Kingman Airport Kingman Army Airfield |
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USGS aerial image | |||
IATA: IGM – ICAO: KIGM – FAA LID: IGM | |||
Summary | |||
Airport type | Public | ||
Owner | City of Kingman | ||
Serves | Kingman, Arizona | ||
Location | Mohave County, Arizona | ||
Elevation AMSL | 3,449 ft / 1,051 m | ||
Coordinates | |||
Map | |||
IGM
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Runways | |||
Direction | Length | Surface | |
ft | m | ||
3/21 | 6,827 | 2,081 | Asphalt |
17/35 | 6,725 | 2,050 | Asphalt |
Statistics (2011) | |||
Aircraft operations | 44,137 | ||
Based aircraft | 185 | ||
Source: Federal Aviation Administration[1] |
Kingman Airport (IATA: IGM, ICAO: KIGM, FAA LID: IGM) is a city-owned, public-use airport located eight nautical miles (9 mi, 15 km) northeast of the central business district of Kingman, a city in Mohave County, Arizona, United States.[1] It has scheduled service provided by one commercial airline, which is subsidized by the Essential Air Service program. A number of aircraft withdrawn from commercial service are stored or scrapped there.
As per Federal Aviation Administration records, the airport had 897 passenger boardings (enplanements) in calendar year 2010, an increase of 2.2% from the 878 enplanements in 2009.[2] This airport is included in the FAA's National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems for 2011–2015, which categorized it as a general aviation airport (the commercial service category requires at least 2,500 enplanements per year).[3]
Contents |
The Kingman Airport was originally built as a World War II United States Army Air Force training field. Between 1942 and 1945, the U.S. Army Air Force acquired approximately 4,145 acres in Mohave County outside of Kingman, Arizona and established the Kingman Army Airfield and associated Kingman Aerial Gunnery School training facilities in 1942.
Kingman Army Airfield was established as a training base for Army Air Force aerial gunners. In addition to the main base, the Kingman Ground to Ground Gunnery Range and Kingman Air to Air Gunnery Range was located about six miles north of the present city limits of the City of Kingman. From this point, the former practice gunnery ranges extended northward approximately 31 miles, generally following the Hualapai Valley. To support the training at the main facility, Yucca Army Airfield operated several emergency landing strips.
The Gunnery Ranges were used to train gunners in air-to-air firing techniques. Five target flight lines and two auxiliary landing fields were established within this range. Initially, gunnery trainees fired at targets towed along these target flight lines. This technique did not provide a sufficient quality of training and other training techniques were tried. One of the first tried was to place a gun camera on the machine gun and instead of firing bullets the camera would record the gunners site picture whenever the trigger was pulled. In this situation, instead of aiming at a towed target sleeve, P-39 and P-63 aircraft were used as targets. Another technique tried involved the use of frangible bullets which were fired at specially armored versions of the P-39 and P-63s. This was called Operation PINBALL.
On 7 May 1943 the facility was officially named the Kingman Army Air Field. The base continued to grow and change with many new squadrons being added to the base and some of the existing ones combined. The host unit at Kingman Field was the 460th AAF Base Unit. Training units were as follows:
The 1120th and the 329th merged with the 328th to become the 328th Flexible Gunnery Training Group. The 1122nd, 537th, and 538th were consolidated to form the 1123rd Flexible Gunnery Training Group. The 1121st became the 329th. The 536th and the 760th Flexible Gunnery Training Groups were added to the list. Also assigned to the B17 fighting groups was the 31st Altitude Squadron, training for operations at high altitude.
Kingman Army Air Field was set up to handle two classes of about 200 students at any one time. During 1943, the policy was to have a class fire 1,200 rounds per student for one week on the Kingman Air to Air Gunnery Range (week five of the training cycle) and then move to Yucca AAF and have them fire 1,000 rounds during the second week.
Initially, the ammunition used was .30 caliber. As the .50 caliber machine gun became available, the use of the .30 caliber was slowly phased out. The P-39 and P-63 aircraft, used as targets, were normally equipped with a 37mm cannon. When the aircraft was in use as a target, this cannon was supposed to be removed and a light replaced it which would signal the gunners when hits were scored on the aircraft. During the latter part of the period this range was operational, the policy was that the gun camera missions were flown on this range and the live fire missions were flown on the Yucca Air to Air Range.
On 22 April 1944 the Kingman Army Air Field was consolidated and the host unit was redesignated as the 3018th Army Air Force Base Unit. Each of the units on the base became subdivisions of 3018th. During 1944 the 3018th was one of the top training schools in the United States.
The war ended on both fronts in 1945. With peace in the world there was no further need for a gunnery school - or for the airplanes that carried the guns. That year saw the base gradually wind down to a stop. On 15 November 1945, the property was declared surplus, and between 1946 and 1950 the various parcels were returned and leases cancelled.
After the war, the Reconstruction Finance Corporation established five large storage, sales and scrapping centers for Army Air Forces aircraft. These were located at: Albuquerque AAF, New Mexico, Altus AAF, Oklahoma, Kingman, Arizona, Ontario AAF, California and Walnut Ridge AAF, Arkansas. A sixth facility for storing, selling and scrapping Navy and Marine aircraft was located at Clinton, Oklahoma.
Estimates of the number of excess surplus airplanes ran as high as 150,000. Consideration was given to storing a substantial number of these. By the summer of 1945, at least 30 sales-storage depots and 23 sales centers were in operation. In November 1945, it was estimated a total of 117,210 aircraft would be transferred as surplus.
Between 1945 and June 1947, the RFC, War Assets Corporation and the War Assets Administration (disposal function of the RFC was transferred to WAC on January 15, 1946, and to the WAA in March 1946) processed approximately 61,600 World War II aircraft, of which 34,700 were sold for flyable purposes and 26,900, primarily combat types, were sold for scrapping.
War Assets Administration came to KAAF to set up Sales & Storage Depot 41. Depot 41 was to sell of the base buildings and equipment. Not only that, it would store aircraft from the Army Air Force. It is estimated that approximately 10,000 warbirds were flown to Kingman in 1945 and 1946 for storage and sale. Some sources report the number to be over 11,000. It is reported that at least 100 of the 118 B-32 Heavy Bombers built were flown there, many straight from the assembly line.
Most of the transports and trainers could be used in the civilian fleet, and trainers were sold for $875 to $2,400. The fighters and bombers were of little peacetime use, although some were sold. Typical prices for surplus aircraft were:
Many aircraft were transferred to schools for educational purposes, and to communities for memorial use for a minimal fee. A Boy Scout troop bought a B-17 for $350.
General sales were conducted from these centers; however, the idea for long term storage, considering the approximate cost of $20 per month per aircraft, was soon discarded, and in June 1946, the remaining aircraft, except those at Altus, were put up for scrap bid.
The tens of thousands of warbirds that had survived the enemy fighter planes and fierce anti-aircraft fire ended up at Albuquerque, Altus, Kingman, Ontario, Walnut Ridge and Clinton.
After the Depot 41 did it’s job, the airfield was turned over to Mohave County to be used as an airport for the county.
With the disposal of the military aircraft completed, Kingman AAF was returned to civilian use in 1949.
All but a few of the original Kingman Army Airfield buildings have been removed. The property was formerly used as a support facility for aircraft training and has been redeveloped into a civil airport and industrial park. Today, some civilian airliners are stored there and remarketed or recycled into spare parts and into their base metals.
The Kingman Army Airfield Historical Society was also established, creating a museum to preserve the field's history with artifacts, photos, and displays. It also includes recognition of all conflicts in which Americans have served.
Kingman Airport covers an area of 4,200 acres (1,700 ha) at an elevation of 3,449 feet (1,051 m) above mean sea level. It has two asphalt paved runways: 3/21 is 6,827 by 150 feet (2,081 x 46 m) and 17/35 is 6,725 by 75 feet (2,050 x 23 m).[1]
For the 12-month period ending April 30, 2011, the airport had 44,137 aircraft operations, an average of 120 per day: 95% general aviation, 4% scheduled commercial, 1% air taxi, and <1% military. At that time there were 185 aircraft based at this airport: 51% single-engine, 23% multi-engine, 23% jet, 1% helicopter, 1% glider and 1% ultralight.[1]
Passenger boardings (enplanements) by year, as per the Federal Aviation Administration:
Year | 2005 [4] | 2006 [4] | 2007 [5] | 2008 [6] | 2009 [7] | 2010 [2] |
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Enplanements | 1,907 | 2,417 | 2,437 | 1,260 | 878 | 897 |
Change | -22.9% | +26.7% | +0.8% | -48.3% | -30.3% | +2.2% |
Airlines | Destinations |
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Great Lakes Airlines | Phoenix |
Ameriflight | Lake Havasu City |
Carrier | Passengers (arriving and departing) |
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Great Lakes |
1,880(100%)
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Rank | City | Airport | Passengers |
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1 | Las Vegas, NV | McCarran International Airport (LAS) | <1,000 |
2 | Phoenix, AZ | Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport (PHX) | <1,000 |
3 | Farmington, NM | Four Corners Regional Airport (FMN) | <1,000 |
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