Los Angeles International Airport History
Transcription
Los Angeles International Airport History
“What the choice of a harbor means to a sea port community of the present and past, the selection of a great metropolitan airport means to the community of the future even more.” The Daily Californian, March 17, 1928 1928 > Los Angeles 1928 Mines Field > 1928 Los Angeles Municipal Airport > 1941 Los Angeles Airport > 1950 Los Angeles International Airport Below: Bean and barley fields, 1928. Los Angeles > Heritage The year was 1928. The burgeoning community of Los Angeles was struggling to meet the rising demands of the post-World War I aviation boom. Small, privately operated airports dotted the Southland map. Aviation was an exciting adventure in this land of Hollywood glamour. A group of enlightened businessmen, with support from the City Council, recognized that the city desperately needed a single airport that would meet the exploding demands for passenger flight, as well as air mail and cargo. In a prescient editorial on March 17, 1928, the Daily Californian opined, in part, “…the great metropolitan airport of a thousand acres, an area comparing with the largest similar airports of the world, is to be on the site… in Los Angeles.” The editorial went on: “The reader can no doubt vision the importance to this community that the choice of the site entails. …in a comparatively few years (giant liners of the air) will make port here, with hundreds of passengers where one to a dozen now travel by air.” A wind-blown bean and barley field “out in the country” at Inglewood-Redondo Road and Imperial Highway was selected by the Los Angeles Council. Considerable influence on site selection was brought by its choice for the 1928 National Air Races in September that would attract 200,000 spectators and include three dirt runways, a 200,000-square-foot display building, a 40,000-car parking lot and a 20,000 seat grandstand. Mines Field (named for realtor, William W. Mines, who brokered the land) was created on 640 acres of 10-year leased land. Two 100-foot by 100-foot “modern hangars” were constructed. Hangar No.1, off Imperial, is the sole remaining building of the original airport. Famed American aviator, Charles “Lucky Lindy” Lindbergh helped promote the site selection. In addition to Lindbergh, who flew with the U.S. Army Air Corps Three Musketeers Flying Trapeze aerobatic team, the 1928 National Air Races attracted aviation boosters such as Will Rogers, Amelia Earhart, Jimmy Doolittle and Roscoe Turner. Aviation pioneering designer Jack Northrop (who would later locate an aircraft production facility on the airport) was there. That same year, Mines Field (as the airport was known for many years) was officially named Los Angeles Municipal Airport. The Los Angeles Department of Airports was created that October. Cliff Henderson, known as the father of the National Air Races, was named first airport director. The airport became the focal point for Western aviation. Curtiss Wright established a flight school in 1928, then designed and constructed two original buildings. The famed Graf Zeppelin arrived in 1929 following its transpacific flight from Japan. The airport was officially dedicated on June 7, 1930. Douglas Aircraft began operations in 1932, followed by Northrop, and North American Aviation in 1936. Los Angeles became known as the “Detroit of aviation.” The airport again hosted the National Air Races in 1933 and 1936. They eventually became the Cleveland Air Races, continuing under the aegis of Los Angeles entrepreneur Cliff Henderson. In 1937 the city purchased title to the airport for $2.24 million, saving $3 million over the life of the lease. Those 1928 decisions laid the groundwork for 75 years of continuing progress, making aviation and its elements one of the principal economic drivers in Southern California. Opposite page: Above: Hangars No. 1, 2 and 3, 1929. This page: Above: Rooftop signs guided pilots to Mines Field, 1930, photo from the Herald Examiner Collection/Los Angeles Public Library. Inset: U.S. Army aerobatic team at airport dedication, 1930. Below: Airport dedication, 1930. Aviation in America Focused on Los Angeles This page: Above: Monoplane demonstration flyby, National Air Races, 1933. Below: Cliff Henderson with Air Races model, Sid Grauman (Grauman’s Chinese Theater), 1928. Opposite page: Above: Aerobatic demonstration, 1928. Above, inset: National Air Races program covers, 1928, 1933 and 1936. Below: All eyes skyward, 1933 National Air Races. Although the 1928 National Air Races were not the ultimate reason for the site selection of LAX, they played a major role. Entrepreneur Cliff Henderson (who later became first airport director of Los Angeles Municipal Airport) recognized that the location was already something of a landing field — albeit scruffy and ill-prepared. Henderson and his team worked feverishly to lay out three runways; erect grandstands, temporary buildings and fencing; build access roads; and install utilities and sanitary facilities. The 1928 Air Races introduced more than 200,000 people – including Bill Boeing, Donald Douglas, Amelia Earhart and Marion Davies – to the site of what would become one of the world’s busiest airports. A highlight of these 1928 Air Races was the appearance of America’s aviation hero, Charles Lindbergh, who flew with the U.S. Army Air Corps Three Musketeers Flying Trapeze aerobatic team. The Air Races spotlight continued to shine on Southern California in 1933 and 1936 when this national event returned to the airport, attracting even more people than the 1928 inaugural, including well-known Hollywood celebrities. The Decade of the 1940s > Los Angeles World War II and the post-war years were a decade to remember! On the ground it was an airport, from the air it looked like a farm, made that way by some of the most massive camouflage ever conceived— including wooden cows. The city turned over airport operations to the federal government “for the duration.” It was the hub of a vast military complex. Southern California was the aircraft production center of America—making more than a third of the 40,000 planes produced annually in the U.S. Despite wartime conditions, a 1944 master plan called for expansion in two stages when the war ended. That plan went into effect in 1946 with terminals and offices built and runways extended to 6,000 feet. On December 9, 1946, four major carriers (American, Trans World, United and Western Airlines) moved overnight from Burbank, establishing Los Angeles Airport as the region’s premier air facility. A month later, Pan American Airlines moved from Burbank to Los Angeles. When Los Angeles Department of Airports acquired Van Nuys Airport for $1 from the War Assets Administration in 1949, it was the first step toward the city department’s current regional airport system. Opposite page: Above: Sentry guards airport buildings, World War II, ca. 1943. Below: Camouflage netting, buildings, parking lots, ca. 1943. This page: Above: Terminals, hangars, airfield, 1947; logos of airlines that moved to Los Angeles Airport, 1946. Inset: WASP (Women Airforce Service Pilots) aircraft delivery pilot, North American P-51, camouflage, ca. 1944. Below: North American P-51s awaiting delivery flights, ca. 1944. LAX The Decade of the 1950s > Los Angeles The airport grew up in the 1950s. In 1950 it was officially named Los Angeles International and designated LAX (the “X” is a space filler for when airport codes expanded from two letters to three to accommodate the growth in aviation). In 1952 for the first time in its history, the airport’s finances went into the black—with a net income of $185,701. The airport’s profitability continues today. The Sepulveda Boulevard underpass was completed in 1953, allowing two runways to pass overhead. It was the first such underpass in the world. Anticipating the popularity of air travel and passenger growth, a new terminal complex was designed by a team of renowned architects. Ground-breaking for this new complex was in 1957. Runways were extended. The seminal event for Los Angeles Airport occurred on January 25, 1959, when American Airlines inaugurated the airport’s first jet service with its New YorkLos Angeles nonstop flight of a Boeing 707-123. Although there was still a plethora of piston-engine, propeller aircraft in service with most of the airlines serving LAX, more than a quarter million passengers flew in and out of LAX on jetliners that year. Opposite page: Above: Airline stewardesses and flight engineer help install new LAX sign, ca. 1950. Below: Terminal shoppers, 1950. This page: Above, left: Sepulveda Boulevard underpass, 1953. Above, right: Third LAX Air Traffic Control Tower, 1951. Left: U.S. President Dwight Eisenhower deplanes at LAX, 1951. Below: American Airlines 707-123 first jet flight arrives at LAX, January 25, 1959. The Decade of the 1960s > Los Angeles This page: Above: Architect’s concept of airport administration building and control tower, 1960, photo from the Herald Examiner Collection/Los Angeles Public Library. Opposite page: Above: Airline signs evoke international service, ca. 1965. Insets: U.S. President John F. Kennedy welcomed to LAX by California Governor Pat Brown, 1961; U.S. Vice President Lyndon Johnson dedicates Jet Age airport, 1961. Below: Theme Building construction, 1960. The Jet Age arrived in 1959. Despite the continued operation by leading airlines of a host of piston-powered, propeller airplanes, by 1961 more than one million jet flights were logged at LAX. The decade was marked by significant airport expansion. In 1961 U.S. Vice President Lyndon Johnson officially dedicated the new airport. All new were the main terminal complex (Central Terminal); additional ticketing and satellite buildings; and a 12-story, 172foot tall combination airport administration building and air traffic control tower housing all Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) operations and offices. By June 1962, 21 airlines served LAX, including 11 international carriers. Air mail increased 400 percent from 1947 to 1962, air express 200 percent, and air cargo an astounding 1,300 percent. The new Cargo City began operations in 1964 with several airlines building their own cargo facilities in 1965-66. A $10million postal center in Cargo City began operations in June 1968. The City’s Department of Airports furthered the concept of regional air service with the 1967 acquisition of Ontario International Airport (in an agreement with the City of Ontario). In 1969, the Department began acquiring 17,500 acres of land in northern Los Angeles County that would eventually become Palmdale Regional Airport (PMD). The Decade of the 1970s > Los Angeles This page: Above: Terminal 5, full house of jets loading, 1970s. Opposite page: Above: Television coverage, dignitary arrival of Pan Am 747 at LAX, 1976. Insets: U.S. presidents at LAX, President and Mrs. Richard Nixon departing for China, 1976; President Gerald Ford, 1974; President Jimmy Carter, 1977. Bottom: LAX panorama, Administration Tower, Theme Building, complex of hangars, roads, a booming airport, 1970. The era of widebody jets – B-747s, DC-10s, L-1011s – began in the 1970s. TWA (Trans World Airlines) inaugurated Los Angeles-New York service with Boeing 747s. The McDonnell Douglas DC-10, built in Long Beach, 20 miles south of Los Angeles, was the first aircraft to meet new federal standards for reduced noise and emissions. The British/French Concorde, the world’s first supersonic transport, made a courtesy visit to Los Angeles on October 24, 1974. When the city celebrated 25 years of commercial passenger service in 1971, LAX had served more than 200 million passengers. In 1978, LAX and Van Nuys Airport marked their 50th anniversaries, Ontario International Airport its 55th. The Decade of the 1980s > Los Angeles This page: Above: Refurbished interior of Terminal 5 (Delta). Below: Looking west toward the Pacific Ocean, with two runways on the left and two more on the right, ca. 1985. Opposite page: Above: Tom Bradley International Terminal view of airfield. Inset: Department of Airports Executive Director Clifton Moore, Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley with cornerstone of new International Terminal, 1982; U.S. President and Mrs. Ronald Reagan welcomed to LAX, 1989. Below: Busy Tom Bradley International Terminal at night. The 1980s could very well be designated the “international decade.” The Tom Bradley International Terminal was built in time to host thousands of athletes and officials from around the world arriving for the Los Angeles-hosted 1984 Olympics. The 963,000square-foot Bradley Terminal housed 11 aircraft gates. The second-level roadway was also completed in time for the Olympics, doubling curb space in front of each passenger terminal, speeding vehicles through the airport. Parking for LAX increased with completion of three new structures in the Central Terminal Area, and the addition of Lots C and D. A total of 26,550 parking spaces are available at LAX today. In December 1989 the Department of Airports presented a $59.7-million check to the city to retire bonds originated in 1956. The bonds financed the Jet Age airport, including the Theme Building. Repayment of the bond issue was made without imposing any expense to Los Angeles taxpayers. The Decade of the 1990s… and into the 21st Century This page: Above left: United Airlines cargo terminal, 2001. Above right: Renovated American Airlines terminal, 2002. Below: New Air Traffic Control Tower, 1996. Opposite page: Above: LAX Gateway at sunset, Theme Building and Control Tower in center, 2000. Insets: U.S. President and Mrs. George H.W. Bush, LAX, 1991; U.S. President William J. Clinton, LAX, 1999; U.S. President George W. Bush, LAX, 2002; Below left, top: Interior of Tom Bradley International Terminal, 1997; Below left, bottom: Eerie, quiet LAX roadway and curbside, September 11, 2001; Below right: Metro Rail Green Line terminal, rail cars, LAX Shuttle buses. Major growth in air travel and air cargo marked the 1990s and made modernizing the airport for the 21st century a vital concern. Hangar No. 1 (the only building remaining from Mines Field) was designated a National Historic Landmark, and the Theme Building a City of Los Angeles cultural and historic landmark. Tom Bradley International Terminal underwent a $14million renovation in 1997, adding 35,000 square feet of eateries and shops. The LAX Gateway and its pylons, some over 100 feet tall, were lit August 2000 to welcome the Democratic National Convention. United Airlines completed a $300-million renovation of three terminals and built a new cargo facility in 2001. American Airlines completed a $250-million renovation of Terminal 4 in 2002. On September 11, 2001, terrorists hijacked four flights – three of them bound for LAX – and flew them into the New York World Trade Center, the Pentagon and a Pennsylania field. Immediately following the attacks, LAX employees worked diligently and stoically to secure the airport and transport thousands of stranded passengers. The airport was closed for the first time in its history – for 2 1/2 days – as 178 aircraft sat grounded on the airfield. LAX was among the first U.S. airport to reopen after security recertification. Since then, LAX has led U.S. airports in implementing a myriad of new federally mandated security measures to enhance public safety. This page: Early airfield, hangars, ca. 1928. Opposite page: The LAX metropolis from above, 2003. 1928 > 2003 75 Years of Airport Planning In 1928, when it was barley and bean fields with a dirt strip, Mines Field planning was in the eyes of the beholders, dreamers envisioning a booming airfield to serve the biplanes and monoplanes then cutting through the sky. It soon became evident that more formalized planning was required. Whether identified officially as a Master Plan or just plain planning, the sequential expansion of LAX (and its sister airports, VNY and ONT) was carefully structured in the 75 years since those agricultural days. When the City of Los Angeles took title to the land in 1937, a plan for future use of the field was created. The first study officially identified as a Master Plan wasn’t developed until 1944. It was a two-stage plan designed to “better serve air carriers.” World War II and the airport’s major role in military aircraft production skewed practical planning, but post-war suburban tract houses began to sprout in surrounding El Segundo, Inglewood, Westchester and Playa del Rey. The embryonic communities became major factors in future airport planning. Successive detailed documents – usually identified as a Master Plan – were created in 1951 by renowned architects William L. Pereira and Charles Luckman; in 1967 when a new, comprehensive Master Plan was created in conjunction with William Pereira & Associates; and in 1978 when the Board of Airport Commissioners approved an Environmental Impact Report. The 1978 plan included two new terminals, remodeling existing terminals, parking expansion, upgrading a central utility plant, a new upper level roadway, and airfield improvements. The most recent Master Plan explores ways that the Southern California region can meet projected needs for air transportation while balancing those needs with the concerns of airport area communities. This cannot take place without careful consideration and thoughtful planning. Public involvement is key to airport planning. Draft environmental studies and an accompanying master plan are available to facilitate the public review process. Master Plans through the years have continuously ensured the airport’s position as one of the world’s best known and most used air fields. Now encompassing 3,600 acres, annually handling nearly 57 million passengers, 1.9 million tons of cargo and with an asset value to the City of Los Angeles of more than $2.1 billion, LAX has grown to be one of the world’s most important aviation sites. LAX operations are responsible for more than 400,000 jobs in Southern California and contributes more than $60 billion annually to the regional economy. From the rough, oil-drenched strips of 1928 has grown an airport with a unique, four-parallel runway system that handles more than 650,000 operations (airlines, air taxi, military, general aviation takeoffs and landings) each year. From a site thought to be “out in the country,” LAX is now a center for Southern California commerce. The airport is surrounded by a beehive of businesses that depend on the aviation industry and owe their existence to LAX operations, including air freight companies, hotels, restaurants, rental car agencies, expediters and retail shops. Passengers: From Hundreds to Millions This page: Top: Dedicated air travelers, Mines Field, 1931. Below: Graf Zeppelin dirigible at LAX, 1929. Opposite page: Top left: First two paying passengers, Mines Field, ca. 1930. Top right: Passengers enplane DC-3, ca. 1935. In 1928 travel by air was an adventure. Seventy-five years later, it has become routine. Today, LAX is the fifth busiest airport in the world behind Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport, Atlanta’s Hartfield, Dallas/Ft. Worth and London’s Heathrow. However, LAX leads the world in origination and destination passengers. That means more people begin and end their trips in Los Angeles than any other airport in the world. Intrepid passengers annually using the original Mines Field could be counted in only two digits. The early 1930s were the beginning of passenger air travel. Boeing’s twin-engine 247 and Douglas’ DC-1 (that led to the famed DC-3) made their inaugural flights in 1933. Both the B-247 and DC-1 demonstrated that passengers could be carried safely and more quickly than ground transport. Moreover, when they entered passenger service, these pioneering aircraft proved that an airline could be profitable flying passengers. They transformed flying from an adventurous novelty into a practical mode of transportation. An unofficial imprimatur for LAX came in 1946 when four of five major U.S. airlines moved all operations and equipment from Burbank to Los Angeles Airport. The morning after their overnight move, American, TWA, Western and United along with Total Passengers Handled > 1928 > 2002 56,233,843 51,050,275 44,873,100 28,361,900 18,125,200 4,669,060 1,233,620 # n/a n/a Year 1928 1938 1948 1958 1968 1978 1988 1998 2002 Passengers: From Hundreds to Millions newcomer regional carrier, Southwest (not the current Houston-based airline), dispatched 1,900 passengers on 100 flights—all without problems. Pan American moved from Burbank to Los Angeles a month later. In addition, the U.S. Postal Service in December 1946 moved all air mail operations to Los Angeles Airport. In 1947 international operations began when Mexicana Airlines began service to cities in Mexico. By 1971, the 25th anniversary of commercial airline service at LAX, more than 200 million passengers had used the airport. By the end of 2002, LAX served more than 56 million passengers annually. The change in clothing attire of typical passengers from 75 years ago to today reflects the evolution of America. From suits and ties for men to stylish hats and furs for women in the 1920s through the 1950s, the air passenger of the 21st century is casual, informal, often with a floppy hat and comfortable shoes. Family travel has become a norm, particularly with airfares that attract even more passengers. Air travel has brought almost any spot in the world within one day’s flight time from LAX. Today, LAX offers nonstop flights to 71 domestic and 42 international destinations. Opposite page: Top: Busy passenger terminal, 1960s. Below: Luggage volume has expanded, 1999. This page: Above: Today’s informal international traveler, 2001. Below: Passengers deplane from American Airlines DC-6, 1950. Cargo, Mail Add to Airport Revenues, Growth Total Air Cargo > 1928 > 2002 (in tons) 1,962,354 1,703,445 1,160,030 812,289 360,264 16,777 Tons n/a n/a Year 1928 1938 1948 70,360 1958 1968 1978 1988 1998 2002 In 1962 construction began on what is now known as “Cargo City” (east of passenger operations) to handle ever-increasing air freight traffic. A $10-million postal center in Cargo City was completed in 1968. In 1971, a new $1.4-million joint-use cargo facility called Air Freight Building No. 1 was dedicated. It was the first building since 1951 constructed exclusively for freight handling. The $3.5-million Gateway Cargo Center, serving airlines without their own cargo facilities, was dedicated in 1985 as part of the Imperial cargo complex. Total air cargo topped the one-million ton mark in 1970. By 2000, LAX air cargo exceeded 1.9 million tons with just the international freight portion of one million tons valued at over $75 billion. Today, LAX is the fifth busiest cargo airport in the world. LAX has been named the top cargo airport in North America eight times since 1994 by CargoNews Asia’s Asian Freight Industry Awards. The Asia-Pacific region is LAX’s top trading partner with nearly 430,000 tons of international air cargo valued at $53.3 billion. The nation’s leading exports and imports, including semiconductors and electronic components, computers, biomedical instruments, film and music products, aircraft and aerospace products, apparel and perishable goods are processed through LAX. Air cargo at LAX, like passengers, has become a principal contributor to the Southland’s and America’s economy. Opposite page: Western Air Express airmail pilot Art Kelley, ca. 1930. This page: Above: Nose loading of B-747 cargo aircraft, 1996. Below left: Loading airmail sacks (workers dressed for the photo), Mines Field, ca. 1930. Below right: United DC-6A Cargoliner, LAX, ca. 1960. As Americans in the 1920s and 1930s grew ever more comfortable with air travel, it became evident that these same airplanes could carry freight (goods) and mail. Although spawned in the pioneering days of the early 1900s and then visibly demonstrated during World War I by “those magnificent men in their flying machines,” aeroplanes were basically vehicles of adventure, flown by barnstorming pioneers. But, they also carried cargo, particularly mail, before they carried passengers between selected cities. America’s air hero of the 1920s, Charles “Lucky Lindy” Lindbergh, flew the mail even before he captured the world’s attention with his solo, nonstop 1927 New York-to-Paris flight. An oft-repeated aviation legend is told about humorist Will Rogers, a dedicated aviation buff. When he found he could not be carried as an air passenger but that mail was being flown by air, Rogers had himself weighed, then pasted enough stamps on himself to be transported by air to his destination. But it wasn’t until after World War II that air shipments became accepted as a way of doing business. Even then, air cargo concentration was on perishable goods such as flowers, fruit and other foodstuffs. In 1951 an Air Freight Terminal was completed and cargo operations moved out of passenger terminals. 1928 > 2003 > 75 Years of Wings Total Aircraft Movements > 1928 > 2002 667,200 689,888 645,424 482,774 500,976 1968 1978 319,590 160,000 # n/a n/a Year 1928 1938 1948 1958 1988 1998 2002 Clockwise from top left: Curtiss Pusher, ca. 1931; Stearman Biplane, ca. 1931; Marcoux Bromberg racer, ca. 1936; Western Airlines Convair 340, ca. 1951; American Airlines DC-6, ca. 1953; Boeing 747, ca. 1972; Air France Concorde SST, ca. 1974; Western Airlines DC-3, ca. 1951; North American AT6, ca. 1941, photo from the Herald Examiner Collection/Los Angeles Public Library; Sikorsky S-43, ca. 1938; Travelaire (American Girl). ca. 1930; United Airlines DC-4, ca. 1946. From the stick, wire and canvas post-World War I aeroplanes flown by barnstormers, stunt pilots and airmail carriers of the 1920s to the giant, silver-winged behemoths of the Jet Age, LAX has been a home for all. Many of the aeroplanes viewed at Mines Field in 1928 were remnants of the 1914-1918 “Great War.” Mostly biplanes, the pilots (like Henry Bakes who was the airport’s first employee in 1928 and who retired in 1970; see cover) flew in open cockpits dressed in traditional aviator’s togs (boots, jodhpurs, leather jacket, helmet and goggles). Aircraft movements during the airport’s first 10 years were almost negligible, but by 1937 takeoffs and landings had passed the 50,000 annual mark. During World War II – when Douglas, Northrop and North American each had production facilities on the airport – aircraft movements literally soared. The airport was lined with a variety of military aircraft awaiting delivery. To make certain trained pilots were available, the Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASP) flew domestic delivery flights of many Southern California designed and produced combat aircraft. These aircraft were familiar sights and important in the WWII European and Pacific campaigns. The venerable Douglas DC-3, a “workhorse” asset in passenger service, was a regular sight at the airport, as was TWA’s Northrop Alpha, the world’s first passenger-carrying, metal fuselage airplane. The post-WWII years were marked by the utilization of the final generation of piston-powered passenger airplanes: Douglas DC-6s and 7s, Lockheed Constellations and Convair 340s and 440s. Transforming and re-defining passenger air travel, the Jet Age arrived in Los Angeles January 25, 1959, when American Airlines inaugurated its New York-toLos Angeles service with a Boeing 707-123. The first jet service from LAX was February 1, 1959. U.S. Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson dedicated a new Jet Age airport in 1961. Boeing 707s and Douglas DC-8s dominated domestic and international passenger service for several years. Customers of Lockheed (Eastern Airlines and several foreign carriers) trumpeted the debut of the “Jet Age” with the Electra (also designed and produced in California), a turboprop passenger aircraft that promised greater speed and lower cabin noise than its piston-engine predecessors. During the late 1960s when many airlines believed “bigger is better,” the world’s largest passenger aircraft, the Boeing 747, was designed and introduced into service. TWA inaugurated widebody jet service at Los Angeles in 1970 with nonstop LAX-New York flights. During the early 1970s, two Southern California headquartered companies, Lockheed and Douglas, introduced three-engine widebody aircraft, the Lockheed L-1011 and Douglas DC-10 (later to become the MD-11). DC-10 service was inaugurated in 1971. That jetliner was the first aircraft to meet federal standards of reduced noise and emission. By the mid-1970s a half million takeoffs and landings were logged annually at LAX; in the early 1990s aircraft movements totaled 680,000. Since the 1970s, Boeing has continued its international passenger jet leadership with introduction of its three-engine 727, the twin-engine 737; and then the twin-engine 757 and 767 in the 1980s; and 777 in the 1990s. Douglas (later acquired by McDonnell Aircraft of St. Louis) countered with a stretched, four-engine DC-8 and subsequently the aft-fuselagemounted twin-engine DC-9s and its later version, the MD-9. A third aircraft builder, Airbus Industries (a joint company owned by France, the United Kingdom, Italy and Spain, and headquartered in Toulouse, France) introduced a line of Airbus aircraft. Many of these jetliners have regularly served LAX passengers for the more than four decades of the Jet Age. A piston-powered passenger aircraft is a unique sight at LAX, although some air freight carriers continue to fly them, along with earlier versions of the B-707 and DC-8. LAX is considered a veritable Garden of Eden for airplane spotters and aviation enthusiasts. The Glamour of Aviation At left: Media coverage, USSR Premier Nikita Kruschev arrival, 1959. Above, top row, left to right: Great Britain’s Prince Charles, 1970; Famed aviators Ruth Elder (left) and Amelia Earhart, 1928, photo from the Herald Examiner Collection/Los Angeles Public Library; Actor John Wayne, ca. 1958, ©Photography Ink; Pope John Paul, 1987; Charles Lindbergh, 1928; Cassius Clay, 1962, ©Photography Ink; The Beatles, 1961; Former First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy, 1966; Bottom row, left to right: Actor Audrey Hepburn, 1958, ©Photography Ink; Actor Errol Flynn and family, 1956, photo from the Herald Examiner Collection/Los Angeles Public Library; U.S. President Dwight Eisenhower, 1951; Entertainer Bob Hope returns from USO tour to Vietnam, 1969; Actors Robert DeNiro, Al Pacino with “rushes” from movie HEAT, 1995 By its very nature aviation is glamorous. It is a combination of adventure, excitement, even danger. Glamour was present 75 years ago when Mines Field first came into being. It continues to this day. Proximity to Hollywood and “show biz,” the importance of Los Angeles in world trade, and the region’s position as a focal point for international economics and politics, make LAX the setting for a wide range of familiar personages. In the early days, Mines Field and the National Air Races attracted the likes of Will Rogers, Charlie Chaplin, Sid Grauman and aviation icons such as General Jimmy Doolittle and Dr. Hugh Eckener (commander of the Graf Zeppelin). In addition, Hollywood stars such as Jean Harlow, Mary Pickford, Hoot Gibson, Ken Maynard, Wallace Beery, Carole Lombard, Jimmy Durante and Lucille Ball were seen flying, spectating or traveling. Famed aviator Charles Lindbergh played a role in airport site selection, the Air Races and even the start of Transcontinental and Western Airways (precursor of TWA) service from Los Angeles to New York (with many stops in between). Howard Hughes began several of his record-setting flights at Mines Field. America’s best-known women aviators – Amelia Earhart, Ruth Elder, Bobbi Trout, Jackie Cochran and Pancho Barnes – utilized Mines Field and its pristine sky as the scene for records and exciting exploits. In later years, the Beatles caused near-chaos when they arrived at LAX in 1961. Heads of state, led by U.S. Presidents Dwight Eisenhower, John F. Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson, Richard Nixon, Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan (both as California governor and president), Bill Clinton, George H. and George W. Bush have landed at LAX. Personal security and special handling arrangements were made for Prince Sihanouk of Thailand, Prime Minister Nehru of India, President Anwar Sadat of Egypt, Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip of Great Britain, Premier Nikita Kruschev of the USSR, the Shah of Iran, Prince Akihito of Japan, and Presidents Lopez Mateo and Vicenté Fox of Mexico. Los Angeles World Airport’s four facilities have provided locations for countless motion pictures. One of the most famous at Van Nuys Airport was its location for all airport scenes in 1942’s Casablanca (including the moving farewell of Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman). LAX and Palmdale Regional Airport runways were settings for the 1994 Keanu Reeves/Sandra Bullock film Speed. LAX Imperial Terminal served as Moscow Airport for the 1997 Harrison Ford film Air Force One. ONT and LAX were settings for scenes from the 2002 Tom Hanks/Leonardo DiCaprio film Catch Me If You Can. The popularity of LAX as a film location continues today with a commercial production scheduled almost everyday. LAX is considered by the entertainment industry as the “Most Filmed Airport in the World,” with the iconic arches of the Theme Building instantly establishing a film’s setting as Los Angeles. < The Stars Are Out…