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The airport was gradually replaced by the Missoula County Airport, opened in 1941 with WPA funds, and the cooperation of the US Forest Service, which needed access to an airport. The new airport was renamed Johnson-Bell Field in 1968 and today serves over 750,000 passengers a year.
The museum was founded by Stan Cohen, Dick Komberec and Steve Smith in 1993 following the purchase of 2.8 acres (0.011 km 2) of land that was a boneyard of Johnson Flying Service aircraft and buildings. [1] [2] A hangar at the airport was borrowed for a temporary museum until a purpose build structure could be built. [3]
English: FAA Airport Diagram of airport: OAK. Source FAA Airport Diagrams; note that these change every 28 days. Taken from PDF on FAA site and converted to SVG using en:Wikipedia:How to draw SVG circuits using Xcircuit. Date 2017-01 Author
Johnson Flying Service (JFS) was an American certificated supplemental air carrier (known earlier as an irregular air carrier or nonscheduled carrier), a type of airline defined and regulated after World War II by the Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB), a now defunct federal agency which tightly regulated almost all commercial air transportation in ...
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Original file (806 × 1,237 pixels, file size: 99 KB, MIME type: application/pdf) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
Date/Time Thumbnail Dimensions User Comment; current: 19:43, 4 November 2019: 806 × 1,237 (215 KB): Tigerdude9: Reverted to version as of 18:50, 4 November 2019 (UTC) Diagram update did not fail, it actually just took several minutes to appear.