Aviation in Arkansas

The first aeronautical event in Arkansas was the flight of a balloon around 1870 in Yell county. The first heavier than air flight was by James C. “Bud” Mars on 21 May 1910.[1]

Aviation in Arkansas
Aviation in the United States
Arkansas State Flag
Airports
Commercial – primary4
Commercial – non-primary2
General aviation71
Other public-use airports22
Military and other airports3
First flight
1870 - Hot air balloon

Events

  • July 1930, Walter Herschel Beech, founder of Beechcraft has an offer rejected to build a factory in Arkansas City, Arkansas, instead building the company in Wichita, Kansas.[2]
  • September 19, 1980, a major mishap occurred after a socket rolled off a platform and punctured a Titan II Stage I fuel tank, subsequently causing the entire silo to explode, killing an Air Force airman, SrA David Livingston, and destroying the silo near Damascus, Arkansas.[3] A "B" grade television movie portrays this event, "Disaster at Silo 7".[4]
  • 1 April 1981 Arkansas native, J. Lynn Helms is appointed as director of the FAA, serving through the 1981 Controller strike[5]

Aircraft Manufacturers

Aerospace

    Airports

    Commercial Service

      Organizations

      • The Arkansas Aerospace Alliance is part of the Arkansas Economic Development Commission.[6]

      Government and Military

      The Boeing X-32B taking off from Little Rock Air Force Base, Arkansas
      • All flight operations in Arkansas are conducted within FAA oversight.
      • The Arkansas Department of Aeronautics was founded in 1966.[7]

      Museums

      gollark: My desktop has a Ryzen 3 1200, which I think is actually 4 cores.
      gollark: I'm pretty sure my laptop and... actually most laptops? have native dual core dies.
      gollark: I'm not sure about *that*.
      gollark: It just happens to have been rejected from being a different thing.
      gollark: You get a functional 3-core-or-whatever CPU.

      References

      1. "Encyclopedia of Arkansas Culture". Retrieved 14 May 2012.
      2. Heather D. Ferguson. Arkansas City. p. 101.
      3. "Light on the Road to Damascus" Time magazine, September 29, 1980. Retrieved 2009-10-18
      4. Disaster At Silo 7 (1988) IMDB Page
      5. Gordon Baxter (June 1982). "The Arkansas Quick-Draw". Flying Magazine: 76.
      6. "Arkansas Aerospace Alliance". Retrieved 31 May 2012.
      7. Karr Shannon (1967). Arkansas almanac: the encyclopedia of Arkansas.
      8. Lee Ellis. Free Tours, Museums and Sites in America: Southern States Series. p. 44.
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