Kingston Airfield Explained

Kingston Airfield
Type:Redeveloped as subdivision
Owner:City of Kingston
Operator:Kingston Flying Club
Location:Kingston, Ontario
Timezone:EST
Summer:EDT
Coordinates:44.2511°N -76.5028°W
Pushpin Map:Canada Ontario
Pushpin Label:Kingston Airfield
Pushpin Map Caption:Location in Ontario
R1-Length-F:1,200
R1-Length-M:365
R1-Surface:(Formerly) grass
Opened:1929
Closed:1942

Kingston Airfield, in Kingston, Ontario, Canada, operated from 1929 - 1942 as Kingston's first airport. It consisted of a grass strip and supporting buildings in what is now the Kingscourt subdivision of the city, just to the west of the St. Mary's cemetery. The city of Kingston purchased what was then the Reid Farm and leased it to the Kingston Flying Club, who operated a flight school using two Gipsy Moth aircraft.

The Kingston Airfield was a popular refueling stop between Toronto and Montreal, and in 1931, 1,400 transient aircraft were recorded using the field.[1]

The airport was closed in 1942 after a crash. After World War II, the Kingston Flying Club resumed operations at Norman Rogers Airport, west of the city, which had been built as a military field, and the original Kingston Airfield was redeveloped as a residential neighborhood.

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Kingston Airfield (CA-0312) @ OurAirports . 2023-04-09 . ourairports.com.