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Fly for Fun Airport (FAA LID: W56) is a privately owned, public use airport located four nautical miles (5 mi, 7 km) northeast of the central business district of Vancouver, a city in Clark County, Washington, United States.
All Washington State Airports (clickable map, each region has lists and links) Seaplane Base Directory at the Wayback Machine (archived December 7, 2006) Airport Directory (list) Washington State Airport Reference Guide (list and links to PDFs) WSDOT-Managed Airports (list and map) Other sites used as a reference when compiling and updating ...
Evergreen Field (FAA LID: 59S), also known as Evergreen Airport, was a public-use airport located five miles (8.0 km) east of the central business district of Vancouver, a city in Clark County, Washington, United States. [1] It was located northeast of the intersection of Southeast Mill Plain Boulevard & Southeast 136th Avenue. [2]
Original file (4,032 × 3,024 pixels, file size: 3.15 MB, MIME type: image/jpeg) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
Pearson Field covers an area of 82 acres (33 ha) which contains one runway designated 8/26 with a 3,275 ft × 60 ft (998 m × 18 m) asphalt pavement. For the 12-month period ending December 31, 2022, the airport had 52,700 aircraft operations, an average of 144 per day: 100% general aviation, <1% military and <1% air taxi.
Evergreen North–South Airpark (FAA LID: WA81) is a private-use airport located six nautical miles (11 km) east-northeast of the central business district of Vancouver, in Clark County, Washington, United States. It is owned by North/South Airpark Association.
Further splits in 1995 to create area code 360 for most of Western Washington, and 1997 to form area codes 253 and 425. 564 will be added to the 206 area in 2025. 509: January 1, 1957 [1] Eastern Washington, including Spokane, the Tri-Cities, Yakima, Walla Walla, and Wenatchee: Created in a split from area code 206. [2] 360: January 15, 1995 [3]
He shot at police responding to the scene and was killed by return fire. [89] 1993-01-31: Copeland, Timothy (19) Washington, D.C. Copeland was shot and killed by a police sniper after a hostage crisis in which Copeland fatally shot a woman and an infant and wounded another woman. [90] [91] 1993-01-30: Muhammed, Mujahid (24) New York (New York)