Origins In the early years after World War II, Lutheran pastor Ejlif Egon Richard Søndergaard Krogager organized the first trip from the town of Tjæreborg to Spain. • 1951 - The pastor founded Nordisk Bustrafik to better manage bus excursions at affordable prices. The company was later renamed Tjæreborg Rejser, located at
Tjæreborg a town near Esbjerg. After some time, trips were also offered by plane.
The birth of the airline • 16 May 1962: Together with Jørgen Størling, Eilif Krogager founded Sterling Airways, with the aim of operating flights from Billund Airport. Two
Douglas DC-6B were purchased to better service package tours from Scandinavia to the Mediterranean. • 7 July 1962: First flight from Copenhagen to Las Palmas de Teneriffe with 93 passengers. At the controls was Anders Helgstrand, a former military pilot and later an instructor and test pilot for SAS. He would become the airline's president in the 1970s. • 1963: Further DC-6Bs were acquired. Maintenance base activated at Copenhagen Kastrup Airport
The first jetliners • 1965: Purchase of two
Caravelles serie 10B3 jetliners, which allowed to reach destinations on the African coast of the Mediterranean, the Middle East, and Tanzania. A total of another 10 will be purchased later. • 1966: The half-million passenger mark, also coming from Norway and Sweden, is exceeded, mostly to Spanish destinations. • 1967-1968: Transport of Danish soldiers to UN garrisons in Cyprus and Gaza. • 1968-1969: A total of 218 humanitarian flights to Biafra, with DC 6Bs flying from Sâo Tomé Island to the Uli airstrip. • 1968: The company was separated from the Tjæreborg Group and started working with other travel agencies as well. • May 1968: Delivery of a Fokker 27 Series 500 (stretched fuselage) for short-haul operations. It was equipped with 56 seats and easily convertible to an all-freighter. • June 1970: Delivery of a second Fokker 27 for short-haul operations. It was leased to the UN in early 1973.
Challenging 1970s • October 1970: First operation with an A.B.206 "Jetranger" helicopter • 1971: Delivery of three Caravelle Series 12s, followed by another three the next year, a version developed in conjunction with Aérospatiale. In December, a Caravelle 10B crossed the Atlantic from Oslo to Gander with 99 passengers, the first of a series of charter flights to North America. By the end of the year, 10,000 passengers had been carried between Europe and the USA. • 1972: Delivery of 13 second-hand Caravelle 6Rs purchased in the USA, but in May, three Boeing 727-200s were ordered. Their selection was very much influenced by the possibility of operating, fully loaded, one of the longest routes: Stockholm-Las Palmas de Tenerife. • 14 March 1972: A Caravelle 10B3, operating
Sterling Airways Flight 296 crashed in Fujairah Emirate while approaching
Dubai airport in heavy rain, killing all 112 persons on board. The 106 passengers were bound to
Denmark from a holiday in
Sri Lanka. • 1973: Options were signed on three Airbus A300B4s, which were never confirmed later on. The two F.27s were retired. • 1977: Acquired regional airline
Copenhagen Air Services. • 1978: Eilif Krogager bought a resort still under construction on the Spanish island of Lanzarote, a complex which will be completed and opened in 1983.
Turning points In 1988 Sterling was spun off from Tjæreborg Rejser, which is then sold to T.O. Spies on January 3, 1989. In September 1993 the airline suspends all flight operations and declared bankruptcy. In December part of the management of the previous company established
Sterling European Airways with three aircraft and 182 staff. The company begins charter operations began with a fleet of Boeing 727s and Boeing 737s. • 1996: The airline was bought by the Norwegian shipping company
Fred. Olsen. • 2000:
Sterling brand was adopted during the year. • 1 November 2000: Scheduled flights began to
Málaga and
Alicante to compensate for the decreasing charter business. • 2001: More routes were added; it was also decided that Sterling should leave the charter industry and become a fully fledged low-fare airline. • 2002: 21 new routes opened, primarily between Scandinavia and Southern Europe, but also from
Copenhagen to
Oslo and
Stockholm. • 2003: The fleet was expanded from six to eight aircraft and 11 more routes between Scandinavia and Southern Europe were opened. Passenger numbers reached a record high of 1.3 million, a 40% increase on 2002. • 2004: The fleet grew to 12 aircraft.
Changes in ownership and trends • March 2005: Fred. Olsen sold Sterling to the Icelandic investment company Fons Eignarhaldsfélag, owners of the small
Iceland Express airline, and its managing director, Almar Örn Hilmarsson, was appointed new managing director for Sterling. • June 2005: The Fons Eignarhaldsfélag bought
Maersk Air airline from the
A.P. Moller-Maersk Group and announced that they wanted to merge the two Danish airlines. • 13 September 2005: The company merged with
Maersk Air to form
Sterling Airlines A/S. The fleet consisted exclusively of Boeing 737s. The merger was approved by the authorities; it turned to be the fourth largest low-cost carrier in Europe but only a month later Fons Eignarhaldsfélag sold the company to FL Group. • 6 January 2006:
Hannes Þór Smárason, CEO of the FL Group, stated that a merger with
EasyJet was a possibility. • December 2006: FL Group sold the airline to Northern Travel Holding, a holding company owned by the three Icelandic private equity companies FL Group, Fons Eignarhaldsfélag and
Sons. • 29 October 2008: Sterling ceased shortly after being declared bankrupt due to the rising fuel prices in the first half of the year and the
Icelandic financial crisis that hit its major investor The entire fleet was grounded with immediate effect. == Destinations ==