Haverhill Dutton Airport
Airport in Haverhill, Massachusetts
42°48′7.02″N 71°3′43.04″W / 42.8019500°N 71.0619556°W / 42.8019500; -71.0619556 Haverhill Dutton Airport was an airfield operational in the mid-20th century in Haverhill, Massachusetts. One of the smallest airports in the continental U.S., the runway was 1,500 feet long, and its width was 30 feet, 15 of which was asphalt and the remaining of dirt. The owner-operator, Howard Dutton, lived with his family on the grounds. Dutton was an accomplished barnstormer in the 1930s and had photographs of his biplane stunts from that era hanging in his home.[1]
References
- ^ "Abandoned & Little-Known Airfields: Northeastern Massachusetts". Abandoned & Little-Known Airfields. 23 November 2013. Retrieved 29 December 2013.
- v
- t
- e
Airports in Massachusetts
- Boston–Logan
- Barnstable–Boardman/Polano
- Hanscom Field
- Nantucket Memorial
- Provincetown
- Martha's Vineyard
- Worcester
- Beverly
- Lawrence
- Norwood Memorial
- Chatham
- Fitchburg
- Gardner
- Great Barrington–Koladza
- Mansfield
- Marshfield–Harlow
- Turners Falls
- Harriman–West
- Northampton
- Orange
- Pittsfield
- Plymouth
- Southbridge
- Westover
- Minute Man
- Taunton–King
- Westfield–Barnes
- Canapitsit
- Crow Island
- Metropolitan
- Muskeget
- Snow
- Tuckernuck
- Ware
- Acushnet
- NAAF Beverly
- Bowles Agawam
- Bolton
- Braintree
- Brockton
- Boston–Metropolitan
- NAS Chatham
- Clark
- Clifton
- Coonamessett
- Crosman USAR Center
- Fall River
- Grafton
- Hatfield–Pilgrim
- Haverhill–Dutton
- Haverhill–Riverside
- NAAF Hyannis
- Leicester
- Lowell
- Marlboro
- NTS Marblehead
- NAAS Martha's Vineyard
- Moore AAF
- NAAF Nantucket
- NAAF New Bedford
- No Man's Land NAF
- Oxford
- Pine Hill
- Providence–Seekonk
- Revere
- Robbins
- CGAS Salem
- Saugus
- NAS South Weymouth
- Springfield
- NAS Squantum
- CGAS Ten Pound Island
- Tew-Mac
- Trade Wind
- Westboro
This article about an airport in Massachusetts is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e