Aviation in Alabama

Alabama's first aeronautical event was on 10 March 1910 with the flight of a Wright biplane flown by Orville Wright in Montgomery, Alabama.[1]

Aviation in Alabama
Aviation in the United States
Alabama State Flag
Airports
Commercial – primary5
Commercial – non-primary1
General aviation65
Other public-use airports24
Military and other airports9
First flight
10 March 1910

Events

  • 1909: E.T. Odum brings an aircraft to the Alabama State Fair.[2]
  • 15 March 1910: Orville and Wilbur Wright establish the nation's first civilian flying school in Montgomery, Alabama.
  • 1931: Steadham Acker starts the National Air Carnival series of air shows at Birmingham Municipal Airport.
  • 10 July 1991: L'Express Airlines Flight 508 crashed at Birmingham Municipal Airport.

Aircraft Manufacturers

Aerospace

73,000 jobs are based in Alabama in support of aerospace.[4]

Airports

Colleges and Universities

  • Auburn University is home to the nations oldest continually operated flight school and is the only 4-year aviation degree in the State of Alabama. Recently, Auburn University created the Auburn University Aviation Center. The Aviation Center's objective is to, "...create a robust, visionary aviation program that creates opportunities for students and fosters economic development in the state."

Commercial Service

  • Birmingham-Shuttlesworth International Airport provides air service with 1.4 million operations annually.

Government and Military

Overhead view of Maxwell Field in 1937
  • All flight operations in Alabama are conducted within FAA oversight.
  • Maxwell Air Force Base is the headquarters of Air University (United States Air Force).
  • The Redstone Arsenal supports missile and space operations.
  • The Marshall Space Flight Center supports NASA operations.
  • The U. S. Army Air Corps' Tuskegee Airmen were trained at Tuskegee, Alabama
  • The Alabama State Trooper Aviation Unit was formed in 1975 using four Bell H-13 Sioux and one Cessna 182. The unit currently operates one Bell 206L, one Bell 407, seven OH-58 helicopters and three Cessna 182’s, a Piper Navajo and King Air 200.[6]
  • Cullman City Police Department operates two OH-58, Dale County Sheriff's Office operates 3 OH-58's, Etowah County Sheriff's Office operates one OH-58 and one Cessna 172, Jefferson County Sheriff's Office operates two OH-58's, Limestone County Alabama Sheriff's Office operates one OH-58, Morgan County Sheriff's Office operates one OH-58, Tuscaloosa County Sheriff's Aviation Unit operates two OH-58's, Tuscaloosa Alabama Police Department operates two OH-58's[7]

Museums

References

  1. "encyclopedia of Alabama". Retrieved October 14, 2011.
  2. Don Dodd, Amy Bartlett-Dodd. Deep South Aviation.
  3. "Alabama". Retrieved November 1, 2015.
  4. "Aerospace". Retrieved October 14, 2011.
  5. "Continental Motors Group To Assemble Diesel Kits In U.S." Retrieved April 17, 2015.
  6. "Alabama State Troopers Aviation Unit". Retrieved October 14, 2011.
  7. "Police Helicopter Unit". Retrieved October 14, 2011.
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