British Airways and the history of Avios
Explore the heritage of Britain's most popular airline and its reward program, Avios
The History of BA It seems hard to believe but British Airways can trace its history back to biplanes. Civil aviation began shortly after World War I and some early passenger flights were made in converted bombers. The world’s first daily international scheduled air service, between London and Paris, was launched from Hounslow Heath on August 25 1919 by Aircraft Transport and Travel Limited (AT&T). That first flight carried just one passenger along with the unlikely holiday essentials of Devonshire cream, jam and several braces of grouse. Other airline pioneers followed suit, taking handfuls of passengers to Europe. In 1924, planning to establish air routes to Africa, India and Australia, the government launched Imperial Airways. By the thirties, the airline even offered services by flying boat. In 1935 four pioneering independent airlines merged to form British Airways Limited. Five years later, this was nationalised and combined with Imperial Airways to create British Overseas Airways Corporation (BOAC). BOAC operated throughout World War II and beyond, alongside two other new state airlines.