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Lower Granite State Airport: College Place: S95: Martin Field: Camano Island / Stanwood: 13W: Camano Island Airfield: Concrete: 3W5: Mears Field (was Concrete Municipal Airport) Copalis Beach: S16: Copalis State Airport (was Copalis Beach State Airport) Darrington: 1S2: Darrington Municipal Airport: Easton: ESW: ESW KESW Easton State Airport ...
It is the primary airport serving the Inland Northwest, which consists of 30 counties and includes areas such as Spokane, the Tri-Cities, both in Eastern Washington, and Coeur d'Alene in North Idaho. The airport's code, GEG, is derived from its former name, Geiger Field, which honored Major Harold Geiger (1884–1927).
Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMap. ... Pages in category "Airports in Washington (state)" ... Spokane International Airport; T.
Carrington College is a network of for-profit private colleges with its headquarters in Sacramento, California, and 17 locations throughout the Western United States. Established in 1967, it has a student enrollment of over 5,200 and 132,000 alumni.
Now: Spokane International Airport (IATA: GEG, ICAO: KGEG, FAA LID: GEG) Seven Mile Gunnery Range, Spokane Sub-base of Geiger AAF (7 miles NW of Spokane; may have only been a target field.) Felts Field, Spokane Auxiliary of Geiger AAF Joint civil and contract AAF pilot training Now: Felts Field Airport (IATA: SFF, ICAO: KSFF) McChord Field AAF ...
It is owned by Spokane City-County. [1] The airport has two parallel runways. Now used for general aviation, Felts Field was Spokane's commercial airport before the opening of Spokane International Airport. The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems for 2017–2021 categorized it as a regional reliever ...
Name Founded Control Enrollment [1] (Fall 2022) Endowment Location Other branches University of Washington: 1861: Public: 52,319: $2.83 billion: Seattle: Bothell, Tacoma: Washington State University
Martin Field (FAA LID: S95) is a privately owned, public-use airport located one mile (2 km) west of the central business district of College Place, a city in Walla Walla County, Washington, United States. [1] The airport was founded in the early 1940s by Herman L. Martin.