Cloncurry Airport | |
Iata: | CNJ |
Icao: | YCCY |
Type: | Public |
Operator: | Cloncurry Shire Council |
Location: | Cloncurry, Queensland |
Elevation-F: | 616 |
Coordinates: | -20.6653°N 140.5064°W |
Pushpin Map: | Queensland |
Pushpin Label: | YCCY |
Pushpin Map Caption: | Location in Queensland |
Metric-Rwy: | Y |
R1-Number: | 06/24 |
R1-Length-M: | 1,157 |
R1-Surface: | Asphalt |
R2-Number: | 12/30 |
R2-Length-M: | 2,000 |
R2-Surface: | Asphalt |
Footnotes: | Sources: Australian AIP and aerodrome chart[1] |
Cloncurry Airport is an airport in Cloncurry, Queensland, Australia.
Cloncurry Airport has been the focal point for many of Australia's greatest innovations. Cloncurry was involved with the beginnings of QANTAS, and the original QANTAS hangar is still in use at the aerodrome, where "Queensland and Northern Territory Aerial Service" is still displayed above the hangar door.
The Royal Flying Doctor Service was founded there in 1928, now recognised the world over. The airport was also on route for early planes coming from overseas and a stopping place for contestants in the great air races of 1919 and 1934.
In the late 1930s (as early as 1938, as late as 1941), the KNILM service from Batavia (Jakarta) to Sydney, connecting at Batavia from Amsterdam on KLM, called at Cloncurry. On the way South, passengers spent the night, while on the way North, they had a luncheon in Cloncurry.[2]
In early 2022, Horizon Airways established a base in Cloncurry providing flight training for all initial and advanced training, as well as fixed wing charter flight services.
Due to the strategic importance of Cloncurry aerodrome on the main Darwin–Sydney air route, the Royal Australian Air Force expanded the aerodrome during World War II. Intended to be a major airbase should the Empire of Japan have occupied New Guinea and Papua.
During the Second World War, Cloncurry Airport was the site of a major United States Army Air Forces air base in 1942. As the war moved north, the USAAF units located north to forward bases.
HQ 19th Bomb Group assigned to Essendon Airport, Melbourne, Victoria
28th Bombardment Squadron, (28 March-5 May 1942)
Detachment operated from: Perth Airport, Perth, Western Australia, (28 March-18 May 1942)
30th Bombardment Squadron, (24 March-13 May 1942)
93d Bombardment Squadron, (29 March-18 May 1942)