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Page Field Army Airfield' was a United States Army Air Forces base, approximately 4 miles south of Fort Myers, Florida. It was active during World War II as a Third Air Force training airfield. It was closed on 30 September 1945, two years prior to the establishment of the United States Air Force as an independent service.
Page Field (IATA: FMY, ICAO: KFMY, FAA LID: FMY) is a public airport located in Fort Myers, in Lee County, Florida, United States. It is owned by the Lee County Port Authority; [ 1 ] the National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems for 2011–2015 categorized it as a reliever airport .
Hawkins Field (airport) Hesler-Noble Field; Hunter Army Airfield; Immokalee Regional Airport; Jim Hamilton–L.B. Owens Airport; Lake Charles Army Air Field; Lake Wales Municipal Airport; Lakeland Army Air Field; MacDill Field; Page Field Army Airfield; Perry–Foley Airport; Pinellas Army Air Field; Punta Gorda Airport (Florida) Scholes ...
The airport code APF derives from "alternate Page Field" - which is a reference to Page Field in Fort Myers. [7] The airport experienced a rebound in traffic during the mid-1990s, with 173,000 passengers and seven airlines in 1995. [6]
Photo of graduates of the Army Air Forces contract flight school at Cimarron Field, Oklahoma, 1944 Cimarron Field 1944 USAAF Classbook. Clarence E. Page Municipal Airport (ICAO: KRCE, FAA LID: RCE, formerly F29) is a public-use airport owned by the city of Oklahoma City and located in Canadian County, Oklahoma, United States.
Page Municipal Airport (IATA: PGA [2], ICAO: KPGA, FAA LID: PGA) is a public use airport 1 mile (0.87 nmi; 1.6 km) east of Page, in Coconino County, Arizona. [1] The airport has scheduled passenger service subsidized by the U.S. federal government's Essential Air Service program as well as regular sightseeing flights.
General William J. Fox Airfield (IATA: WJF, ICAO: KWJF, FAA LID: WJF) is a county-owned, public airport in Los Angeles County, California, [1] five miles northwest of Lancaster, California, United States. [1] Locally known as Fox Field, the airport serves the Antelope Valley.
The airfield was established in 1943 as Ellensburg Army Airfield and manned by the 302d Base Headquarters and Air Base Squadron. Though planned as a fighter airfield for Fourth Air Force, it was taken over by Air Technical Service Command as a maintenance and supply depot, supporting transient Lend-Lease aircraft being flown to Alaska for subsequent transfer to the Soviet Union.