| ALBERT
WHITTED AIRPORT HISTORY |
|
| January
1, 1914, The first regularly scheduled aircraft flight in history. |
In
2003 Albert Whitted Airport celebrated its 75th anniversary, although
the field has actually been around much longer. Albert Whitted
Airport is nationally recognized as the birthplace of scheduled
airline flight. On January 1, 1914, a small airboat took
off near this airport, on the first regularly scheduled aircraft
flight in history. |
 |
| National
Airlines |
 |
National
Airlines, one of the nation's first airlines, began service
here in 1934. Decades later, National merged with Pan-Am
to create one of the world's largest air carriers. In
the late thirties, Goodyear chose Albert Whitted as one of
the first airports to base its famous blimps. |
|
| World
War II |
During
World War II, Albert Whitted airport helped support the war
effort when it was converted from a public airfield to an
military air base. Hundreds of Naval cadets received their
training here. For generations, Albert Whitted airport has
served our community in many unique and often unrecognized
ways. This service continues today.
Ens.
Albert Whtted, USN |
 |
|
| Picture
Perfect |

Antique Postcard... Downtown in the Sunshine City
|
"Remember
Whitted When..."
featured articles from various issues of The
Flyer newsletter |
Remember
Whitted When...
Do you remember when you could fly for a "Penny-A-Pound"
at Albert Whitted Airport? In the '70s, flights were offered to
folks who would like to see St. Pete from above or experience their
first airplane flight. The price was one cent for each pound the
passenger weighed. You were asked to step up on a scale to determine
the number of pennies it cost you to fly. If you weighed 50 pounds,
your ticket was 50 cents!
Today, EAA Chapter
47 offers two great programs where first flights are absolutely
free! Young Eagles is for children ages 8-17, Flying Start is for
18 and up; both programs are offered by our local volunteer pilots
who give their time, planes and fuel to provide this fun and exciting
service to our community. To participate and find out more, refer
to the Airports Contact list on page 2.
If you remember or took part in the "Penny-A-Pound" Flying
and would like to tell your story, or if you have an old photo from
that event, please contact markbogue@albertwhittedairport.org. We
would love to hear from you!
By
Glenn Anderson
|
Remember
Whitted When...
A few years ago I was chatting with local aviation pioneer, Ed
Hoffman down at the airport. He pointed to the middle of runway
6/24 and said,
"I used to fish right about there."
To visualize
how the downtown waterfront once looked, you have only to visit
Lassing Park on Tampa Bay in the Old Southeast Neighborhood. This
park shows today how different the downtown waterfront was a century
ago.
Whitted was one result of the 1920s dredging and landfill projects
which turned shoals into channels and water into land. In less than
a decade, a five mile stretch of natural shoreline was converted
to a "sea walled front yard." The dredging of Bayboro Harbor
to a depth of nineteen feet in the channel and twenty-one feet in
the turning basin produced the landfill that became Albert Whitted
Airport and the United States Coast Guard Station. It went from "fishin'
hole to landing strip."
William "Bill" Straub
moved to the City in 1901 and championed the cause for public ownership
and multiple uses of the downtown waterfront. The project was to
take until the mid 1920s with much politicking to get the waterfront
project completed. The airport, the Coast Guard station, the Municipal
Marina, the Port, the parks, and later, Al Lang Field, the Bayfront
Center/Mahaffey Theatre, the University of South Florida campus
and even the public parking lots all nicely fit that vision of
public owned and used lands.
In October 1928, the City Council authorized the construction of
a flying field to be named in honor of hometown Navy aviator James
Albert Whitted.
By
Glenn Anderson
|
Remember
Whitted When...
In October of 1928, the City Council authorized the construction
of a field to be named in honor of James Albert Whitted and it
was opened during the summer of 1929.
Being built on landfill from the port dredging, it went from "fishin'
hole to landing strip." But Albert Whitted Airport was not
St. Pete's first and only airport.
In 1926, pioneer
entrepreneur Walter Fuller built a private airport, the Piper-Fuller
Airport, in the Jungle area; it was St. Petersburg's first airport.
Larger than Albert Whitted and designed as an amenity to tourist-oriented
projects Fuller was involved in, it was later given up to development.
During WWII, it was reactivated for use by primary trainer planes.
Despite interest in developing it further after the war, the Jungle
Property Owners Association defeated the proposal.
Another St. Petersburg airport lost along the way was Sky Harbor
Airport on Weedon Island. It began operations in 1928. Both Eastern
Air Transport and National Airlines used it in the '30s but it too
was lost.
Period photos show several other air facilities that have since vanished.
A seaplane base was located close to Gandy Blvd., and a war time
emergency field was once located on Mullet Key, now part of Fort
Desoto Park. The ramps of the Coast Guard seaplane facility close
to the South end of Runway 18/36 can still be seen at the Bayboro
Coast Guard station though they are no longer used.
By
Glenn Anderson
|
Remember
Whitted When...
For many years, Albert Whitted Airport had an amenity that made
it unique among the airports of the world: an airship hangar; one
of very few ever built. During the late 1990's construction phase,
the remaining vestiges of the blimp hanger were torn down. Reasons
given were that this structure was dangerous and no longer usable.
It was dismantled piece-by-piece, pieces numbered and trucked off
to be rebuilt elsewhere.
Even at its beginning
in 1928, Albert Whitted Airport was a modest facility, with only
one short runway. Of the three existing St. Petersburg airports
at that time, it was the smallest but it was the only one publicly
owned. Politicians were keen on attracting more tourists, and developers
looked for ways to lure more Northerners to buy into their developments.
The City's publicity agent at the time, John Lodwick, decided it
needed to be a more exciting place. So, shortly after the airport's
opening, he convinced the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company of Akron,
Ohio, to bring one of its blimps to the Airport as its home base.
In September 1929, city council appropriated $33,062 for a municipal
blimp hangar to house the airships he envisioned coming and going.
It was completed and the blimp "Goodyear" flew into the
city in December 1929. Unfortunately, the stock market had crashed
three months earlier and this aviation venture was doomed for failure.
As money dried up for almost every American and the Great Depression
cut all activities to the bare minimum, so went the airship enterprise.
By April of 1930, every bank in the city was forced to close.
With the Hindenburg disaster, the Depression and the end of the Airship
era, our blimp hangar was a white elephant. The building was made
shorter in height by about half and that is the way it spent most
of its life here.
By
Glenn Anderson
|
Remember
Whitted When...
The topic of my last column was the blimp hanger that had been
built at Albert Whitted Airport in 1929 to house the blimp "Goodyear."
With the stock market crash and bank failures of the depression
having struck between the time construction started and the time
the first blimp arrived, blimp activity at the airport was short
lived. The only blimp activity here now is an occasional touch
and go by contemporary blimps coming to the area to cover special
events. A few years ago, I had the thrill to be given the Whitted
Tower instruction that I
"was number two in the pattern cleared for landing on runway
6 behind the blimp 'Snoopy.'" It was on final at the breakneck
speed of 19 knots! We did slow flight and S turns to stay behind
but ultimately had to execute a go around to keep from getting
too close. From that experience I gained a real respect for "committing
aviation" in and around a lighter-than-air craft.
Though I have
been around the airport since the mid-70's, it wasn't until recently
that I found out there are remnants of the old blimp facility still
remaining. Along the west fence line of the airport, north of the
blast fence, just past the "picnic nook" are what remains
of the old blimp tie downs. My guess is that these concrete tie
downs have such a massive "root" that they have never
been removed. That, plus the fact they are out of the way of any
airport activity except grass mowing, has allowed them to stand
as monuments to lighter-than-air activity on the field. I hope
that as the airport is developed, these concrete pylons will be
marked as such and some public access to them provided.
One personal note, I have taken on the responsibility of Chairman
of the Historic Preservation Committee of AWAPS. Our committee will
be seeking personal stories of the airport in times past as well
as any items of memorabilia that might remain. If you want to get
involved, have good stories that need to be told and preserved or
items that you might want to donate for use in a collection we hope
to house in a museum area, please contact me by E-mail, wlfsng914@aol.com,
or by sending a note to or calling the AWAPS office.
By
Glenn Anderson
|
|