Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Joplin was one of many stops on a route between Dallas and Chicago. Ozark Airlines: 1950-1986 to Springfield, MO, St. Louis, Chicago, Tulsa, and Dallas/Fort Worth. Ozark began the first jets to Joplin in 1968 with the Douglas DC-9. Central Airlines: 1955-1967 to Kansas City, Fayetteville, and Fort Smith. Central merged into Frontier Airlines in ...
I-49 south / US 71 south / Route 249 north – Neosho, Fort Smith, Joplin: Signed as exits 11A (south) and 11B (north) eastbound; western terminus of I-49/US 71 concurrency 13.190: 21.227: 13: Prigmor Road (CR 190) – Joplin: Opened November 2015 15.483: 24.917: 15: I-44 BL west / Route 66 west – Duenweg: Westbound exit and eastbound ...
Waynesville–St. Robert Regional Airport (Forney Field) P-N 7,717 Joplin: JLN: JLN KJLN Joplin Regional Airport: P-N 40,013 Kansas City: MCI: MCI KMCI Kansas City International Airport (was Mid-Continent International) P-M 5,790,847 St. Louis: STL: STL KSTL St. Louis Lambert International Airport: P-M 7,631,953 Springfield/Branson: SGF: SGF KSGF
Near the AR/MO/OK tripoint. North of Joplin, Route 43 is a relatively straight highway. It intersects U.S. Route 160 in Barton County west of Lamar. A few miles south of there it intersects Route 126. Just north of Joplin, it intersects Route 96. In Joplin, the highway is known as Main Street and passes through the old historic downtown area.
The Joplin Globe, Mo. Debby Woodin, The Joplin Globe, Mo. Updated February 22, 2024 at 6:49 AM. ... SkyWest is the only passenger carrier in and out of the Joplin Regional Airport.
This is a list of airports in Kansas (a U.S. state), grouped by type and sorted by location.It contains all public-use and military airports in the state. Some private-use and former airports may be included where notable, such as airports that were previously public-use, those with commercial enplanements recorded by the FAA or airports assigned an IATA airport code.
Ozark Air Lines was incorporated on 1 September 1943 in Missouri by Laddie Hamilton, Barak Mattingly and Floyd Jones with $100,000 in paid-up capital. [2] Ozark flew from Springfield, Missouri, [3] and, in January 1945, it began flights between Springfield and St. Louis on Beechcraft Model 17 Staggerwings, replaced by Cessna AT-17 Bobcats in the late 1940s.
Route 249 begins at an interchange with I-44, I-49, and US 71 east of Joplin in Jasper County, where the road continues south as I-49/US 71.The route heads north as a four-lane freeway through agricultural areas with some nearby development, coming to an interchange with Route 66/I-44 Bus. west of Duenweg.