Cornell University Airport/ East Hill Airport/ Ithaca Tompkins International Airport

Details
Name
Cornell University Airport/ East Hill Airport/ Ithaca Tompkins International Airport
Address
1 Culligan Dr Lansing
Year Built
Unknown
Building Type
Construction
not specified
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Add Source/NarrativeSources & Narratives
"One of the few airline-owned airports in the nation, the Cornell-Robinson field in the Town of Lansing is now in operation. It will meet all federal requirements for Robinson Airlines operation under a Civil Aeronautics Board certificate.
The field went into service for the first time at 5:30 p.m. Sunday when Flight 6 from Buffalo to Ithaca, Triple Cities and New York, landed on schedule before several hundred spectators.
The plane carried three passengers bound from Buffalo to Triple Cities.... A nine-place Beechcraft D-18S, the transport was flown in over Cayuga Lake to a landing by Capt. John Ganley and First Officer Donald Washburn.
C. S. Robinson, president of the airlines corporation, and the spectators noted that the plane used less than half the runway, the northwest-southwest strip, for the landing. Robinson greeted the passengers from Buffalo and he also welcomed the four local passengers who boarded the flight after brief ceremonies....
Three landings took place later in the evening. A Beechcraft came in from the late round-trip to Albany and two of the Robinson 21-passenger transports arrived from New York, one of them being an extra section. The final landing took place at 7:40 p.m. The big DC-3s, like the Beechcraft, used less than half of the runway for the landing.
Constructed by Robinson Airlines Corporation with the co-operation of Cornell University, the airport has two 3,800-foot runways, and a taxi strip to the new hangar and office quarters and the highway.
These facilities will be used for night landings until the Robinson organization can complete the extensive task of moving all operations to the new field. Arrangements are being made to accomplish this without any interruption or delay in flight service.
First use of the field for airline passenger service marks another milestone in the history of Robinson Airlines and airline service for this area. The present service has developed from the efforts of Robinson and other local men to obtain airline service here.
An established line refused several years ago to serve Ithaca with the result that Robinson operation was begun nearly 3 years ago. Since then, the company has expanded steadily, passengers are being carried at the rate of 30,000 annually, a perfect operational record has been maintained and 5,000,000 passenger miles soon will be completed."
"Airlines' New Airport Goes Into Service," Ithaca Journal, September 29, 1947, 5.

September 29, 1947

Cecil S Robinson

"Airport transfer is completed at Cornell this morning. County Treasurer Donald Stobbs presents Cornell a check for $324,387, and John E. Burton, Cornell vice present-business, presents a deed for the Cornell University Airport to Harvey Stevenson, [Tompkins County] Board of Supervisors chairman."
"Airport Transfer [photo caption]," Ithaca Journal, July 31, 1956, 1.

1956

"Miss Ruth Carol Taylor, formerly of Trumansburg, has been employed as an airline stewardess by Mohawk Airlines, the first Negro stewardess on a U.S. commercial airline.
Miss Taylor is the daughter of Mrs. Ruth Powell Taylor of New York City and the late William Edison Taylor. Miss Taylor lives with her mother.
She was graduated from Trumansburg Central High School, attended Elmira College and was graduated from the Bellevue School of Nursing in 1955.
Miss Taylor will report for work with Mohawk Monday Jan 13.
Charles Abrams, chairman of the State Commission Against Discrimination, said Sunday that Miss Taylor is the first Negro hired as an airline stewardess in the history of commercial aviation in the United States.
She had filed a complaint with the SCAD after applying to Trans World Airlines for a job as stewardess and being told she could not be hired because of 'intangible factors that have to be considered.'"
"Mohawk Hires First Negro Stewardess," Ithaca Journal, December 23, 1957, 4.

1957

Ruth Carol Taylor