Naval Auxiliary Air Station Chincoteague Explained

Naval Auxiliary Air Station Chincoteague
Operator:United States Navy (transferred to NASA)
Built:1943
Used:1943 - 1959
Coordinates:37.9407°N -75.4625°W
R1-Number:22/04
R1-Length-F:8,750
R1-Length-M:2,670
R1-Surface:asphalt
R2-Number:28/10
R2-Length-F:8,000
R2-Length-M:2,440
R2-Surface:asphalt
R3-Number:35/17
R3-Length-F:4,800
R3-Length-M:1,465
R3-Surface:asphalt

Naval Auxiliary Air Station Chincoteague was a U.S. Navy Auxiliary Air Station near Chincoteague Island, Virginia. In 1941, the United States entered World War II; early the following year, the Germans torpedoed two merchant ships off the Assateague coast. To guard the coast, the United States Army established two small posts on Virginia's Eastern Shore, one each at Accomac and Chincoteague. The Navy established the Chincoteague Naval Auxiliary Air Station in 1943, across from Chincoteague on the mainland. One young pilot being trained there, future president George Herbert Walker Bush, got in trouble for "buzzing" the house of a young woman he had met at a dance.[1]

In 1959, NASA acquired the former Naval Auxiliary Air Station Chincoteague, and engineering and administrative activities were moved to this location. In 1974, the Wallops Station was named Wallops Flight Center. The name was changed to Wallops Flight Facility in 1981, when it became part of Goddard Space Flight Center.

Notes and References

    • Book: Mariner , Kirk . 1996 . 2010 . 3rd . Once Upon an Island: The History of Chincoteague . Miona Publications . Onancock, VA . 978-0-9648393-3-5 .