Today marks 90 years of Delta service to Atlanta, the airline's corporate home and largest operational hub. It all started with trial service on June 12, 1930. Five-passenger Travel Air planes flew one daily nonstop to and from Birmingham, Alabama. Daily service started June 18th.
Delta travel poster, early 1950s. Shows aerial view of downtown Atlanta, including the state capitol in the foreground (with gold dome).
If you took the Delta morning flight out of Atlanta in mid-June 1930, you could reach Birmingham in an hour and a half, and Ft. Worth, Texas, by mid afternoon. The fare to Birmingham cost $9.80, half as much as railroad fare at the time. For more details, see this Atlanta Journal article describing the initial service.
After a week of trial runs, daily Atlanta service began on June 18, 1930. Delta was celebrating its first year of passenger service and a "remarkable record of safety and efficiency, having flown 251,000 miles without an accident and with a 90 percent average of 'on time' arrivals and departures," noted the Atlanta Constitution newspaper.
Cover of Delta's June 17, 1930 timetable announcing the new daily service to Atlanta. You can browse this entire timetable in our Public Digital Archives.
Checking in for a Delta flight at Atlanta, mid-late 1930s.
Delta headquarters moved to Atlanta in 1941, and Delta is the oldest continuous tenant at the Atlanta airport (since 1934).
Linen postcard shows a Delta Douglas DC-2 at Atlanta, 1940. On reverse, the airport is described as the "Hub of Southeastern Aviation."
Delta's grown with this "transportation hub" city, and over the years celebrated many firsts in Atlanta air service, including:
Congratulations on 90 years, Delta ATL!
Marie Force
Archives Director
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