(N6884C serial 59701, shown here in 2007)
DC-8-62F Tucson 1989
DC-8-63F RAF Mildenhall 1985
DC-8-63F Los Angeles 1986
Fire fighting In 1960, pilot William E. "Bill" Rosenbalm, Jr. incorporated Rosenbalm Aviation in Medford, Oregon to
crop dust and bid on
United States Forest Service (USFS) business such as spraying pesticides, seeding land and fighting fires. In 1961 Rosenbaum bought and converted five
B-26s, two
PB4Y-2s and a
PV-2 to drop fire retardant. The company, which won fire-fighting contracts nationwide, also flew the
Kaman H-43A helicopter. In 1973 Rosenbalm became a
Part 121 commercial operator, otherwise known as an uncertificated carrier—authorized to fly large commercial aircraft by the
Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) but only on a contract basis, not as a
common carrier.
Auto parts In November 1973, Rosenbalm bought the
Willow Run Airport (
Ypsilanti, Michigan) business of
Intermountain Aviation, flying auto parts for
Big Three automakers, including four
Curtiss C-46s. Rosenbalm financials were poor, and significantly improved after the purchase. In 1988, Bill Rosenbalm refused to discuss how he had afforded the acquisition. In 1974, Intermountain was revealed to be owned by the
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). Rosenbalm would later "piggyback" on the airline certificate of
Evergreen International Airlines (EIA), paying a commission to operate aircraft as a common carrier under EIA's authority. Evergreen had similar origins to Rosenbalm: Oregon-based, operated for USFS, and bought the remaining Intermountain assets in early 1975. In 1975 Rosenbalm took its first
Douglas DC-8, also the year that it obtained a
supplemental type certificate to convert DC-8s to cargo configuration.
Contract flying The
Air Cargo Deregulation Act passed in late 1977, deregulating the US domestic cargo market. As a result of this, Rosenbalm received a domestic cargo certificate in May 1979, making it a common carrier. By the mid 1980s,
Burlington Air Express,
CF AirFreight,
Emery Worldwide,
Purolator Courier and
United Parcel Service (UPS) all had air freight and/or package express operations, all of which used contract airlines to operate the aircraft. Rosenbalm was one such airline. In this model, Rosenbalm operated "client-owned" aircraft, supplying crew and maintenance. By the mid-1980s Rosenbalm flew for Emery and Burlington and later added CF AirFreight. The airline grew strongly and profitably during this period; annual revenues increased from $12 million in 1985 to $57 million in 1989 and the company reported annual profits of $4 million in mid-1990. and came to operate Emery's entire DC-8 fleet (the largest and only long-haul aircraft that Emery had at the time) including flying to Asia and Europe and participating in the
Civil Reserve Air Fleet on Emery's behalf.
Ownership and name changes, scheduled service and abrupt end Bill Rosenbalm sold Rosenbalm in November 1987 to a Rosenbalm executive allied to an investment group. In August 1989 the airline was again sold, this time to a public company, Westronix, controlled by
Eli Jacobs, a financier and at the time the owner of the
Baltimore Orioles. Westronix changed its name to Flagship Express in July 1990. In early 1991 the airline predicted further strong growth. In April 1991, Rosenbalm's name changed to Flagship Express Services (FSX). In October 1991, FSX stopped operating for Emery. Emery had accounted for 60% of FSX revenue, but FSX said reduced hours under the contract were not providing a sufficient return. The decision moved 17 DC-8s to
Emery Worldwide Airlines; Emery said it would save money on the move. Employees came to work December 3, to learn, by phone, that FSX ceased operations at midnight December 2 and was liquidating. Creditors forced the airline into involuntary bankruptcy, then found it hard to find the assets listed on the bankruptcy filing. Employee wage checks bounced. Moreover, contract flying demand had diminished substantially. In 1988 UPS transitioned all flying in-house from four airlines it had previously contracted with. In 1987 and 1989, two mergers reduced Purolator, CF AirFreight and Emery Worldwide to a single organization (with the Emery name) under
Consolidated Freightways (CF) ownership. In 1989 CF also bought an airline,
AirTrain, which it renamed to Emery Worldwide Airlines and said that in the long run it intended to transition all flying in-house. ==Fleet==