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Air links
The
establishment of a State-wide network of air routes, linked to interstate
and international flights has done much to reduce the isolation felt by
communities within Western Australia. Although the first air services were
offered in Western Australia during the 1920s, passenger services to eastern
Australia did not begin until the 1930s.
Air travel from west to east was still new and exciting enough for the Western
Australian government to commission an air race in 1929 as a part of its
centenary celebrations. Air travel remained difficult and expensive, preventing
most people from using it to go interstate, while travel by sea remained
the favoured method of international travel.
It
was not until 1962 that Western Australia was connected with a direct jet
flight to London. The replacement of prop-driven aircraft with the jet significantly
reduced travel times, increased the number of people carried on a flight
and increased the numbers of flights between destinations, helping to reduce
costs and make air travel more affordable for Western Australians. By 1966
there were six overseas flights per week landing at the new International
Airport in Perth. At about this time the first east-west jet flights were
commenced.
The
1970s and 1980s saw a massive increase in the number of Western Australians
travelling interstate and overseas to Europe and to holiday destinations
in south-east Asia. The development of these air links have altered Western
Australian's sense of their place in the world and within the Australian
Commonwealth.
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