Naval Air Station Rockaway

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Aerial view of NAS Rockaway in 1917 NAS Rockaway 1917 NAN12-67.jpg
Aerial view of NAS Rockaway in 1917
Aerial view of NAS Rockaway in 1919 looking eastward with view of airship hangar. NAS Rockaway 1919.jpg
Aerial view of NAS Rockaway in 1919 looking eastward with view of airship hangar.

Naval Air Station Rockaway adjoined Fort Tilden on the western portion of the Rockaway Peninsula in the New York City borough of Queens. It was established on transferred municipal property in 1917 during American involvement in World War I.

The station was the departure point for the first transatlantic flight in 1919, executed by the crew of the NC-4. On November 27, 1918, the NC-1 took off from the station with 51 people aboard, establishing a new world record for persons carried in flight. [1]

In 1920, U.S. Navy balloon A-5598 departed for the air station. It went off-course and its crew of three were recorded missing for several weeks, lost in the Canadian wilderness.

On August 31, 1921, an airship hangar caught fire. [2] It destroyed the D-6 [3] blimp along with two small dirigibles, the C-10 and the H-1 and the kite balloon A-P. The D-6 was built by the Naval Aircraft Factory, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, to a design [4] somewhat different from the other five D-class airships. It featured an improved control car (the "D-1 Enclosed Cabin Car) which had a watertight bottom for landings on water, and internal fuel tanks.

The station was demolished in 1930 to make way for Jacob Riis Park. Operations were moved across the inlet to a hangar in the municipal Floyd Bennett Field, which itself was sold to the federal government in 1941 and made Naval Air Station New York. In turn, NAS New York was decommissioned in 1972 and is now a part of the Gateway National Recreation Area, as are Fort Tilden and Jacob Riis Park.

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D-class blimp

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H-class blimp 1921 blimp of the United States Navy

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The Weeksville Dirigible Hangar is an airship manufacturing, storage and test facility originally built by the United States Navy in 1941 for servicing airships conducting anti-submarine patrols of the US coast and harbors. It is located on the former Naval Air Station Weeksville in Elizabeth City, North Carolina, approximately 2 miles southeast of the present day Coast Guard Air Station Elizabeth City.

The United States Navy proposed to the U.S. Congress the development of a lighter-than-air station program for anti-submarine patrolling of the coast and harbors. This program proposed, in addition to the expansion at Naval Air Station and Lakehurst, the construction of new stations. The original contract was for steel hangars, 960 ft (290 m) long, 328 ft (100 m) wide and 190 ft (58 m) high, helium storage and service, barracks for 228 men, a power plant, landing mat, and a mobile mooring mast.

References

  1. "The First Flight Across the Atlantic", Naval Historical Center. Accessed July 11, 2007. "Soon the NC-l would establish a record by carrying 51 men aloft, including the first deliberate stowaway in aviation history."
  2. NY Times Sept. 1, 1921, Page 2, Biggest Navy Blimp Burns with 3 More
  3. U.S. Navy Goodyear Airship D-6 1921 Archived 2008-11-19 at the Wayback Machine
  4. Kite Balloons to Airships...the Navy's Lighter-than-Air Experience

Coordinates: 40°34′6″N73°52′21″W / 40.56833°N 73.87250°W / 40.56833; -73.87250