
Personal Thoughts on Lamar Muse
Personal Thoughts on Lamar Muse
I just read a few minutes ago that Lamar Muse, Southwest's first President and CEO has passed away. Although I joined Southwest much later, I remember his role with Southwest during those early precarious days of our existence. The first thing I think of when I hear his name is that famous Southwest print ad that was used during the pivotal fare war with Braniff, when Southwest gave its Customers the option of either paying Braniff's fare that was designed to run us out of the skies or taking home a fifth of premium liquor. Lamar's picture appears in the ad, next to big bold type proclaiming: "Nobody's Going to Shoot Southwest Airlines out of the Sky for a Lousy $13."
I know that I join my fellow Employees in sharing our sympathy with the Muse family.
Trackback URL for this post:

Southwest Airlines Blog
Nuts about Southwest is all about our Employees, Customers, airplanes, and airports. We really are Nuts about Southwest and we hope that our Readers will share that passion by posting their own comments.
For more information about the blog and participating, please visit our User Guide.
Syndicate This Blog
Exclusive Southwest Offers Right on Your Desktop
Download Our
Mommy Blogger Patches

Southwest Airlines
Tags
- $25
- $30
- $60
- $90
- 1970s
- 1980s
- 2008
- 2009
- 20th Anniversary
- 25 Years
- 30 Years
- 38th
- 4th of July
- 4th of July. Independence Day
- 5th Grade
- 60 second
- 727
- 737
- ad campaign
- Adam Boatman
- Adam Willis
- Adopt
- Adopt-a-Pilot
- advertisements
- advertising
- AED
- Air Circulation System
- Air New Zealand
- Air Traffic Control
- Aircraft Flaps
- airlines
- Airport
- Airport anamolies
- Airport Security
- Airport Taxi
- airports
- Alice Wilson
- Amarillo
- Amazing Story
- American Idol
- American Idol Experience
- Ana Schwager
- Anabell Odisho
- Andrea
- Angela Vargo
- anniversary
- Annual Awards Banquet
- Appreciation
- April Fools
- archives
- Ashley Butler
- Ashley Rogers
- ATC
- Austin
- aver
- Award
- babies
- Baby on Board
- Backpack
- Backpack Brigade
- bag
- Baggage
- baggage policy
- bags
- Bags Fly Free
- ball parks
- Barack Obama
- Barak Obama
- baseball
- Baseball Hall of Fame
- Battle of the Ashleys
- BBBBB
- Beach Commercial
- Beantown
- Beat-box
- Beatles
- beer
- Behind the Scenes
- Bernie DeKoven
- Bernoulli
- Bernoulli principle
- Berri Gentry
- Bert Stevens
- Best Place To Work
- Beverly Behrens
- Bevo
- bid
- Big Texan Steak Ranch
- Bill Owen
- Bill Morton
- Bill Owen
- Bill Stone
- birthday
- Black History Month
- Blackberry
- Blended winglets
- Blog O Spondent
- Blog-o-spondent
- Blogospondent
- blogsouthwest.com
- BlogWorld
- Bob Hurst
- bob jordan
- Bob Montgomery
- Bob Phillips
- Bob Sprague
- Boeing
- Boeing 727
- Boeing 737
- Bonnie Endicott
- Booking Online
- books
- Boston
- Boston Logan
- Bovine
- Boy George
- Brad Hawkins
- Branded Entertainment
- Brandy King
- Braniff
- Braniff Airlines
- Brian Lusk
- Briarhill Middle School
- Bryant Park
- budget
- burgers
- Business Select
- business travel
- Caleb Fox
- California
- Candice Tanu
- Captain Kirk
- carbon emission
- career
- Career Fair
- Cargo
- Cargo Bins
- Carole Adams
- Casey Welch
- Cashless Cabin
- cat
- Catastrophic Assistance Charity
- Catherine Gantt
- celebrate
- Cell Phone
- cell phones
- Central Time
- CEO
- CEO of the Year
- change
- Charitable Giving
- Charles Kitowski
- Charles Taylor
- checked bags
- Checkin
- Checking Bags
- Cheers
- Cheryl Hughey
- Chicago
- Chicago Cubs
- Chili
- Chili Cook-off
- Chris Mainz
- Chris Mattingly
- Chris Ronan
- Christi Day
- Christie Volkmer
- Christmas
- Chuck Magill
- Chuck McGill
- Cinco de Mayo
- city opening
- classical music
- Click 'n Save
- Coastal Ridge Chardonnay
- Coastal Ridge Merlot
- Coca Cola
- codeshare
- Coffee
- Colleen
- Colleen Barrett
- Comal
- commendation
- Commercial
- Community Service
- Competition
- condolences
- connections
- connectivity
- Container Store
- contest
- Contest Steve Heaser
- Contests
- Cooperstown
- Corporate Challenge
- Corporate Social Responsibility
- correspondent
- Count Bagula
- Country Song
- Cowbells
- Cows
- CPR
- Cranky Flier
- CS2
- Culture
- Culture Committee
- Culture culture
- cupcake
- Curtis Needs a Ride
- Customer
- Customer Service
- Customer Support & Service
- Customers
- Cyclone
- D Mag
- Dallas
- Dallas Morning News
- Dan Airways
- Dan Webb
- Darvina Wong
- Daryl Kraus
- Dave Ridley
- David Cook
- David Holmes
- David Holms
- Day in the Life
- deals
- DECA
- December 6
- Deicing
- delicious
- dentral care
- Denver
- Denver Rescue Mission
- Detroit
- DING!
- DING! contest
- Dining
- Dinner
- director
- DIsney
- Disney Hollywood Studio
- Dispatch
- Dispatchers
- diversity
- dog
- Door number 3
- Dorothy Carpenter
- Double Credit
- Doug Lawson
- Dr. Seuss
- dreams
- Drink Vendor
- Duck
- Duck boat
- EarlyBird
- earnings
- Earth Day
- Eastern Airlines
- Eddie Rickenbacher
- Eduardo Xol
- education
- El Paso
- elders
- Elise May
- Elizabeth Bryant
- Ellen Torbert
- Elvis
- Emerging Media
- Emerson Drive
- emotional intelligence
- Employee
- Employees
- Engine Washing
- enhancements
- Environment
- Erin Terry
- etymologist
- Euna Lee
- Event
- Evolution of Dance
- Extreme Makeover: Home Edition
- F9
- Fall
- Falling Down Stairs
- Family
- Fare Sale
- FareCompare.com
- fares
- Fat Tuesday
- Father Martin
- Father's Day
- Feast
- Fees
- ferry flight
- financial results
- First Birthday
- First Flight
- Five SIxty
- Flag Day
- flickr
- Flight Atendant
- Flight Attendant
- Flight Attendants
- flight delays
- Flight Ops
- flight schedules
- Flight Simulators
- Flight Training
- flowers
- Fly By Security Lanes
- flying
- flying training
- Food
- Food Bank
- food courts
- FOOD FOR THOUGHT (AND FOR CREDITS
- Found
- Fourth of July
- Frank Porter
- Fred Taylor
- Freddie Awards
- Freedom Week
- Fresh Air Movement
- Friday the 13th
- friends
- Frontier
- Frontier Airlines
- FUN
- GAAP
- GAAP Rap
- Gadling
- Gary
- Gary Hooyman
- Gary Kelly
- Geek
- GEG
- gifts
- Ginger
- Ginger Hardage
- Going Green
- Golf
- Gordon Gillory
- Gordon Guillory
- Goro Harada
- Gory Bateson
- Grab Your Bag
- Grab Your Bag It's On
- Grab Your Bag...It's On
- Green
- Green Plane
- Greg Wells
- Ground Operations
- Groundhog Day
- Grumpy Santa
- guest post
- guitars
- Gwen Thalley
- Hall of Fame
- Halloween
- Headquarters
- Heide Cayouette
- Hell's Kitchen
- Herb
- Herb Kelleher
- Herb Time
- Heroes of the Heart
- hispanic adverstising
- Hispanic Heritage Month
- History
- Hogan
- Hokey Day
- Holiday
- Holiday Travel
- holidays
- Holly Chacon
- Hollye Chacon
- home makeover
- Honor Flight
- Honor Flight Cleveland
- hood
- Hot Dog
- Houston
- Howard Schultz
- Huge Pile of Laundry
- Humor
- Hurricane
- Hurricanes
- Hydraulic System
- In a Nutshell
- Inauguration
- Independence Day
- Indianapolis
- inflight
- inflight class 245
- infomercial
- Inside Southwest
- Interns
- interview
- Intrastate
- Iphone
- Ipod
- Ismath Mohideen
- it's on
- It's On. Southwest Commercial
- Jackie Thompson
- Jaimy
- James Tibbons
- Janice Swift
- Japanese American
- Jason Castro
- Jason Reyna
- Jasspreet Singh
- Jaunted
- Jay Heinrichs
- Jay Leno
- Jeff Lamb
- Jeff Martin
- jen lanes
- Jessica Turner
- Jet Engine
- jet engines
- Jim Herring
- Jim McOmbre
- Jim Powell
- job
- Jodi Wincheski
- Joe Mendez
- John Jones
- John McCain
- John Yuspa
- Judson Laipply
- June
- junkyard golf
- kaci beeler
- Karen Price-Ward
- Katie Coldwell
- Kay Bailey Hutchison
- Keith Geeding
- Kentucky Derby
- Kevin Krone
- Kevin Schemm
- Kick Tail
- Kidd Kraddick
- Kidd's Kids
- Kids
- Kim Delevett
- Kim Ramirez
- Kim Seale
- Kristen Francis
- Kristen Garrison
- Kristina Ramirez
- La Guardia
- La Raza
- Labor
- Labor Day
- lady Antebellum
- Lady Liberty
- LaGuardia
- Lamar Muse
- Lana Elliott
- Lánzate
- Las Vegas
- Latin Art Beat
- Laura Ling
- Lavatory
- Lavs
- LAX
- Leadership
- Leadership Development
- Lemons
- Leprechauns
- lessons
- LGA
- LIFT
- LIFT coffee
- Limes
- Linda Rutherford
- Lindsey Reynolds
- Linnea Sallberg
- Liquor
- Little Rock
- Load Planning
- longhorns
- Loretta Hohmann
- Lori Skinner
- Los Angeles
- Lost
- Louisville
- Love Field
- low fares
- lucubrating
- luculent
- LULAC
- LUV
- LUV Classic
- Maddie Ramirez
- mailcart
- maintenance
- Mallory Messina
- man cave
- Mardi Gras
- Marilee McInnis
- Mark Monse
- Marketing
- Mary Creason
- MassPort
- master mechanic
- Matt Buckley
- Max jones
- Max Reynolds
- Meals on Wheels
- mechanic
- Medal of Honor
- Media Day
- Media Day 2009
- medical benefits
- Meet & Greet
- Meg Gorom
- Melissa Jones
- Memorial Day
- menu
- Message to the Field
- Meteorologists
- MGM Grand
- Michele Kyle
- Michelle Agnew
- Michelob Ultra
- Mick Cornett
- Mike Clanton
- Mike Haeg
- Mike Sims
- Military
- Millie Richter
- Milwaukee
- Ming Chan
- Minneapolis
- Minneapolis - St. Paul
- Minneapolis/St. Paul
- Minnesota
- MIT Level II
- MKE
- Mobile Enhancements
- Mockup
- modem
- Mofongo
- Mommy
- Mommy Blogger
- Monica Whalin
- Mother
- Mother Parkers
- Mother's Day
- Moustache
- MOW
- MSP
- Mural
- Museum of Flight
- Mustache
- My Old Man in Maintenance
- N901WN
- napa
- Napa Valley Marriott Hotel and Spa
- NASA
- nashville film festival
- National
- National Safe Place
- Naverus
- NBTA
- Negotiations
- New Braunfels
- New Hire
- New Orleans
- New Plane
- New Service
- New Year's
- New Year's Resolution
- New York
- New York City
- New York Stock Exchange
- News
- Nicholas Haan
- Nicole Cordeiro
- Nina
- Nina Guerriero
- Nixon
- No Bag Fees
- No Change Fees
- no fees
- No Fees for Bags
- No Hidden Fees
- Nolan Ryan
- Non rev
- North Terminal
- November
- nuts
- NYC
- NYSE
- Oakland
- Officers
- Oklahoma
- Oklahoma City
- Old Navy
- Olga Romero
- Olympics
- Onboard Magazine
- OnBoarding
- Open Heart Surgery
- Open Seating
- opening day
- Operation Homefront
- Operation Kick Tail
- opine
- options
- orange county
- OU
- P.A.W.S.
- Packers
- Paint
- parade
- Paradise Bakery
- Parent Day
- parents
- pari passu
- Parkland Burn Camp
- Partnerpalooza
- Partners
- party
- Pass the Peanuts
- Pass Bureau
- Passing out Meals
- Patricks's Day
- Paul
- Paul Bellar
- Paul Revere
- Paul Thompson
- Paula
- Paula Berg
- PAWS
- PDX
- Peanut
- peanuts
- People Department
- Personal and Professional Development
- perspicacious
- pets
- PFN
- Phil Davies
- Philadelphia
- Phoenix
- photos
- Pigskin
- Pilot
- pilot report
- Pilots
- Pittsburgh
- plane
- plane pull
- PlaneBusiness
- PlaneBuzz
- Playing Guitar
- Podcast
- police
- Policy
- Porch
- Portland
- Portmanteau
- President
- President's Award
- Press Conference
- Proactive
- products
- Promotion
- promotions
- Proposal
- Propylene glycol
- provisioning
- quiescent
- Quincy Jones
- Quyen
- race
- Rachael Jacobs
- raconteur
- radio Commercial
- Radome
- ramp
- Ramper Driving Around
- Ramper Love Story
- Rampers
- Randy Day
- Randy Rickard
- Rap
- Rapid Rewards
- Rapping Flight Attendant
- Raps
- Ray Buffington
- Ray Stark
- Reagan Dollar
- recipe
- recipes
- recreational flying
- recurrent training
- recycle
- Red Belly Radio
- Red River Rivalry
- Reducing Emission
- Relationships
- Renee Allen
- reservations
- retirement
- Richard Knight
- Richard Moore
- Richard Sweet
- Ringtone
- RMD
- RNP
- Rob Hahn
- Role
- Ron Ricks
- Ronald McDonald House
- Row 44
- Roy Harris
- Ruiz Family
- Ruth Ryan
- s
- s'mores
- Safety
- sales
- San Diego
- San Francisco
- Sarah
- Sarah Elias
- Saving Fuel
- Schedule Opening
- Schedule Planning
- Schedule Planning contest
- Schedules
- Screenplay
- SEA
- Seattle
- SeaWorld
- Second Harvest Heartland
- Secure Flight
- self awareness
- September 11
- Servant's Heart
- service
- service men and women
- share holder
- Share the Spirit
- shareholder
- Shareholders
- Shareholders' meeeting
- sharon maas
- Shay Dixon
- Sherie Blanton
- Sherpa
- shopping
- SI One
- Skiing
- small world
- Smoking
- snacks
- Sofia Proll
- sons
- Sons of Liberty
- sooners
- southwest
- Southwest Airlines
- Southwest Airlines
- southwest airlines culture colleen
- southwest airlines culture gary kelly caring
- Southwest Airlines Dallas Love Field Time-Lapse
- southwest airlines duck derby san antonio seaworld
- Southwest Airlines History
- Southwest Airlines Ronald McDonald House Dick East Ann Hancock
- southwest airlines women maintenance colleen barrett
- Southwest Airlines. liz zuniga
- Southwest Airlines. Tena Griffith
- Southwest Airliness
- Southwest Airlnes
- Southwest Airlnies
- Southwest Commercial
- Southwest Culture
- Southwest Customers
- Southwest History
- Southwest humor
- Southwest Pilots
- Southwest Porch
- Southwest Shortcut
- Southwest Vacations
- southwest.com
- Space Camp
- Spirit
- Spirit magazine
- Spirit Party
- Spokane
- Sports Illustrated
- Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue
- spring
- SS United States
- St
- St. Louis
- St. Patrick
- St. Patrick's Day
- St. Paul
- stand-by
- Star Trek
- State Fair
- Stephanie Kinghorn
- Steve Heaser
- STL
- stock
- Studebaker
- Summer Sale
- Summer travel
- Super Bowl
- Superstitious
- supplier diversity
- SWA
- SWA Annual Awards Banquet
- SWAECAC
- Swarm theory
- sweet potato
- Swine Flu
- SXSW
- Sylvia Santelli
- T-shirts
- Tail Numbers
- Tailgate
- Tale of Two Bags
- Tammy Romo
- Tammy Shafer
- tasty
- TCB
- Tea Party
- Technology
- Teleflora
- Telethon
- Ten Thousand Dollars
- Tena Griffith
- Terlingua
- Terry Tripler
- Test
- Texas
- Texas Country Reporter
- Texas Horned Lizard
- thankful; turkey; dinner
- Thanksgiving
- Thanksgiving. Linda Rutherford
- The Amazing Race
- The Beatles
- The Golden Rule
- The Mom Creative
- The Southwest Way
- Tickets
- Tim Conners
- Tim Spaight
- Timeline
- timetables
- tips
- Tom Colicchio
- Tom Moore
- TONE
- TOO)!
- Touchdown
- tradition
- training
- Travel
- Travel Guide
- Trees
- Trent
- Trent Duran
- trip report
- TSA
- tubing
- turkey
- Tuskegee Airmen
- Tweet
- Tweeter
- twins
- Tyrone Ward
- unaccompanied minors
- Uncle Sam
- Unions
- University
- University for People
- University of Texas
- Update
- US Air Force
- US Airways
- US Open
- USAir; Flight Crew Training
- USAirways; Flight Crew Training
- USMC
- UT
- UT Flying Club
- Vail
- Valerie Curry
- Vegas
- Vendor
- Veteran's Day
- Veterans
- video
- Vikings
- Volaris
- Volunteers
- Volunteers of LUV
- Wallet
- Walt Disney World Resort
- Wanna Get Away
- Warrior Spirit
- Warriors
- Washington D.C.
- We're All In This Together
- Weather
- wedding
- Weight and Balance
- Welcome Home
- Wendell
- Wendell Rankin
- WestJet
- Whitney Eichinger
- Wi-Fi
- Wild Turkey
- Willie Wilson
- Willy-Willy
- windshear
- wine
- wing
- winglets
- winter
- Wisconsin
- Wisconsion
- WN
- Wolfgang Puck
- Women Aviators Day
- Women's History Month
- work
- working
- Wrapping
- Wright brothers
- Wrigley Field
View all tags
Archives
Categories
- Airports
- Blogroll
- Customers
- Flying
- Nutty stuff
- Southwest Culture
- Uncategorized
- Under the hood
- Working at Southwest
Link Luv
- A Blog About Those Things in the Sky
- Adopt-a-Pilot Blog
- Air Transport Association
- Airchive
- Airfield by David Field
- Airline Biz
- Airline Blog (the original)
- Airliners.net
- Airport Chronicles Blog
- Airways Magazine
- America's Second Harvest
- Aviation Week: Things with Wings
- Boarding Area
- Boeing 737
- Boeing Blog
- D.J. Gregory's PGA Tour Blog
- Delta Blog
- Evan Spark's Aviation Policy
- Extreme Home
- Flight International's Runway Girl
- Flight Options
- Flight's Airline Business Blog
- FlightAware
- Fly A Sim
- Get On That Plane
- Houston Airport System
- In the Shadow of the Blade
- Jeffrey Sigmon's Aviation Blog
- Jetwhine
- Left Field
- Middle Seat Terminal
- NBA
- Operation Freedom Bird
- Plane Buzz
- RD2 Blog
- Rick Seaney
- Ronald McDonald House
- San Diego Airport Ambassablog
- Sky Talk
- Snowball Express
- Southwest Travel Guide
- The Cranky Flier
- The Luggage Blog
- The WNBA--Know it, Live it, Love it!
- Today in the Sky
- USS Nimitz - The Official Ship of Nuts About Southwest
- WWII Memorial


Comments
If you have the book "Nuts", the tale of the "Lousy $13" is on pages 31-33. I like the part where for two months SWA was the largest distributor of Chivas, Crown Royal and Smirnoff in the state of Texas.
an end of an era. I first saw that famous ad in "Nuts". He paved the way for Southwest to be one of the most beloved and successful airlines in the world.
Jim and Francisco,
I think one reason why that ad stands out in my mind, is that the Great Texas Fare War symbolizes the Warrior Spirit of Southwest Airlines. Lamar's response showed the airline world and our Customers that we would fight to ensure our Company's survival against almost impossible odds. Our Warrior Spirit, Servant's Heart, and Fun-LUVing Attitude were forged during those early days by our Original Employees under Lamar's Leadership.
Brian
M. Lamar Muse was a maverick and a genius, and without his strict control of costs and keen understanding of the airline industry, I doubt there would be a Southwest Airlines today. His legacy can be seen in every 30-minute turn, in the 3rd generation 737's SWA continues to purchase, in the "whatever it takes" attitude of the employees, and in Southwest's punchy, humorous ads. He built an airline with a soul.
I'd like to ask that Southwest forget whatever hard feelings there are left over his leaving and finally roll out a plane emblazoned with his name.
I will add a copy and paste from TxAgKuwait over at airliners.net had to say.
"You can't say it's a shame.....a man of 86 years who has lived life to the fullest and succeeded beyond one's wildest dreams....who, in the process, made a lot of people rich. I guess you can say it's sad to see him go, it's true that he is seldom recognized for everything he did for the airline industry.
We can also say that it'll be a helluva long time before the airline industry sees anyone else like Lamar.
I'll share a few memories that might not have gotten captured in the news articles.
Lamar was a very soft-spoken individual...so soft-spoken, in fact, that it was sometimes difficult to hear what he was saying. Many times, especially if you were a subordinate who had not accomplished what Lamar thought you should have...what he was saying (when you finally heard it) would curl your hair, cause insomnia, and curdle milk at 100 yds. A nice way to phrase it would be to say Lamar had a way with words, and could cuss someone in very low tones but there was never any doubt that you had been verbally ripped to shreds.
Lamar always thought of his employees as his team, and it bothered him somewhat when they organized.....not that he was opposed to unionism per se, but he always hated a union getting in the way between him and his people. As a result, he always wanted to make sure that the employee groups that did not organize got better pay and benefits than those who voted in a union.
After the $13 war, when loads were getting bigger and better by the minute....one Sunday Lamar and his late wife Juanice flew in to Love Field and noticed that the gates were crowded, the employees were unbelievably busy...so they went home, made up a whole bunch of food, and brought it to the break room. A nice gesture, nothing outrageous....but stop and think about the last time you heard of an Airline CEO and his wife personally cooking up a bunch of food, with no prior planning or announcement, in order to make sure the employees got a bite to eat on their lunch break.
The profit sharing plans that Lamar put in to place ensured that all of the early employees...not just pilots and execs....but the rez agents, cabin cleaners, skycaps, everyone.......walked away millionaires after 25 yrs or so. Millionaires. Millionaire sykcaps.
Lamar argued for years that his board room challenge / showdown that led to his departure from Southwest had nothing to do with his desire to install his son Mike as his heir apparent as Prez/CEO at Southwest...but most of us who were around will always believe that was the root of the problem. And while Mike is an okay guy......those of us who were around will tell you that the kid he should have put in charge was his daughter Debbie.
Lamar was working for Trans-Texas Airways when they decided they had to have some aircraft to replace their aging (and less attractive to passengers) DC-3s. They decided to try and buy some Convair 240s used from American. Earl McKaughan, president of TTa, told Lamar to try and get them down to $250K apiece (can you imagine buying airlines for $250K)? If I have the story straight, Lamar negotiated American down to a price of $225K or so, and told American it was a deal. He then called Houston, only to be told that wasn't good enough, squeeze another $10K or so apiece out of American. Having made a deal, and then getting back doored by the company the way he did was why Lamar left Trans Texas.
He was hired at Central to try and salvage a sinking ship. Central had the worst routes, worst airplanes, worst service, and worse reputation of any of the local service airlines. When two of your really good stations are Lawton, Oklahoma and Fort Smith, Arkansas that ought to tell you something. Lamar got ahold of Central, beat it in to shape.....tried as clever a pricing scheme as the CAB would let him get away with (fly anywhere on Central for the regular price and fly back home for $10)..and within a few months had it more profitable than any of the other local service carriers. Then the people who hired him to save the airline sold it out from under him to Frontier, in the process octupling their investment. Imagine...800% return on your investment in two years.
Southwest is often thought of as Herb's airline, and you can't really diminish the fact that Kelleher took what Lamar handed him and managed to not "F" it up. Most executives would have messed it up immensely. But let's not, for one second, think that there would ever have been a Southwest Airlines had it not been for Lamar.
A couple of quick anecdotes for now.....I am reminded of when Lamar, in Austin, got the news on a Thursday afternoon that Southwest had received approval to start flying in and out of Harlingen...their first expansion outside the original three cities. He snuck off to a phone booth, called the VP-Ground Ops, and asked in a whisper if it would be possible to start service by Monday or Tuesday. Lamar was afraid Texas International would find a sympathetic judge to grant a restraining order. A measure of how loyal Lamar's folks were---the VP himself and the Dallas Station Manager loaded up a pickup with everything they could think of that they might need to open a station, left Dallas about 8 that night, rolled in to Harlingen Friday morning, and spent the next 72 hrs setting up a station. The first flight arrived from Houston, IIRC, on Monday morning at 9:20 am. The VP was the only one who passed the FAA's weather observer test on the first try, so he had to spend the week in Harlingen until they could train some folks and get them certified to take weather observations. When Southwest inaugurated service to Midland/Odessa and Lubbock the same day (5/20/77?) Lamar was supposed to ride the 7:30 am LBB to DAL, then catch the 8:30 DAL to MAF so he could be at both locations for the inaugural festivities. Well, fog in Dallas kept the 6:25 to LBB (which turned the 7:30 flight back) on the ground so ultimately Lamar hopped in rent car and headed for Midland/Odessa at about 100 mph (in that era of 55 mph speed limits), picking up 3 speeding tickets along the way.
Lamar's motto for the airline industry, which so few pay any attention to, was "feed the rich and grow poor, feed the poor and grow rich."
Thank you TxAgKuwait!
Joe Friedmann
not a blog boy.
His family & friends will be in my prayers. I remember reading about him & seeing the ad in my book "Nuts."
"a cantankerous genius" indeed. Board meetings are going to be a little boring, without Lamar to drop in. ;-)
Godspeed, Lamar.
Will Browne
MDW F/A
Since Lamar Muse was such an important part of the airline during the seventies, will there be an "The Lamar Muse" aircraft in the future?
I join my fellow bloggers in sending condolences to the Muse family at the death of this legend of the airline industry. Growing up in Dallas, I well remember the impact that he had on TTA (Trans Texas Airlines, or as we called it, Tree Top Airlines) and Southwest. (and yes, Brian, I can remember seeing the "lousy $13" ad in the Dallas Times Herald)
I agree with my pal Joe that for better or worse, Lamar Muse was a huge factor in Southwest becoming what we know it as. I also remember the white Muse Air planes that I'd see in Houston and the public rivalry that he fostered with his former employer. I never quite knew if it was as real as it seemed or was just a lot of hype to get more publicity. Maybe he was also an early pioneer of the sport that we now know as "trash talking" your opponent?
I certainly respect him for all that he accomplished, but to be candid, I lost a fair amount of respect trying to read his book "Southwest Passage". What started out as a nice history of Southwest turned into a very bitter condemnation of many of the people there. It would have been nicer to have written a less spiteful book and slipped away into our aviation memories as a fellow with several notable success stories under his belt.
But, from what Joe says above, he would not have been true to himself if he had done so. Apparently, there was a lot of vinegar in the soft-spoken airline genius, or to use the term that Herb used to define Mr. Muse's genius in the Dallas paper today, maybe he was just "cantankerous".
Is it just me, or does it seem like so many of our "legends", whether from the corporate world, sports world or entertainment world are leaving us so much more quickly these days? Maybe we just aren't growing new legends fast enough to replace them, or maybe us old fellas just aren't embracing the younger legends...
Thanks to Lamar Muse for all that he did to make Southwest a great airline!
Kim
I don't view "Southwest Passage" as spiteful at all. Mr. Muse simply wrote honestly about his tenure from his point of view. I can only hope that when Herb's book (if he writes one; I sincerely wish he does) is published, it is filled with the same candor.
First of all, "Ditto" to the suggestions above that there be an "M. Lamar Muse" SW 737 very soon. Whatever hard feelings may still exist from so many years ago at Southwest, it's been long overdue to get rid of them.
It was influences from this gentleman that got me interested in the business world and investing at all. I was a young, long haired music graduate from SMU at the time-the early years of Southwest Airlines, and reading about Southwest and Lamar Muse got me deep into the airline & investing bug. During the time Lamar ran Southwest (and for quite a while afterward) I clipped every article from the Dallas papers & the Wall Street Journal that said anything about Southwest Airlines-I still have them all. It caused me to go back to SMU and get a business degree. It was Mr. Muse that introduced me to operating metrics such as "Unit Costs per Available Seat MIle" which are discussed at length nowadays.
If any of you have not read "Southwest Passage", I highly recommend it. To me the book and the story that he tells are fascinating. Yes, you might detect a slightly biased side of Lamar's story here and there, but he supports much of it with copies of the memos he wrote back and forth to the Board, to Rollin, and the rest. He demonstrates the basic business and operating model/formula of Southwest Airlines and how the gradual expansion of service early on resulted in the profitable results that continue today.
This man would talk to me on the phone whenever I called him at Southwest, even if he didn't know me. He was personable at other public venues as well, always approachable.
I close with a quote I remember that was stated on an insert placed into the 1977 Southwest Airlines Annual Report in the spring of 1978: "Mr. Muse has left an indelible print of greatness at Southwest Airlines that will never be forgotten". God Bless you, Mr. Muse & the Muse family
Bill Hudson Dallas
A CEO cooking for his employees??? That says something about his leadership and character.
some one please explain what southwest plans to do with newest city washington dulles? Why is SWA their if they are not expanding SWA has been so tight liped about this city why?
Southwest always boasts about being the best in the business, so why not help consumers where it counts most. There are so many children out there who have to fly between parents due to custody agreements. Why not have a package deal/discounts to accommodate them and promote parental visitation? I know of a family who struggles each and every time their daughter has to fly from Texas to california. They only have to buy her return flight but if they were able to purchase a package that included return flights at the beginning of the year with open dates. If for some reason, she doesn't go, then the money would be forfeited to SWA. Her father is a dead beat dad except when it comes to visitation and my opinion is that he is only trying to stick it to the mother. He waits till the last minute to buy his ticket (he can afford it by not paying child support) and then she has to pay high dollar amounts to get her home. Surely, one of your exec's can come up with a solution to a problem that is affecting so many.
That would boost sales as well because instead of looking for the cheapest and bypassing SWA, they would already have a ticket.
Kinda like a yearly prepay on flights. non refundable. allow say 6 return flights in one calendar year. When they purchase the flights, they need to designate that years expected returns. Then they just need to complete the booking process at least a week before. Offer a discounted fare to entice the parents to use SWA and you just hit a very big market and eased the lives of many consumers.
Just a suggestion.
As one of many aviation reporters for the now-defunct Dallas Times-Herald, I had the pleasure of covering Lamar Muse, when he and his son ran Muse Air during the 1980s. He was a great interview and an enjoyable fellow. He once told me that unlike many hard-charging executive types, he really did enjoy retirement--especially fishing in Canada. Who could blame him? Rest in Peace, Lamar.
Respectfully,
Bob Reed
Learn more about Muse Air and TranStar Airlines at http://www.museair.com .
Post new comment