100
edits
EFDspotter (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
EFDspotter (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
||
Line 16: | Line 16: | ||
atcdeparture=134.45| | atcdeparture=134.45| | ||
atcatis=135.575| | atcatis=135.575| | ||
atcunicom=123.05 | atcunicom=123.05}} | ||
Scholes International Airport is the former Galveston Municipal Airport that dates back to 1932. It was renamed Corrigan Airport in 1938 for Douglas "Wrong Way" Corrigan, a Galveston native who worked at Ryan Aeronautical Company and helped to build Charles Lindbergh's "Spirit of St. Louis". Later he piloted his 1929 Curtiss Robin OX-5 monoplane named "Sunshine" from Floyd Bennett Field in Brooklyn, New York, to Ireland due to a "compass error" after being denied permission to fly that same trans-Atlantic route by the U.S. Bureau of Air Commerce many times before. | Scholes International Airport is the former Galveston Municipal Airport that dates back to 1932. It was renamed Corrigan Airport in 1938 for Douglas "Wrong Way" Corrigan, a Galveston native who worked at Ryan Aeronautical Company and helped to build Charles Lindbergh's "Spirit of St. Louis". Later he piloted his 1929 Curtiss Robin OX-5 monoplane named "Sunshine" from Floyd Bennett Field in Brooklyn, New York, to Ireland due to a "compass error" after being denied permission to fly that same trans-Atlantic route by the U.S. Bureau of Air Commerce many times before. |
edits