CCLVII
Although the Wright brothers used the Outer Banks of North Carolina as their first flight laboratory and made the first confirmed successful powered airplane flight there at Kill Devil Hill near the village of Kitty Hawk on December 17, 1903, Long Island is truly the cradle of aviation.
Roosevelt
Field in the early 1920s
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Long
Island was underpopulated during the “Soaring Twenties,” and the
flat-as-a-floor Hempstead Plains, the only natural North American prairie east
of the Mississippi River, was a perfect landing field. In July 1919, the
British dirigible R34 touched down at Mineola on Long Island during the first
two-way crossing of the Atlantic Ocean by air.
Unlike
the far more vast western prairies, however, the Hempstead Plains area is
blessed by proximity to the fleshpots of New York City. Pilots could indulge
their randiest urges by taking a short train ride west, and aviation investors
could eyeball what their money hath wrought by taking that same train ride eastward. Even before the advent of powered
flight, balloonists from Long Island attempted to cross the Atlantic (1873),
and glider pilots were soaring down the heights of the rocky North Shore
(1896). Dirigibles carrying sightseers were rising aloft from Brooklyn as early
as 1902. By 1910, there were three organized airfields on the Hempstead Plains,
representing a significant fraction of all airports then in existence.
“Cal”
Rogers came from an adventurous family. His forebears included the two naval
Commodores Perry, and his cousin John, who made the first successful flight
from California to Hawaii
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Long
Island was the hub for the first experimental airmail flights in 1911, and was
the liftoff point for Calbraith Perry Rogers, who flew from New York to California
for the first time that same year (the flight took 49 days). Rogers died a few
weeks later in 1912, when his airplane crashed in the Golden State.
During
World War I, Long Island bustled with aviation business. Mitchel Field, near
Roosevelt Field, became the largest military airfield in the country. Naval
aviators were being trained in Port Washington on the North Shore, and Bay
Shore on the South Shore. Aircraft factories sprang up in Farmingdale and
Baldwin to bolster the growing war effort. They had names like Curtiss and Sikorsky and
Fairchild and Sperry.
Among many
other accomplishments, Floyd Bennett piloted the first North Polar flight with
Admiral Richard E. Byrd
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Young
Juan Trippe founded a shuttle service between New York City and the Hamptons
just after the war. In 1923, only twelve short years after Cal Rogers’ 49 day
coast-to-coast flight the first nonstop transcontinental flight was made from
Long Island. And, of course, Charles Lindbergh lifted off from Roosevelt Field
to make his epochal flight to Paris.
In 1955,
the historic airfield became the site of what was then the largest shopping
mall in the world
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An aerial
view of the adjacent Mitchel Field and Roosevelt Field, circa 1930. Note the
emptiness of Long Island’s Hempstead Plains
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Mitchel
Field was operational until 1961. This photo dates from 1968. Note the
development around the field
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Today,
Mitchel Field is the site of Nassau Community College, Hofstra University, and
the Nassau Coliseum. NCC’s first classes were held in the old hangars. A few
military-era buildings remain today, and are still in use
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The
Borough and the County of Queens, on the western edge of the Hempstead Plains,
was also an area that was early devoted to aviation. Before a massive
population influx from Manhattan and the more urbanized areas of Brooklyn and
the Bronx, early aviation pioneers used the flat lands of Queens, otherwise
dedicated to potato farming, as space for airfields and factories.
As the only
truly international city in the United States, New York has had a succession of
Mayors as colorful and diverse as itself, dating back to Peter Stuyvesant.
Among the most charismatic, beloved, and pugilistic was “The Little Flower,”
Fiorello Enrico LaGuardia (1882-1947) the 99th Mayor of the city. At
only 5’2” and with a flaming temper, he ran as a Republican, trounced the
opposition in traditionally Democratic New York, and crushed the Tammany Hall
machine with flair and verve. A dedicated New Dealer, he supported FDR’s
policies despite their differences in party affiliation. Tough but tender he
made it a point to read the Sunday funny papers over the radio to a rapt
audience of children and adults alike. Ruling rather than governing the city
between 1934 and 1945, he appealed to New Yorkers nevertheless, who loved him
for his no-bullshit approach to politics, and because he, like they, was a
child of immigrants. His parents were from Italy. His father was named Achille
LaGuardia and was from Foggia. His mother was Irene Cohen from Trieste.
Fiorello himself became what he described as an “Catholic Episcopal Jew” as an
adult. The Church Fathers winced, but the people loved it. FDR gave The Little
Flower what he wanted for his city because he needed a Republican in his
corner, especially one overseeing a Democratic stronghold
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The
city of New York built its first airfield not on the Hempstead Plains (in fact,
none of New York City’s major airports were built on the Hempstead Plains) but
on the marshy islands at the extreme western edge of what was then known as
Grassy Bay, which were landfilled and attached to the mainland of
Brooklyn.
This
railroad map dates from before the creation of Nassau County in 1898. The
Hempstead Plains cover most of central Brooklyn and Queens, from Flatlands to
past the Suffolk County line where begin the Pine Barrens. For “historical”
purposes, the Hempstead Plains are usually considered to make up the heart of
Nassau County alone
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After World
War II, the explosive growth of New York’s suburbs swallowed up most of the
natural prairieland on Long Island, especially because the flat lands of Nassau
County lent themselves to easy residential development. Today, the native flora
and fauna of the Hempstead Plains remains intact only in pockets strewn like an
archipelago across the center of the Island
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The
airport, first named “Barren Island Airport” in the 1920s, started out with one
dirt runway, was used by private pilots, and mostly by one vaguely
remembered local barnstormer, who made a living taking New Yorkers for dollar
airplane rides. As the city filled in the channels between the marsh islands,
the airport grew in size and importance, finally being named for famed aviator
Floyd Bennett, and opening on June 26, 1930. It replaced Newark Airport in New
Jersey as New York City’s official air port.
“Wrong Way”
Corrigan claimed to have realized he was lost when he looked down midflight and
saw water
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Wiley
Post used Floyd Bennett Field as his preferred starting point for two ‘round-the-world
flights. Douglas “Wrong Way” Corrigan flew from North America to Europe from
Floyd Bennett Field on July 17-18, 1938, feigning shock that he did not arrive
in California. (Aviator Howard Hughes, who was planning a Worldflight to take
off at the same time, was enraged that Corrigan stole his thunder and the
headlines that day.)
A
Depression-wracked United States gleefully celebrated Corrigan’s “mistake”
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Typically
tussocky islands in Jamaica (Grassy) Bay, with a typical New York City skyline in
the background (looking across Brooklyn). Note the housing projects and the
Empire State Building in the far distance
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Floyd Bennett Field in the 1930s
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Floyd Bennett Field today. Although no longer a commercial airfield it is
used by the New York City Police Department to house its aviation wing. Floyd
Bennett Field passed from civilian to military hands during World War II, and
functioned as a Naval Air Station well into the 1990s. Now part of Gateway
National Recreation Area it contains campgrounds, an aviation museum, and other
facilities for the general public
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No sooner had Floyd Bennett Field been opened than the city
fathers agreed that the airport was too small to serve New York City
efficiently, and another site was sought for a larger airport. The decision was
eventually taken to use North Field (North Beach Airport) just off Bowery Bay
in Queens. Before its conversion to an airfield it had been “Galaland,” an
amusement park owned by the Steinway family of piano fame (and of eponymous
Steinway Street).
Galaland Amusement Park
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North Field / North Beach / Glenn Curtiss Airport in the early 1930s
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New York was home to many New Deal construction projects during the depths
of the Great Depression. Among them were its parkway and expressway network,
its airports, and many of its largest buildings, bridges, and tunnels. The new
North Field / New York Municipal Airport is in the foreground
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North Field had many competitors for the role of New York
City’s next aerodrome. A slew of small and privately owned airports dotted the
area right around North Field, including Grand Central Airport, used by
Goodyear for its blimps and semirigid airships of the day (the name of which
survives in Queens’ Grand Central Parkway under whose concrete lanes the old
runways are buried). Grand Central Airport (or “Air Terminal”) was also known as Holmes Airport. Flushing Airport was also very close by.
Although North Field was known for its “advanced” facilities in the 1930s,
“advanced” was a relative term
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North Field had two advantages over every other site, First,
it was owned by Glenn Curtiss and his family, who made certain that North Field
was equipped with the cutting edge technology of the day, and second, it
fronted the confluence of the East River and Long Island Sound, allowing for
flying boat access.**
The owners of Holmes / Grand Central Airport tried to block
the expansion of North Field, but were defeated in court. The costly court battle
put the airfield squarely out of business, and allowed North Field to buy parts
of the bankrupt property for further development.
A map showing the relative locations of most of the New York City area airports
circa 1935. Floyd Bennett Field lies to the southwest, in Brooklyn. Holmes (Grand
Central Airport) is directly adjacent to North Field (Glenn Curtiss Field is
another name for North Field, which eventually became LaGuardia Airport.
Jamaica Sea Airport, serving seaplanes only, was eventually expanded into
Idlewild Airport (Now John F. Kennedy International). Flushing Airport, though
only a mile from busy LaGuardia, remained busy with small aircraft trafficuntil
the mid-1980s when safety concerns about air traffic forced its closure.
Roosevelt Field lies to the east. Mitchel Field is unmarked. The yellow areas
show dense population
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Mayor
Fiorello LaGuardia was the midwife of the new airport. As Mayor of New York
City from 1934 to 1945, he was irritated that his flights from Washington D.C.
to New York invariably ended up in Newark (New Jersey), despite the fact that
his ticket was stamped “New York.” He once demanded that his plane hop from
Newark to Floyd Bennett Field so he could actually land in New York, an act that would be seen as skyjacking today. The
limited facilities at Floyd Bennett Field were not enough for the great city,
it’s Mayor declaimed, and so construction at North Field began within days
(paid for by the City of New York, the State of New York, the Works Progress
Administration (WPA) of the Federal Government --- and by Pan American Airways,
which wanted a flying boat terminal at North Field.
New York
Municipal Airport in 1939. It was the first airport to boast of a shopping
arcade and service providers, including a bank, a beauty salon, a barbershop, and
a brokerage office
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Landfill
was begun atop a tubular steel framework (the framework today interferes with
navigational equipment aboard aircraft and the airport posts signs to this
effect). Runways were built out into Bowery Bay like so many long fingers. Huge
hangars were built, and multiple terminals. American Airlines was coaxed from
its lair at Newark to establish its new hub at what was soon called New York
Municipal Airport.*** And Pan American built a splendid building for its flying
boats which it called the Marine Air Terminal****.
The vast
American Airlines hangars at LaGuardia Airport are still New York landmarks
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A 1940
photograph of LaGuardia Airport showing the AA hangars and the Marine Air Terminal,
complete with a Clipper
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LaGuardia
Airport today. Crammed onto a shelf projecting out into Bowery Bay, the 70 year
old airport is currently being rebuilt. Pilots had taken to calling it the “U.S.S.
LaGuardia” because of the aircraft carrier size of its landing fields and the
fact that they project out over the water. Distressed jets have occasionally
run out of runway and ended up in the drink. The major highway hugging the
shore is the Grand Central Parkway. Old Grand Central Airport would have been
in the vicinity of the oval
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*The title of this post is taken from the poem
by Walt Whitman:
STARTING
from fish-shape Paumanok, where I was born,
Well-begotten,
and rais’d by a perfect mother;
After
roaming many lands—lover of populous pavements;
Dweller
in Mannahatta, my city—or on southern savannas;
Or
a soldier camp’d, or carrying my knapsack and gun—or a miner in California;
Or
rude in my home in Dakota’s woods, my diet meat, my drink from the spring;
Or
withdrawn to muse and meditate in some deep recess,
Far
from the clank of crowds, intervals passing, rapt and happy;
Aware
of the fresh free giver, the flowing Missouri—aware of mighty Niagara;
Aware
of the buffalo herds, grazing the plains—the hirsute and strong-breasted bull;
Of
earth, rocks, Fifth-month flowers, experienced—stars, rain, snow, my amaze;
Having
studied the mocking-bird’s tones, and the mountainhawk’s,
And
heard at dusk the unrival’d one, the hermit thrush from the swamp-cedars,
Solitary,
singing in the West, I strike up for a New World.
**Mayor LaGuardia, no doubt
imagining a New York version of San Francisco’s Treasure Island, wanted to turn
square-mile sized Governor’s Island just off the tip of Manhattan into a
combination landplane/flying boat/airship port, but he lost that one fight. He
disliked the North Field location, complaining that it was too small for a
great international airport --- and he was eventually proved right. He would
have enjoyed the irony that the airport built there was eventually named for
him and him alone in 1953. It was a long way from Galaland, and yet not
***After it was no longer “Galaland”
this piece of New York real estate was variously known as North Field, North
Beach Field, New York Municipal, New York Municipal-LaGuardia Field, and
finally LaGuardia Airport. Once a cutting edge facility, it is considered a
rather run-down place today. Delta Air Lines now uses it as a hub, and is
closely involved with the ongoing redevelopment of the airport
****By way of full disclosure, this blogger was born in Brooklyn and raised on Long Island. As a child, and as one of innumerable denizens of New York City, his family often visited the beach at Jacob Riis Park (now part of Gateway National Recreation Area). The highway to the beach passed directly alongside Floyd Bennett Field, and this blogger can remember seeing aircraft and activity at that very busy military base of the 1960s. Polaris submarine missiles were stockpiled there. Like all traveling New Yorkers this blogger has often used LaGuardia Airport (LGA) and John F. Kennedy Airport (JFK). Until fairly recently, this blogger had no clue as to the mysterious moniker of the "Marine Air Terminal" and its connection to Pan Am's Clippers. That's why this blog exists. To learn something new every day.
****By way of full disclosure, this blogger was born in Brooklyn and raised on Long Island. As a child, and as one of innumerable denizens of New York City, his family often visited the beach at Jacob Riis Park (now part of Gateway National Recreation Area). The highway to the beach passed directly alongside Floyd Bennett Field, and this blogger can remember seeing aircraft and activity at that very busy military base of the 1960s. Polaris submarine missiles were stockpiled there. Like all traveling New Yorkers this blogger has often used LaGuardia Airport (LGA) and John F. Kennedy Airport (JFK). Until fairly recently, this blogger had no clue as to the mysterious moniker of the "Marine Air Terminal" and its connection to Pan Am's Clippers. That's why this blog exists. To learn something new every day.
This post is for Carol Starcke Giannattasio
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