Definition
Transcontinental and Western Air was a United States airline formed in 1930 from the merger of Transcontinental Air Transport and Western Air Express. It was one of the major scheduled passenger carriers that emerged during the early development of U.S. commercial aviation, and it later became Trans World Airlines while keeping the same TWA initials.
Plain English
TWA was the name of an early American airline that flew passengers across the country. It was one of the big airlines that helped shape U.S. commercial aviation in the 1930s and beyond.
Context Anchor
Seen in aviation history discussions of the Airline Deregulation Act of 1978, not as a cockpit procedure, aircraft system, or current operating instruction.
Derivation
The name simply describes what the airline did: it flew across the continent (transcontinental) and operated routes in the western United States. The 'and' joined the two predecessor companies whose merger created it.
Why Pilots Care
Knowing the major carriers of that era shows how deregulation reshaped routes, competition, and pilot careers.
Intuition Check
Do not read TWA here as a current cockpit abbreviation or procedure. In this chapter, it is the name of a historical airline.
Example Sentence 1
Transcontinental and Western Air was one of the carriers that helped establish coast-to-coast passenger service in the 1930s.
Example Sentence 2
TWA merged with other carriers after deregulation altered the competitive landscape.