Ignacio Agramonte International Airport

Ignacio Agramonte International Airport (Spanish: Aeropuerto Internacional Ignacio Agramonte) (IATA: CMW, ICAO: MUCM) is an international airport in central Camagüey Province, Cuba. It serves the city of Camagüey and the resort village of Santa Lucía.

Ignacio Agramonte International Airport

Aeropuerto Internacional Ignacio Agramonte
Summary
Airport typePublic
OperatorECASA
LocationCamagüey
Elevation AMSL126 m / 413 ft
Coordinates21°25′13″N 077°50′51″W
Websitecamaguey.airportcuba.net
Map
MUCM
Location in Cuba
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
07/25 3,000 9,843 Asphalt
Source: Aerodrome chart[1]

History

During World War II, the airport was used by the United States Army Air Forces Sixth Air Force from 1942 until 1944. The 25th Bombardment Group 417th Bombardment Squadron flew B-18 Bolo bombers from the airfield, known as Camaguey Air Base, from 13 April 1942 though August 1943. The squadron flew antisubmarine missions over the northern Caribbean. The base was also used for air-sea rescue missions by the 1st Rescue Squadron.[2]

From 1 January 1943, the USAAF set up postal operations for Camaguey using Army Post Office, Miami with the address: 2714 APO MIA.[3] The United States Navy also set up to use a non-descript number for postal operations. They used the Fleet Post Office, Atlantic located in New York City with the address: 617 FPO NY.[4]

Airlines and destinations

AirlinesDestinations
Air Transat Montréal–Trudeau
Seasonal: Toronto–Pearson
Fly All Ways Paramaribo
Neos Seasonal: Milan–Malpensa
Nordwind Airlines Seasonal charter: Moscow–Sheremetyevo
Sunwing Airlines Montréal–Trudeau, Toronto–Pearson
Sunrise Airways Port-au-Prince
VivaAerobús Seasonal: Cancún

Camagüey Air Base

The airport is an inactive Cuban Revolutionary Armed Forces air base:

  • 3685th Regiment
    • 2 General purpose transport squadron - Mil Mi-17 helicopters[5]
gollark: I do wonder, though, has anyone actually tested whether train pathfinding time is brought to actually-significant levels with loops?
gollark: I'm pretty sure it's a preference thing and that elsewhere there are arguments raging on it.
gollark: Also, "use the same train direction" as other people would probably make more sense than "use this train direction".
gollark: You can also remove belts without rotating them.
gollark: Oh, also, rule 12: "Do not rotate belts ..."?

References

 This article incorporates public domain material from the Air Force Historical Research Agency website http://www.afhra.af.mil/.

Media related to Ignacio Agramonte International Airport at Wikimedia Commons

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