this performance until the end of the period.)

1977

Following the successful launch of Skytrain in 1977 he was knighted the following year in recognition of his services to the airline industry.

Laker Airways scored another industry first when it introduced its first daily Skytrain low-fare scheduled service between London Gatwick and New York John F. Kennedy Airport on 26 September 1977.

It took another two years until Laker gained final approval, including a reciprocal permit from the relevant US authorities, which was granted for a one-year experimental period on 13 June 1977 by US President Jimmy Carter – to commence Skytrain.

Laker’s long-running Skytrain application was finally granted in 1977 upon designating the airline as the second UK flag carrier between London and New York under the then just-concluded Bermuda II UK-US air agreement. At the last minute prior to the inaugural Skytrain flight from London to New York, Laker also received government permission to use its Gatwick base as the service’s UK departure and arrival point, rather than Stansted as originally specified in its licence. The restriction limiting it to 189 seats per aircraft in winter was lifted as well and the baggage allowance was brought into line with International Air Transport Association (IATA) rules.

Skytrain took to the air for the first time on 26 September 1977 when the inaugural flight departed London Gatwick for New York JFK. This flight carried 272 passengers on one of the airline’s 345-seat McDonnell Douglas DC-10 widebodied aircraft. The fares charged at the time were £59 (equivalent to £369 in 2019) one-way from London and $135 (equivalent to £845 in 2019) one-way from New York.

Laker claimed that Skytrain helped to grow passenger numbers for all airlines in the London—New York market, citing statistics comparing passenger numbers for the July—September peak season in 1977 with those of the corresponding period in 1976 as evidence. These had shown that in the days before Skytrain, total traffic between London and New York for the aforesaid period in 1977 was down 2% on the same period in 1976. He contrasted these figures with those comparing the October—December 1977 off-peak period with the corresponding 1976 off-peak period. The latter set of figures had shown a 30% increase, boosted by “Skytrain”, which launched on 26 September 1977.

1978

However, it was James Callaghan’s “pro-union” Labour Government that awarded Laker his knighthood for services to the airline industry in 1978, rather than Margaret Thatcher’s subsequent “pro-business” Conservative administration (although the latter had recommended him for his service to private enterprise in her capacity as the then leader of the opposition).

1979

The airline also became one of the early buyers of the first Airbus airliner, the A300, ordering ten of these widebodies in 1979 and had plans to deploy the aircraft on a new network of intra-European Skytrain routes in a big way.

1981

He received an honorary degree from the University of Strathclyde in 1981.

1982

Skytrain came to an end the day the airline went into receivership at the behest of the Midland Bank on 5 February 1982.

In 1982, the company went bankrupt, owing over £250 million (equivalent to £888.77 million in 2019). The airline made its last flight on 5 February 1982, the day it went into receivership.

He was also the subject of a musical, Laker!, as performed at Not in Front of the Audience in 1982, and written by Mel Smith and Peter Brewis in reaction to Laker Airways’ bankruptcy.

1985

Laker divided his final years between his waterfront home in Princess Isle, Grand Bahama Island, where he kept his yacht, The Lady Jacqueline, and Florida. Laker died at the age of 83 in a suburban hospital in Hollywood in Florida, following complications from cardiac surgery to implant a pacemaker. He was survived by his fourth wife, Jacqueline Harvey, a former airline hostess he married in 1985, and also by two of his children. His daughter, Elaine, was by his first wife Joan with whom he also had a son, Kevin, who died in 1965 at the age of 17 after crashing a sports car Freddie had given him for his birthday. His son Freddie Allen Laker – also a successful entrepreneur – was born to his third wife, Patricia Gates, with whom he also had another son who died in infancy.

1988

In 1988, InsideFlyer magazine’s editor and publisher Randy Petersen created the Freddie Awards to honor Freddie Laker’s accomplishments in marketing travel. The awards recognize excellence in frequent traveler awards programs. The Freddie Awards were touted as the frequent traveler’s answer to the Oscar, Emmy and Grammy Awards by Petersen. The individual categories for the Freddie Awards are Best Award, Best Bonus, Best Affinity Credit Card, Best Newsletter/Member Communications, Best Web Site, Best Customer Service, Best Award Redemption, Best Elite Level and Program of the Year.

2005

Laker, by now living in the Bahamas, got off the ground again in the early 1990s, moving his refounded business’s base to Freeport. Laker Airways flew from there until it shut down in 2005. It was Laker’s final airline venture.

2012

When the new passenger terminal at London Southend Airport was opened in 2012, the upstairs bar was named Laker’s Bar, and featured a montage of Laker and his airline across the walls. In 2015, the bar was moved into the departure lounge and renamed Laker’s Bar & Restaurant, and still displays historic images in various frames on the wall.

2017

Virgin Atlantic had earlier named one of its Boeing 747s The Spirit of Sir Freddie. In addition, Malaysia’s low-cost, long-haul carrier AirAsia X named its first Airbus A330 Semangat Sir Freddie in homage to the pioneer of “no-frills” air travel. The third plane to be named in spirit after Freddie Laker happens to be a Boeing 737 MAX that belongs to Norwegian Air Shuttle, delivered in May 2017. He has also recently been applied to a Norwegian Air Sweden Boeing 787-9 Dreamliner, with the registration SE-RXZ.

In June 2017, Norwegian Air International placed Laker’s image on the tail of their first 737-8 MAX (EI-FYA). Laker is one of the company’s five “British tail fin heroes”, joining Queen frontman Freddie Mercury, children’s author Roald Dahl, pioneering pilot Amy Johnson and England’s World Cup winning captain Bobby Moore.

🎂 Upcoming Birthday

Currently, Freddie Laker is 100 years, 3 months and 29 days old. Freddie Laker will celebrate 101st birthday on a Sunday 6th of August 2023.

Find out about Freddie Laker birthday activities in timeline view here.

Freddie Laker trends

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