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'''Lieutenant Eric Lamar Ellington Field''' is a small [[airport]] in southeast [[Houston, Texas]]. Its [[IATA airport code]] is EFD.
'''Lieutenant Eric Lamar Ellington Field''' is a small [[airport]] in southeast [[Houston, Texas]]. Its [[IATA airport code]] is EFD.
[[Image:EllingtonT38s.jpg|right|thumb|250px|NASA's fleet of [[T-38 Talons]] sitting on the flightline at Ellington.]]

The airfield was named after [[Eric Lamar Ellington]], who died in a plane crash in [[San Diego]] in 1913.
The airfield was named after [[Eric Lamar Ellington]], who died in a plane crash in [[San Diego]] in 1913.



Revision as of 20:53, 9 August 2005

Template:BRAC

Lieutenant Eric Lamar Ellington Field is a small airport in southeast Houston, Texas. Its IATA airport code is EFD.

File:EllingtonT38s.jpg
NASA's fleet of T-38 Talons sitting on the flightline at Ellington.

The airfield was named after Eric Lamar Ellington, who died in a plane crash in San Diego in 1913.

Ellington field started out as a military air field. It was a major training base during World War I. It was razed in 1927, but on June 26, 1941, the first plane landed at the rebuilt Ellington Field. The facility was renamed Ellington Air Force Base in 1947, until it was closed in 1976.

Ellington Field has mostly been used for military purposes, for flying NASA aircraft, flying packages for the United Parcel Service, and for flying the United States President into the Houston area. However, the airport is now in civilian management.

Ellington Field once had scheduled commercial air service. Continental Express flew between Ellington Field and George Bush Intercontinental Airport in north Houston. The service ended on September 7, 2004.

Under the BRAC 2005 Ellington Field Air Guard Station is slated for realignment.

Ellington Field is home to the largest flying club in Texas, and to the annual "Wings over Houston" airshow.