To serve the community by providing a safe and functional airport for air related business to flourish on and about the airport facilities. To further serve the community by providing an opportunity for efficient air movement of people and products to and from the Clarksville, Montgomery County, and Fort Campbell, KY areas.
The Vision of the Clarksville- Montgomery County Regional Airport is to provide exceptional customer service, provide a safe and secure environment, and position the airport as a premier regional transportation center.
In August 1929 a newspaper reporter asked Clarksville Chamber of Commerce President Adolf Hach why the city should support an airport. In reply, Hach produced a Louisville & Nashville Railroad timetable. “Locate Clarksville promptly,” he told the reporter. After some searching through the schedule, Clarksville was finally located, printed in type no bigger than the railroad flag stops of Dudley Switch, Louise and Ladero.
”Now find Guthrie, ” Hach continued. “It's in big fat print! Why? Because Clarksville citizens were shortsighted a few years ago, and not finding any local support, the L&N placed the crossing point of its two main lines in Guthrie.”
Hach wanted to be sure that history would not repeat itself. His progressive attitude was shared by a number of people in Clarksville. Among them were Collier and Captain John Outlaw, the commanding officer of the lO5th Observation Squadron detachment at Clarksville. By the late summer of 1929, these men, along with other progressive citizens including Mayor W. D. Hudson, Howard Smith, Emmitt Ladd, and Joseph Boillan. Jr., formed the Clarksville Aviation Corporation. After hedgehopping across Montgomery County, they found their ideal Airport location, a 236-acre field six miles north of Clarksville near Highway 41 and the Tennessee Central Railroad Line. Selling $50 shares of company stock to the public was slow at first, but on September 29, 1929, they arranged to purchase the property from the J.C. Caroland family.
After minor tree cutting and grading, the field was scheduled to open on October 28. By then it had the backing of citizens and businesses, including the Tennessee Central Railroad, which built a 40-foot-long station platform along the nearby tracks, designating it the Clarksville Airfield Station.
Despite a thick overcast and rain, 3,OOO people showed up on opening day to see what might happen. With better weather on October 29 th , crowds watched Army Air Corps pursuit aircraft perform, paid for airplane rides and witnessed a 16-year-old Hopkinsville, Kentucky, high school student volunteer and successfully make a parachute jump. The event was capped by the arrival of a 200-foot-Iong dirigible from Scott Field in Illinois. Clarksville Leaf-Chronicle newspaper reports said the airship “Swooped down over the city. The craft was brought low and Captain Kepner shouted questions as to the location of the field. Spectators pointed toward the new port and automobiles streaked, in an unbroken line, to witness the craft land.”
A formal opening of the airfield was held June 17 -18, 1930. Five thousand people attended the dedication of a new hangar and other facilities. Interstate Airlines displayed aircraft from Sky Harbor Airport near Nashville. Standard Oil Company of Louisiana arrived in a huge amphibian, and Shell Petroleum of St. Louis flew dignitaries around in a Lockheed Vega. There was a glider demonstration by Paul Flannery of the Middle Tennessee Glider Association in Nashville, and a local couple was married in an airp1ane flying above the field.
Colonel John F. Outlaw
On November 29, 1931, the National Guard honored Clarksville and the work of Captain Outlaw by christening a new Douglas 0-38 observation plane The City 0f Clarksville. Only two other such planes were named after Tennessee cities. The Esso Oil Company constructed the first hangar at the airport in 1932. The Company provided fuel, mechanical services and aircraft storage. A year later, Joe Winkle was hired as the first full-time manager of the field. Local pilots who were based and flew regularly from Clarksville in the 1930′ s included Clyde Brown, Patrick Cross, Howell Gholson, Mode Hampton, Pat Howell, Kenneth Grizzard, Bowman Meriwether, John Outlaw and Marion “Doc” Sadler.
After several years of growing pains, the Clarksville Airport was fully established and smoothly operating. On December 1, 1937, the Clarksville Aviation Corporation was dissolved and the airport deeded to Montgomery County for 525,000, the exact sum the corporation had risen to capitalize the airfield eight years earlier.
From the 1940's forward
Military pilot training was the principle activity at the Clarksville Airport during the early 1940′s. Airport Manager Frank Knapp operated a flight school that supervised the training of hundreds of pilots in the Civilian Pilot Training Program (CPTP) and the War Training Service (WTS). Austin Peay State College (now University) provided housing and classrooms for U.S. Navy Cadets when the WTS began in 1941.
In 1943 the City of Clarksville paid tribute 10 a native son who was partly responsible for the airport's existence. Colonel John F. Outlaw of the 1051h Observation Squadron had been killed by a lightning strike the year before. Outlaw helped organize the Clarksville Aviation Corporation which sold stock to finance construction of the airfield in 1929. During a memorial service on October 18, 1943, C1arksvi11e Airport was named Outlaw Field. The dedication ceremonies were highlighted by a formation flight ofB-17′s from Dyersburg Army Base. Fighter aircraft from Smyrna and Camp Campbell Army Air Fields escorted the bombers.
Following the war Outlaw Field Underwent several significant changes. In 1947 the northeast-southwest runway was paved, lighted and extended 10 4,100 feet. Construction of the airport's terminal building was completed in 1951. Although the building has been renovated numerous times during the last 45 years, it continues to serve the airport today.
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