Sigurdur Helgason (airline executive)

Sigurdur Helgason (July 20, 1921 February 8, 2009) was an innovator in low-cost airlines.[1]

Sigurdur Helgason is credited with pioneering the "hippie airline", Icelandair, that made low-cost air travel to Europe possible for generations of Americans [1]

Born July 20, 1921, in the Icelandic capital, Reykjavík, Sigurdur Helgason came to the United States in his 20s and graduated with a business degree from Columbia University in New York in 1947. He then returned to Iceland, where he managed a cement company.[1]

In 1953, Helgason joined the board of what is now Icelandair, a small airline that had been formed by three pilots nine years earlier. At the time International Air Transport Association (IATA) controlled its members' fares. As a non-member, Icelandic (as the company was then known) was able to significantly undercut other transatlantic carriers' pricing, and it began service from New York to Luxembourg in 1955. According to Gudjon Arngrimsson, Icelandair's current Vice President for Corporate Communication,[2] Helgason was a "very key player" in the strategy.[1]

Helgason managed the American operations of the company from 1961 to 1973, at which point he returned to Reykjavík to become CEO of Icelandair. He stepped down as chief executive in 1984, assuming the position of chairman until retirement in 1991.[1] He then lived In Iceland, Mustique, and New York City.

Helgason's main interest after retirement were fly fishing and the International House of New York. He leased many rivers across Iceland including the Hofsa. As part of the International House of New York he served on the board of directors, where he won the Harry Edmonds Award[3]

Helgason died aged 87 in Mustique, the Grenadines, where he spent winters.[1] Helgason was the first and only non-native to be buried on the island.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Brothers, Caroline (16 February 2009). "Sigurdur Helgason, 87, Airfare Pioneer, Dies". The New York Times. Retrieved 17 February 2009.
  2. "Icelandair Group Management". Retrieved 18 February 2009.
  3. I House

http://www.ihouse-nyc.org/s/707/index.aspx?sid=707&gid=1&pgid=261


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