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Aviation became wildly popular around the world. In addition
to the Wright brothers, several other entrepreneurs began building
and flying airplanes, and the Early aviators were
treated like Rock Stars of today.
Early Aviation in Tucson or A Leap From
Stagecoach To Airplane
The first aircraft in Tucson came only a few short
years after the
Wright
brother's flight at Kitty Hawk
December 17, 1903, North
Carolina.
Hamilton one of the original
"American Daredevil" Pilots learnd how to fly from Curtiss.
Charles Hamilton and Glenn
Curtiss, aviation pioneers, were at an aviation meet in Phoenix.
(Elysian Grove Owner) Emmanuel Drachman and (CofC pres) George Kitt,
Both well-known Tucson businessmen, made a deal to put on an exhibition
in Tucson. It would be performed at the Elysian Grove Amusement Park by
the aviation
pioneer "the Birdman" Charles Hamilton. Cross
country flights were a few years away so the plane was brought to
Tucson by train. On February 19, 1910, Lured by $2000.00 dollars, Hamilton
and two mechanics, and many on-lookers, assembled
his Curtiss biplane (with a "pusher"-type engine). He flew over
the excited
crowd, at terrific speed, on Saturday. On Sunday he did it again
reaching an altitude of 900 feet, this time when landing, he hit a
post on the field and that ended the show at the Elysian Grove Amusement Park.
The next day he packed up and went to Douglas and El Paso. The show in Tucson lost money
but it did make aviation history.
Other events
nourished Tucson’s history with aviation. On November 1 and 2,
1911, two aviators flew into Tucson, bound in opposite directions.
Robert G. Fowler came out of the West, trying to make the first
transcontinental flight from the Pacific to the Atlantic, and landed
on a vacant lot where the old University of Arizona Library stands.
From the East, Calbraith Perry Rodgers flew in with his Vin Fiz
Flyer the next day and landed on Ninth Street, about six blocks from
where Fowler had set down. Rodgers was competing for a $50,000 prize
that newspaper magnate William Randolph Hearst had offered for the
first successful Atlantic-to-Pacific flight in 30 days or less.
Unhappily, he had 15 accidents and so many breakdowns that his trip
lasted 84 days, so he collected nothing—except the honor of being
the first man to fly across the United States.
In 1915, Tucson was
thrilled by the arrival of one Katherine Stinson known as "the
Flying Schoolgirl", because of her youthful appearance. She
had given up a career as concert pianist to become an aviatrix and
was founder and president of Stinson Aviation Co.. Stinson flew a
Partridge Tractor biplane at the Pima County Fair and treated the citizens to a three-day exhibition of entertainment
aerial acrobatics—including the loop-the-loop
(few men tried this maneuver) as part of the at the
Pima County Fair. She was the first woman authorized to carry the
U.S. Mail in the United States and carried the first Airmail in Arizona,
from the Tucson Fairgrounds to a vacant lot behind the U.S. Post Office, where
she dropped it from her airplane.
The Tucson Chamber of
Commerce recognized the marketing pull of aviation, and formed an
aviation committee in the early 1910s. The city did not have an
airfield, or any privately owned airplanes. Nevertheless, the city,
and southern Arizona in general, were recognized as having
tremendous potential for aviation activities.
World
War I put flying to its first practical test. It also put Tucson
firmly on aviation’s map. Army fliers stationed in California and
Texas praised Tucson’s year-round flying weather.
Macauley Field
The Chamber of Commerce in 1917
appointed a committee of five civic leaders to greet the aviators,
truck gasoline to their planes, and provide overnight lodging and
meals. The committee also oversaw first the leasing, then the
grading of Tucson’s first airstrip, Macauley Field, off Oracle Road near the present
site of Amphitheater High School.
Fliers were impressed, and word spread in official reports about
Tucson’s hospitality. The reputation paid off in the spring of 1919,
when the famous Army Flying Circus came to the city to perform in
behalf of the government’s Victory Liberty Bond sale.
The very
day the military aces flew in, Army General Billy Mitchell addressed
a letter to Mayor 0. C. Parker notifying him that the government had
designated Tucson as one of 32 official landing places for military
aircraft in the United States.
The honor, though welcome, carried a cost.
The city was to
provide an adequate air field primarily for military use, but also for
airmail service, forest-fire control, and civilian aviation. The
preparation and maintenance of the field would be entirely a city
expense. Enthusiastic though the city government and the Chamber
were about this recognition, they balked at the cost, informing
Washington by letter that Tucson would provide an airfield for
the Army’s use, but that Uncle Sam should bear all charges of
installing and maintaining it.
These terms proving acceptable, the council and the Chamber
jointly scouted the best location for the field, settling finally on
nearly 83 acres on South Sixth Avenue, the present site of the
Tucson Rodeo
grounds, then far south of the city. When Levi Manning, who owned
the property, consented to sell it for $30 an acre, the council
agreed to borrow money from the Consolidated National Bank to buy
it. The purchase price, together with the cost of fencing and
grading the property, came to about $5000, a sum the Chamber raised
by popular subscription. The field, the first municipally owned and
operated airport in the United States, was officially dedicated
November 20, 1919, when City Councilman Randolph E. Fishburn took
off from the north side airstrip in a Curtiss biplane piloted by a
stunt flier then performing in the city, and landed on the New
Macauley
field.

The first municipally owned and operated
airport in the United States |
Tucson Municipal Flying Field
the first municipal airport in the United
States
The field was known
as New Macauley Field until 1920, when it was changed to Fishburn
Field, and then to Tucson Municipal Flying Field in 1923.
After
Davis Monthan was dedicated in 1927, Charlie Mayse leased the old field
for his flying school and it became known as Mayse Field. Many
people continued to use the old field until the end of 1930, even
though D-M field was in service.
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NOTE:
Reports
certifying this as the first municipal airport in the United
States indicates that the name Davis-Monthan was bestowed
although it was not used. The same name was reserved for
another field. The field honored in 1925 was called "Tucson
Municipal" the "Army Field" or "Charlie Mayse Airport"
depending on the user.
Tucson scored another first when the Arizona Aviation Company
was incorporated, it was the first company in the state to
have aviation as a primary business. They rented the new field
and began building the new hanger. I believe this is the same
hanger standing today used as the Rodeo Parade Museum.
The new airport was officially a joint use facility. Ariz.
Aviation Co. opened their operations and their services were
available to all. In 1919 they flew Senator Ralph Cameron on
his political campaign, this was another first for Arizona, a
political candidate using an airplane. |
The airport on South Sixth Avenue served Tucson’s needs for
about
ten years. The city grew like a boom camp in the 1920s. Military
and civilian aviation grew even faster. Army air traffic increased
because Tucson became a regular refueling stop; and Charles W. Mayse,
Arizona ‘s most famous early aviator, arrived in the city and set up
its first flying school at the municipal airfield. By1925, it was
clear Tucson was outgrowing this facility and needed a new one.
In 1924, Capt. Lowell Smith landed at Tucson Municipal Flying
Field during a
record-setting
around-the-world flight. Smith was accompanied by three other Army
Air Service aviators in the flight, which began in Seattle in April
1924 . The other pilots consisted of Maj. F. L. Martin, who
commanded the mission, 1st Lt. Leigh Wade, and 1st Lt. E. H. Nelson.
The aircraft used in the flight consisted of an experimental type
built by the Douglas Company, known as the World Cruiser. This type
of plane was constructed specifically for the around-the-world
flight at the Douglas plant in Santa Monica, California. Smith's
plane was called the Chicago. The flight was extremely difficult,
and was hampered by bad weather, countless logistical and mechanical
problems, forced landings, and other mishaps. Two of the airplanes
were lost during the flight, the Boston and Seattle, although the
former was replaced by the prototype, and was called the Boston II.
On September 28, the remaining planes completed the 27,553- mile
flight around the world.
The Flight Log Book
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NOTE:
The Flight Log reads
like a virtual “Who ’s Who ”of early aviation greats. Included
within its pages are names, such as: Foulois, Charles Lindbergh,
Amelia Earhart,
Bessie Coleman, Katherin and Eddy Stinson and Jimmy Doolittle,
and Movie Stars . Many of the signatures
belonged to daring pioneers who were instrumental in establishing
what would later become the United States Air Force. At least 19 of
these young pilots had bases named in their honor. They, and others
whose signatures appear in the log, were men of distinction who were
associated with record-breaking events. |
In 1925, Dewey Simpson, another colorful figure in aviation history,
landed at Tucson's dirt field. Simpson was sent to Tucson by the Air
Service in order to establish a refueling and service stop for Army
planes. These stops increased in frequency, and it was soon realized
that a new, more advanced airport was needed. In 1925, Simpson
inaugurated the use of a log book in which each person landing at
the field would record their name, passenger names, aircraft number,
aircraft type, home station, arrival and departure date, and their
destination. The book was used continuously until 1936, when the
final name was entered.
On May 21, 1927, Charles
Lindbergh flew the first nonstop, solo flight from New York to
Paris. Although he was not the first to cross the Atlantic
Ocean, Lindbergh became a hero as a result of the flight. His
popularity in the United States was particularly high, as over
one million people lined the streets of New York to greet him
upon his return.
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Photo above:
Charles Lindbergh arrived Tucson from San Diego Ca. Sept,23.
The photo above was the make "America Air Conscious"
Guggenheim
tour. He landed at the Tucson Municipal Flying Field on S.6th
Ave.
Photo below:
Lindbergh attended the
dedication of the new Davis Monthan Air Field on September 23,
1927. After the dedication
he flew his the "Spirit" to the Tucson Municipal Flying Field,
and departed Tucson for Lordsburg New Mexico early on the
24th.
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These early years of aviation have been referred to by many as
the "Barnstorming era." This refers to the variety of pilots who
practiced stunts to the amazement of observers. Exhibition teams put
on death-defying shows. Some of the more popular stunts included
loops, rolls, wingwalking, and flying extremely close to the ground
(hence the term barnstorming). For a fee, people could also fly with
the pilots. Some of the more colorful and well-known pilots during
this period included Charles Lindbergh, Katherine and Eddie Stinson,
Harriet Quimby, and Bessie Coleman. Eddie Stinson, in fact, was the
first to discover how to recover a plane from a spin. He and Charles
Lindbergh would both fly into Tucson and sign the flight log (at
separate times).
July 20, 1927 to October 23, 1927
Daniel Guggenheim Fund sponsored
Lindbergh on a three month nation-wide tour. Flying the
"Spirit of St. Louis," he touched down in 48 states, visited
92 cities, gave 147 speeches, and rode 1,290 miles in parades.
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Tucson Municipal Flying Field, S. 6th Ave. on
Sept. 24th 1927 |
Davis-Monthan Field
A location for a proposed new field was
found on a tract of land given to the University of Arizona by the
federal government. The land had subsequently been turned back to
the government and opened for homesteading. The current owners of
the land agreed to turn it over to the city for use as an airport.
Two more sections of land surrounding the original tract were then
purchased, for a total of 1,280 acres. They didn't know it at
the time but they had purchased the largest municipal airport in the
United States. Work began immediately on
turning this undeveloped land into a modern flying field. Two
hangars were moved to the site, and a large floodlight was purchased
and installed in 1927. The new facility was named Davis-Monthan
Field. Charles Lindbergh was on hand for the dedication of the field
on September 23, 1927. Lindbergh had just completed his nonstop crossing
of the Atlantic Ocean and flew his Spirit of St. Louis to Tucson for
the ceremony.
The country had not seen anyone like Lindbergh before and there was
state wide excitement. Special trains arrived, bringing groups from Phoenix, Nogales,
Douglas and remote mining camps. Schools and offices were closed and
a wave of 20,000 people arrived at the airport before the 2pm arrival time.
Lindbergh was on time and circled the field before
landing. He threw the switch on the "Lindy Beacon" as part
of the ceremony. That Beacon resides at Ryan Field to
this day. The mothers of the two pilots that the field was named for
were on hand to meet Lindbergh. As a part of the dedication, a unique aircraft
constructed by a local florist out of ocotillo stalks, saguaro ribs,
prickly pear cacti, and a barrel cactus was displayed.
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NOTE: Davis-Monthan
remained the Tucson Municipal airfield until after World War II. By this time
there was regularly scheduled passenger service and airmail. From
1940 on, however, civilian aviation took the" back seat " to
the Army, which took over most of it for an air base. Eventually
Davis-Monthan became an all military field except for American
Airlines and those having prior permission to use the field. Some
time around 1940-41 Walter Douglas opened Gilpin Airport, on the
N.W. side of Tucson, and many people used this field instead of
Davis-Monthan. |
The naming of the field
came from two military aviators, both of whom were
from Tucson. Lt. Samuel Howard Davis came to Tucson as a child in
1904, and attended the University of Arizona. He joined the U.S.
Army at the outbreak of American involvement in World War I. After
serving in various roles during and after the war, Davis was killed
in 1921 in an aircraft accident in Florida. Lt. Oscar Monthan
settled in Tucson in 1900, and enlisted in the Army in 1917.
Following the end of the war, Monthan was trained as a pilot, and
stationed in California and Ohio. In 1924, he was killed in a crash
of a Martin B-2 bomber while he was stationed at Lake Field,
Hawaii.
NOTE:
Tucson had eagerly sought
Davis-Monthan for the revenue it would bring and had sent Monte
Mansfield, a leading businessman and one of the original Chamber
Aviation Committee, to Washington to lobby for it. Tucson won over
intense competition from other desert cities.
With the Army ensconced,
however, the handwriting was on the wall, and the city fathers had
to worry about finding a site for the third municipal airfield.
After scouting the possibilities, the city in 1940 bought about 4000
acres some two miles south of Mayse Field the original Municipal Airport and reserved 2500
acres for a new field. During the war, the Consolidated-Vultee
Aircraft Corp. built three huge hangars at the new site for use in
its B-24 modification program. These buildings stand today and form part of
the airport industrial center.
In
1947, the Tucson Municipal Airfield moved to
the new location, thanks to the efforts of the Tucson Airport
Authority, founded at the urging of the Chamber for the purpose of
running the airport. It has done so ever since.
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Jack Frye, founder-President of Aero
Corporation and Standard Airlines, parent companies of TWA. He
and his first wife (Debbie) christen one of his planes, the
very first commercial flight from Los Angeles to Phoenix and Tucson
http://www.sedonalegendhelenfrye.com/page91.html
FIRST PASSENGER AIR EXPRESS SERVICE
TUCSON-PHOENIX-LOS ANGELES
President Frye Pilots Passenger
Carrying Plane In On Time, Inaugurating Service; Early
Transportation Event Recalled
Read about the beginning of Transcontinental and Western
Air, or TWA..
..
First Plane On Time
Business-like and punctual, the passenger and express plane
which came to Tucson yesterday afternoon on schedule left this
morning at 8 a.m. exactly on schedule for the return trip. Sam
Elrod local realtor, L.C. James, automobile dealer, and the
Mensrs. Whitman and Richardson occupied seats in the cabin of
the plane, while behind them were a number of express packages
for Phoenix and the coast. Early this afternoon the plane will
be back in Los Angeles, and by the time this paper is in the
hands of subscribers, the first round trip will have been
completed and be but one important episode in Tucson's history
of transportation.
TRAVEL BY AIR AIDS BUSINESS TUCSONS SAY
note: Mayse Airport was where the Tucson Rodeo Grounds is
now.
Sam Elrod and L.C. James Urge Use of Planes for Trade Trips
November 29, 1927
If you haven't taken an air trip from Tucson to Phoenix, you
haven't seen nothin' yet, according to L.C. James and Sam
Elrod, local business men, who yesterday were passengers on
the first passenger plane to leave the city for Phoenix and
the coast.
The Tucsonans were two of the four passengers carried out this
morning on the return trip of the first round-trip made by the
Aero Corporation of California. An hour and ten minutes after
they left the Mayse Airport here, they were in Phoenix. Both
transacted business there during the day, and returned to the
city on the train last night, the train time being slightly in
excess of 4 hours.
"The air trip to Phoenix is well worth the cost from the
scenic standpoint alone," said Mr. James who is a
dyed-in-the-wool air fan. "The view of the mountains and
valleys with the cultivated areas looming up is excellant. In
addition the time and convenience of traveling by air makes it
a particularly good mode of travel."
"In the future I will make my trips to Phoenix by plane, and
when we are after deliveries I will send a man to Phoenix by
plane, so he can be back in the city by early afternoon, and
still so a half days's work here."
Sam Elrod, local realtor, who is particularly interested in
the development of the Granada Fig Farms, was impressed with
the view of the state obtained by by such a trip.
"It is the coming mode of travel," he said this morning,
"after my arrival in Phoenix, I went to Casa Grande by
automobile, transacting some business there in addition to the
Phoenix trip, returning to the city by train last night.
"I have been interested in the Casa Grande valley for some
time, but did not know before I made this trip, just how much
land there really was in cultivation there, and the progress
being made."
Both recommended the trip to their friends and predict
prosperity for the air line just established.
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In 1927,
Transcontinental and Western Air, or TWA., began regular
service into the old Tucson airfield. At roughly the same time, Simpson
relocated his refueling/service operations to the new Tucson Municipal
Airport, bringing his flight log with him. James H.
"Jimmy" Doolittle (photo) had the distinction of being the
first military customer at the airfield, and he signed the
flight log on 10/09/1927.
The same Doolittle that
led the raid on Japan after Pearl Harbor
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The Question Mark
Aerial refueling was proven to be viable in 1923, with several
demonstration flights by Air Service pilots. In August of that year,
Lt. Lowell H. Smith and Lt. John P. Richter stayed aloft for over 37
hours in their De Havilland DH-4 aircraft, which was refueled by
another DH-4. This demonstration flight was conducted from San
Diego, and proved that aircraft could stay aloft for an even longer
time. In January 1929, a Fokker C-2 named Question Mark, commanded
by Maj. Carl Spaatz set a new endurance record by staying aloft for
an amazing 151 hours. Other members of the crew consisted of Cap.
Ira C. Eaker, Lt. Elwood R. Quesada, and M.Sgt. Roy Hooe. Two
Douglas C-1s took turns refueling the Question Mark by use of a hose
lowered into a trapdoor in the top of the plane. The crew landed at
Davis-Monthan Field on January 22, 1929, flying from Rockwell Field.
They all signed the log book.
In
1933, another famous aviator, Wiley Post, set a new record by being
the first to fly solo around the world. He flew around the northern
hemisphere, crossing the Atlantic, parts of Europe, the USSR,
Alaska, and Canada. Post completed the 15,596-mile flight
accompanied only by his navigator, Harold Gatty. Post flew into
Tucson on several occasions, signing the flight log each time.

That
same year, the first modern airliner came into service, the Boeing
247. Aviation was rapidly maturing beyond its "barnstorming" youth.
Finally, in
1931, the Army constructed a steel and concrete hangar along with an
operations building at
Davis-Monthan Field. The field was further
improved between 1934 and 1937 thanks to the Works Progress
Administration, which built paved roads and taxi strips. During the
1930s, the field was redesignated as the
Tucson Municipal Airport.
Most still referred to it as
Davis-Monthan Field,
however. Eventually Tucson Municipal would be moved again just a
couple miles south of the old
Tucson Municipal flying
Field on
S. 6th Ave.
This move took place in 1947. The terminal was located
near the three large hangers that were built during WWII.
Later it moved to its present location on the other side of the
field, where it is today.
Tucson Air Base
In 1940, the City of Tucson submitted a second proposal to the War
Department
recommending that an Army airfield be established. With war already
raging in Europe and in the Pacific, the War Department was gearing
up for increased activities, and a board had been formed to find
locations for six new airfields.
The
board (consisting of Cols. Earl DeFord, F. L. Jones, and O. R.
Meredith) spent two weeks in Tucson meeting with the latter's
Aviation Committee and city officials. In order to attract the Army,
the city offered a 16,000-acre plot of land, which included the
municipal airport, along with many other sections of land (including
those purchased in 1929).
Davis-Monthan
Field and Air Force Base
On December 1, 1941, the airfield's name was changed to Davis-Monthan
Field. Eventually the facility would go on serve many varied roles
during and beyond World War II. With the creation of the U.S. Air
Force in 1947, the field became Davis-Monthan AFB, which it remains
today.
Tucson Municipal Airport went on to be Tucson
International Airport.
This website was designed for the
Tucson Rodeo Parade Committee inc.
by
Jake Jacobson 2005 grandson of,
Albert H. Condron,
secretary of the "L
a F i e s t a de los V a q u e r o s" committee 1925
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