Staten Island airfields to include Miller Field in New Dorp - site of 2nd plane wreckage (fortunately aircraft did not land in populated housing and business areas adjacent to the US Army Airfield).
www.airfields-freeman.com
Do you remember when Miller Field was an actual airport?
STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. — Many Staten Islanders were shocked when a small plane landed in Miller Field, New Dorp, Wednesday evening.
However, for most of the last century, this would have been a regular occurrence.
Upon its completion in 1921, the Aero Defense Base at Miller Field was the only coastal defense air station in the eastern United States and was part of the network of fortifications around New York City.
Originally part of the Vanderbilt estate, the government paid $100,000 for the land.
It was also the last airport with a grass runway in New York City. In those days, Miller Field was used for anti-aircraft fire and training Coast Guard personnel.
Miller Field was named after James Ely Miller, a captain of the 95th Fighter Squadron in the Air Force, who died in combat on March 10, 1918. Miller was the first United States aviator killed in World War I who was serving with an American military aviation unit.
It became the home of the 27th Division Air Corps of the National Guard and the Army; several famous fliers landed there, including Lindbergh and Adm. Richard Byrd.
Miller Field closed as an airbase in 1969 and is now part of the Gateway National Recreation Area.
Fifty years later, Miller Field saw its first plane landing -- accidental of course -- since being shut down as an airbase.
On Wednesday evening, the pilot of a banner-in-the-sky plane made an emergency landing on the field.
A video posted to SILive.com shows the plane descending from the sky while a group of children are playing in the park. Spectators gazed in awe at the unusual sight of an aircraft being towed away from the field the following morning.
While it may be a surprise to many that Miller Field was once an airport, Staten Island actually boasted five airfields at different times in the borough’s history:
1. Baldwin’s Flying Field, Oakwood, est. 1910
2. The Aero Defense Base at Miller Field, New Dorp, est. 1919
3. The Donovan-Hughes Airport, New Springville-Greenridge, est. 1926
4. The Staten Island Airport, New Springville-Greenridge, est. 1941 (now the site of the Staten Island Mall)
5. Richmond County Airport, Travis, est. 1941
Many Staten Islanders were shocked when a small plane landed in the New Dorp park Wednesday evening. However, years ago this would have been a regular occurrence.
www.silive.com