Gusap Airport

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Gusap Airport
IATA: GAPICAO: AYGPLID:
Gusap
Airport
Gusap
Airport (Papua New Guinea)
Summary
Airport type Public
Location Gusap, Papua New Guinea
Elevation AMSL 1,450 ft / 442 m
Coordinates 06°03′12.93″S 145°57′37.23″E / 6.0535917°S 145.9603417°E / -6.0535917; 145.9603417
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
03/21 5,250 1,600 Asphalt
Source: World Aero Data

Gusap Airport is a general aviation airport in Morobe Province, Papua New Guinea. (IATA: GAP) located at the base of the Finisterre Range. It has no scheduled commercial airline service.

History

Gusap Airport was built by US Army engineers of the 871st, 872nd and 875th Airborne Aviation Engineer Battalions during World War II, and was developed into major base consisting of ten airstrips and numerous facilities for fighters and light bombers of the Fifth Air Force. Later during the war, the airfield was also a base for Royal Australian Air Force aircraft. The base was built around eight grass runways, with 180 revetments in the complex. The airstrip at Gusap "paid for itself many times over in the quantity of Japanese aircraft, equipment and personnel destroyed by Allied attack missions projected from it."[1]

Allied units assigned to Gusap Airfield

  • 312th Bombardment Group (1 January-June 1944)
Headquarters, 386th, 387th, 388th, 389th Bomb Squadrons, A-20 Havoc
Headquarters, 39th, 41st Fighter Squadrons, P-47 Thunderbolt
  • 49th Fighter Group (20 November 1943 – 19 April 1944)
Headquarters, 7th, 8th, 9th Fighter Squadrons, P-40 Warhawk (1943), P-47 Thunderbolt (1944)

See also

Notes

  1. Casey 1951, pp. 171172

References

 This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the Air Force Historical Research Agency.

External links


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