Teterboro Airport
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Teterboro Airport - Henry M. Holden
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INTRODUCTION
Teterboro Airport, located in Bergen County, New Jersey, is situated just south of Hackensack at the edge of the Hackensack Meadowlands, 12 miles from Midtown Manhattan.
Teterboro Airport, called the cradle of the golden age of aviation,
has been in continuous use since 1916, and at one point, it was considered the busiest airport in the country with 1,000 daily movements. Located just 18 miles north of Newark Liberty International Airport, Teterboro served a different role from its neighbor in the development of aviation. Teterboro’s heritage includes the hundreds of general-aviation developments and records established there and the men and women who created them.
Around 1825, the land was described as more than half salt marsh and cedar swamps.
Dutch farmers drained off portions of the land by digging ditches and developed a modest crop-producing soil.
In 1917, Walter C. Teter acquired the swampy property. Today the town of Teterboro is the smallest municipality in Bergen County and has a synergistic relationship with the airport, which is the largest tract of land in the borough.
The first attempts at aviation at Teterboro barely got off the ground. In 1910, Frederick Kuhnert and a friend bought a 20-acre plot of land to use as an airfield. Kuhnert built an airplane that could hold 14 passengers. Called Kuhnert’s Ferryboat, it was destroyed in 1912 in a tornado before it flew. Prior to the tornado, the Kuhnert Aerodrome hosted weekly air demonstrations.
Charles, Paul, Adolph, and Walter Wittemann, who founded the first airplane manufacturing plant in the United States on Staten Island in 1905, bought the meadowland from Teter. In 1918, they built a manufacturing plant and opened the Wittemann-Lewis Aircraft Company with Samuel P. Lewis. They acquired a post office contract to convert surplus U.S. Army deHavilland DH-4 aircraft for the first airmail service. Approximately 75 to 100 aircraft were modified at the plant.
After Lewis left the company, in 1920, the Wittemann Aircraft Company won a fixed-price contract to build the army’s Barling Bomber, a three winged, 10 wheeled, six-engine bomber that at the time was the largest airplane in the world. The army made many design changes but ultimately rejected the bomber. With a combined 15,600 horsepower, its top speed was only 90 miles per hour empty. The army refused to pay the Wittemanns the $250,000 balance on the contract, and that forced them out of business. They subsequently leased their plant to Anthony Fokker, the world-famous Dutch aircraft designer. Fokker made his reputation during World War I as the builder of aircraft for the German Air Force, among them Manfred Red Baron
von Richthofen’s triplane.
In 1925, Fokker opened the Atlantic Aircraft Corporation in the Wittemann hangar. For the next few years, Teterboro-built Fokker trimotors dominated the aviation industry, but they were sent to the dustbin in March 1931, when famed football coach Knute Rockne died in a Fokker F-10 when it lost a wing.
In the 1920s and 1930s, record-setting flights became a national obsession, and many of the flights originated or terminated at Teterboro Airport. In 1926, navy commander Richard E. Byrd and warrant officer Floyd Bennett flew a Fokker F-VII trimotor over the North Pole and back in 15½ hours for a total of 1,334 nautical miles.
In 1926, Juan Terry Trippe, a Yale College graduate, saw the future of commercial aviation. He formed Colonial Air Transport (CAT), based at Hadley Field in South Plainfield and Teterboro. CAT received the first airmail contract awarded to private aviation, Route No. 1 between Boston and New York (Teterboro). Trippe chose two Fokker F-VIIs and a single-engine Curtiss Lark for his new airmail service. On July 1, CAT inaugurated scheduled service, with the three airplanes leaving Hadley Field at 6:10 a.m. They touched down in Boston at 9:35 a.m. On the return trip that evening, the pilots landed at Teterboro and found Tripp and a crowd of 20,000 waiting to cheer them. CAT went into the passenger business in 1927, and on October 28, 1927, Trippe founded Pan American World Airways (Pan Am), with a Teterboro-built Fokker F-VII trimotor on his international route from Key West, Florida, to Havana, Cuba.
The major aviation challenge in the 1920s was to fly the Atlantic Ocean nonstop. Raymond Orteig, a wealthy businessperson, offered a prize of $25,000 to the first person who completed a nonstop flight between New York and Paris. A number of aviators had tried both east and west bound, but all had failed.
In 1927, there were three strong contenders for the prize: Byrd, Clarence D. Chamberlin, and Charles A. Lindbergh. Byrd had experience flying a Fokker trimotor over the North Pole and planned to fly another Fokker trimotor, the America, to cross the Atlantic.
In April 1927, during a test flight of America at Teterboro Airport, the airplane crashed on landing. Fokker was at the controls, and Floyd Bennett, Byrd, and a radioman were passengers. All survived the crash, although Bennett was severely injured. The America was repaired, but the accident was a setback for Byrd. America became the third aircraft to fly nonstop to Europe, almost a month after Lindbergh’s flight.
On May 20, 1927, Lindbergh flew from Roosevelt Field in New York and became the first person to cross the Atlantic nonstop. He was an instant worldwide hero and became the face of American aviation.
Chamberlin logged over 35,800 hours of flight time during his 27 years in the air, mostly as a captain with Pan Am. He first learned to fly at Teterboro. Chamberlin teamed up with Giuseppe Bellanca, an aircraft designer who worked for the Wright brothers, and millionaire Charles A. Levine. Levine bought a Bellanca monoplane and decided to go for the Orteig prize.
In early April 1927, to test the endurance of the Bellanca monoplane, Chamberlin and his copilot Bert Acosta set an endurance record of 51 hours 11 minutes and beat the old record by nearly six hours. Bellanca was thrilled and believed his airplane Miss Columbia could successfully cross the Atlantic. However, Levine changed his mind and got Acosta to quit and join Byrd’s party. Two weeks after Lindbergh’s flight, Chamberlin, with Levine as the first transatlantic passenger, flew the