Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Jantzen Beach Seaplane Base was a private seaplane base and airport located on Hayden Island in Portland, Oregon, United States. It featured a mile long landing area on the Columbia River and a 3,000 foot by 300 foot gravel runway .
Jantzen Beach Amusement Park was a popular amusement park from 1928 to 1970 in Portland, Oregon, on Hayden Island in the middle of the Columbia River. "The Coney Island of the West" opened on May 26, 1928, as the largest amusement park in the nation, covering over 123 acres (50 ha) at the northern tip of Portland.
Motor Boat Seaplane Base / Garland's Seaplane Base [26] Muzzy's Airport / L'Anse Landing Field [16] Nan Bar Airport / NOLF 27106 / Flat Rock Field [23] National Airways Airport / National Air Service Airport / National Airport [26] Oakland-Orion Airport [7] Oselka Airport [9]
Jack Browns Seaplane Base; Jantzen Beach Seaplane Base; Jolly Fisherman Seaplane Base; K. Kenmore Air Harbor; Kenmore Air Harbor Seaplane Base; L. Lake Oroville;
In 1927, wetlands on the eastern shore of San Francisco Bay were filled to form an airport with an east–west runway, three hangars, an administration building, and a yacht harbor. By 1930, United States Army Air Corps operations referred to the site as Benton Field. Pan Am used the yacht harbor as their California terminal for trans-Pacific ...
According to the Official Airline Guide (OAG), by the spring of 1981 United was operating two daily Boeing 727-200 flights serving Pendleton with an eastbound routing of San Francisco (SFO) - Portland - Pendleton - Salt Lake City - Denver - Philadelphia and a westbound routing of Providence, RI - Chicago O'Hare Airport - Salt Lake City ...
Hughes Airwest introduced the first jets, Douglas DC-9-10 and McDonnell Douglas DC-9-30s, and was operating nonstop flights to Redding, CA and Redmond, OR as well as direct service to San Francisco, Seattle and Eugene, OR in 1980; [12] successor Republic DC-9s continued to serve the airport with nonstop flights to Redding and Redmond as well as ...
Other jets to Redmond included Alaska Airlines Boeing 727-200s for a few months in winter 1989–90 with nonstops to Los Angeles and Seattle, Pacific Express BAC One-Elevens to Portland, San Francisco and other cities, Pacific Southwest Airlines (PSA) BAe 146-200s to San Francisco, and Reno Air McDonnell Douglas MD-80s to San Jose, CA.