A brief history of the American student travel industry.
40 years, and still counting!
RELIGIOUS BEGINNINGS. Travel historians will note that the
present "alphabet soup" of American student travel companies had
its beginnings in the 'sixties at the hands of the elders of the
Mormon Church, in Salt Lake City, who for long had sponsored the
travel of young people overseas for missionary purposes.
THE INDUSTRY. A secularization of this idea by two astute Mormon
businessmen produced the Foreign Language League (FLL), later to
be renamed the Foreign Study League (FSL). Thousands of high
school and college students traveled with "the League" to
Europe, using then-brand-new Boeing 707 and DC-8 jet aircraft.
Thousands more traveled with a competitor company created in
Cincinnati, Ohio by two Proctor & Gamble breakaway executives
called the American Institute for Foreign Study (AIFS).
A CONCEPT PERFECTED... ALSG (the American Leadership Study
Groups) was created in 1965 by a Yale University graduate
student and former Fulbright Scholar, Gil Markle, who a year
later brought the thriving young business to Clark University,
in Worcester, Massachusetts, where he was to teach Philosophy
until 1972.
...AND EMULATED. Most of the student travel companies in
existence today were actual spin offs from, or substantially
influenced by, ALSG, which had developed a reputation for
imaginative teaching techniques overseas, and lively travel
itineraries.1
1A recent (1998) PhD doctoral dissertation traces
this influence. Cf., Lyle, L.G., The Performance of Industry Culture.
Knoxville: University of Tennessee.
ACIS (American Council for International Studies) was created in
1978 by a former philosophy student of Markle's, Mike Eizenberg, who had
worked creatively at ALSG for many years.
Eizenberg, one of the most influential personalities in the American student travel industry,
captained ACIS for nearly 20 years, ceding executive responsibility in 1997 to former ALSG
sales star, Peter Jones.
ACIS, still an industry
leader today, was purchased by AIFS (see above) in 1987, but not
before spawning AET (American Educational Travel).
AET is no longer in existence, but certain of its former (ALSG-trained) staff have
created a new company called NETC (National Educational
Travel Council), which is based in Boston.
The once active CSI (Cultural Studies International) and Ciao!
(a fourth generation descendant) also traced their history to ALSG.
Neither company is in existence today.
Increasingly active during the mid-seventies, and offering quality,
"budget-priced" overseas tours, were
CHA (Cultural Heritage
Alliance) and EF-Educational Tours, the first owned by a well-known educator
from Philadelphia; the second by a successful Swedish
entrepreneur. (Gus Falcione, the Philadelphia-based owner of CHA, died in 2003,
leaving the operation of his company in family hands;
Bertil Hult, the Swedish entrepreneur, is alive and well, currently represented in the
US student travel industry by his Cambridge-based and talented EF President, Martha
Doyle.)
SUBSEQUENT EVENTS. In 1988, shortly after the "terrorism jitters"
and the American bombing of Tripoli, ALSG was taken over by
Access America, Inc. (AAI), a for-profit subsidiary of two East
Coast Blue Cross & Blue Shield insurance "plans." AAI sold the
assets of ALSG to a U.K firm in 1991, which operated
that company from a Cambridge, Massachusetts address, although
with very few original ALSG staff members on board, until June
3, 1993.
Another ALSG spin off is a company called
Voyageur, also
based in Massachusetts, led by ALSG's former computer guru, Paul Colella.
Another still is the meticulous boutique Travel By Design, founded by the former
ALSG staffer and travel writer, Liz Lalos.
NEW IN '92... ALSG's founder, Gil Markle, who left the company
in May of 1990, banded together with
several former colleagues in 1992, and created passports. The
company is headquartered in Spencer, Massachusetts, and now sponsors
the overseas travel of several thousand American students and
teachers each year. Experienced teachers frequently compare passports
to the ALSG of the
seventies and the eighties.
Jim "Nibby" Gibson, an early employee of passports,
had worked previously at Markle's recording studio, and subsequently at ALSG as
an Admissions Coordinator. He left passports
in 1994 to start a competitor travel company called Global
Vistas. Global Vistas filed for bankruptcy protection in May, 2004.In
1999, Mike Eizenberg (mentioned above as an original ALSG veteran who left the
company to help form ACIS, but who left that company in 1997) created a new
Boston-based travel company called eTrav (Educational Travel
Alliance). eTrav's most recent alliance (August, 2004) is strategic in nature,
and involves eTrav's former competitor, EF.
Relatively new (2000) on the "stutrav" scene in Boston is the first EF offspring company
called Explorica. The web
site is excellent, the
dot-com aspirations of this firm are courageous, and the founder of the company is the former
president of EF, Olle Olsson.
Newer still (2001) is The European
Institute. Paul Clarke, a founder of this Boston company, traces his career
in the student travel industry back, through NETC, to the years he spent as an
overseas courier and sales manager at ALSG.
Many of the legacy ALSG personalities mentioned above were recently (2002) brought
together for the first time in twenty years in some cases at a gala
gathering commemorating passports' tenth anniversary. A Boston harbor cruise
provided the physical setting; the persistence and pervasiveness of the shared ALSG
heritage provided the conceptual backdrop. |