Airline exec John "Jack" Magoon Jr. dies

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SOURCE: Honolulu Star-Bulletin
http://starbulletin.com/2003/11/25/news/story3.html

JOHN 'JACK' MAGOON JR. / 1915-2003

Kamaaina led Hawaiian Airlines into jet age and profits

Under his leadership, the carrier expanded to mainland markets

By Tim Ruel
truel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

     John H. "Jack" Magoon Jr., who as president of Hawaiian Airlines
helped bring Hawaii into the jet age, died yesterday. He was 87.

     Magoon, a member of the longtime kamaaina Magoon family, got
involved with several major Hawaii organizations in his lifetime and
became president of Hawaiian Air in 1964. A majority owner of the
company, he was named chairman and chief operating officer in 1981 and
served as chairman until 1989.

     "I know the Hawaiian Air people -- the old-timers -- they really
adore him," said nephew Jerry Magoon, a Big Island resident. Jerry
remembered his uncle as a private person who was like a father.

     Hawaiian Airlines, in a statement, described him as a friend and
father figure who shaped the company during more than one-third of its
74-year history.

     "I know that he kind of found his way into the air business, and I
think he helped to perpetuate the interisland market into what it became
in the '70s, '80s and '90s," said Tony Vericella, who worked for
Hawaiian Airlines in the 1980s.

     During Magoon's time at the company, in 1966, Hawaiian introduced
the first jet aircraft serving the interisland market with the DC-9,
reducing travel time.

     Commercial jet service brought more traffic to Hawaii, which went
from having just 686,314 visitor arrivals in 1965 to nearly 7 million in
2000, before a downturn in the travel market.

     In 1979, Hawaiian also became the first airline in the nation to
make a scheduled flight with an all-female flight crew.

     Vericella said the company turned around from the brink of
bankruptcy in 1982 under Magoon and then-president Paul Finazzo. In
1984, Hawaiian started providing charter services with three long-range
DC-8 jets. The company expanded from the interisland business into the
long flights to the mainland, initiating round-trip Los Angeles-Honolulu
service in 1985.

     That was long before anyone thought the local airlines would have
more revenue from outside the state than from interisland travel,
Vericella said.

     A year later, Hawaiian was running daily flights to Seattle and San
Francisco.

     "No matter how dark the period, he was going to do everything
possible to turn it around," Vericella said of Magoon.

     Hawaiian went from revenue of $10.6 million in 1964 to $632 million
in 2002.

     Four years after Magoon stepped down as chairman, Hawaiian filed
for Chapter 11 reorganization bankruptcy. The airline emerged about a
year later but filed for bankruptcy again this year, needing concessions
from its aircraft lessors. Hawaiian lost $58 million last year.

     Vericella noted that it was sad to see Magoon die with the airline
in bankruptcy. "I think there was always hope. He was always going to
rebound. He always kept hope and faith," Vericella said.

     Magoon also served as director for the Hawaiian Trust Co., Hawaiian
Securities & Realty, First Insurance Co. of Hawaii Ltd. and the Magoon
Estate Ltd. The family estate, formed in 1930, became owner of
significant commercial property in downtown Honolulu and Waikiki, as
well as the 23,000-acre Guenoc Estate vineyards in Northern California.

     Later in his life, Magoon bought into coffee producer and marketer
Coffees of Hawaii Inc.

     "My feeling was that I think the people at Hawaiian always had a
warm feeling for him because he cared for the people of Hawaii and for
Hawaiian," Vericella said.

     Magoon is survived by his wife, Jeanette Baker, and daughter Sara
Dudgeon. Information about services was not available.

--
David Mueller / MRY
dmueller7@xxxxxxxxx
http://www.quanterium.com

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