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  2. Smyrna Airport (Tennessee) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smyrna_Airport_(Tennessee)

    There were neither casualties nor severe property damage on the ground, as the plane went down in an empty field. The Town of Smyrna has erected a permanent memorial to Capt. Kuss near the airport, which includes a decommissioned F/A-18 Hornet identical to the aircraft destroyed in the crash, painted in the Blue Angels #6 livery.

  3. John C. Tune Airport - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_C._Tune_Airport

    John C. Tune Airport (ICAO: KJWN, FAA LID: JWN) is a public airport located in the western portion of the city of Nashville in Davidson County, Tennessee, United States. It is owned by the Metropolitan Nashville Airport Authority , [ 1 ] located approximately one mile (1.6 km) off of Briley Parkway in the Cockrill Bend area.

  4. Dvārakā - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dvārakā

    The city is described as near the sea, in modern-era Gujarat; a painting of the city in the 19th century (lower). Dvārakā , also known as Dvāravatī ( Sanskrit द्वारका "the gated [city]", possibly meaning having many gates, or alternatively having one or several very grand gates), is a sacred historic city in the sacred ...

  5. Nashville International Airport - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Nashville_International_Airport

    Nashville International Airport (IATA: BNA, ICAO: KBNA, FAA LID: BNA) is a public/military airport in the southeastern section of Nashville, Tennessee, United States. Established in 1937, its original name was Berry Field , from which its ICAO and IATA identifiers are derived.

  6. List of defunct international airports - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_defunct...

    The airport was destroyed by the 1994 eruption that destroyed the town of Rabaul and subsequently a new airport was built and opened at Tokua, on the opposite side of the Rabaul caldera. The former airport was located at 04°13′S 152°11′E  /  4.217°S 152.183°E  / -4.217; 152.183  ( Rabaul Airport (old) ) , Ansett Australia ...

  7. Cornelia Fort Airpark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cornelia_Fort_Airpark

    The 141-acre airport was located on part of a plot of land granted to early Nashvillian Ephraim McLean for service in the Revolutionary War, [4] near what is still known as McLean's Bend in the Cumberland River in East Nashville. The airport operated from 1944 until 2011, when the city of Nashville acquired it to include it as non-aviation part ...

  8. Brick Church Mound and Village Site - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brick_Church_Mound_and...

    The Brick Church Mound and Village Site (40DV39) (also known as the Love Mounds and the Brick Church Pike Mound Site) is a Mississippian culture archaeological site located in Nashville in Davidson County, Tennessee. It was excavated in the late nineteenth century by Frederic Ward Putnam.

  9. East Nashville, Tennessee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/East_Nashville,_Tennessee

    The 141-acre airport was located on a bend of the Cumberland River in East Nashville from 1944 until 2011. View from the runway at Cornelia Fort Airpark. In 2011 Nashville bought the private Cornelia Fort Airpark which was the destination of singer Patsy Cline in her 1963 fatal plane crash. The combination of Shelby Park/Shelby Bottoms/Cornelia ...