Mainz Finthen Airport

Mainz Finthen Airport
Mainz Finthen Airport
Flugplatz Mainz-Finthen
Flugplatz Mainz-Finthen Luftbild Verkehrslandeplatz EDFZ Foto 2008 Wolfgang Pehlemann Wiesbaden IMG 0296.jpg
Mainz Finthen Airport, 2008
IATA: noneICAO: EDFZ
Summary
Airport type Civil
Location Mainz, Germany
Elevation AMSL 525 ft / 160 m
Coordinates 49°58′08″N 008°08′47″E / 49.96889°N 8.14639°E / 49.96889; 8.14639
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
08/26 1,000 3,281 Asphalt
08R/26L 1,000 3,281 Grass
Mainz Finthen Airport is located in Germany
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Mainz Finthen Airport
Location of Mainz Finthen Airport, Germany

Mainz Finthen Airport (German: Flugplatz Mainz-Finthen) (ICAO: EDFZ). is an airport in Germany, located about 3 miles southwest of Mainz (Rheinland-Pfalz); approximately 280 miles southwest of Berlin.

The airport serves the general aviation community, with no commercial airline service available. There are also a large number of sailplanes at the airfield. The airport operator is holding Flugplatz Mainz Betriebsgesellschaft mbH on behalf of the former operator of the Mainz Aviation Club.[1]

The airport was first opened in 1939 as a Luftwaffe military airfield (Fliegerhorst Ober-Olm). It was seized by the United States Army in 1945, and used by the United States as a NATO facility (Finthen Army Airfield) until the end of the Cold War. In 1992, the military airfield was returned to the Federal German government, which made it available to private operators as a civil airport.

Contents

Facilities

In addition to the airfield operations, Mainz Finthen offers instructional training for helicopters, ultralight aircraft and gyrocopters. Powered flight and gliding training are also offered. The airport has a modern refueling system offering AvGas, Jet-A1 and premium gasoline.[1]

There is a café and snack bar (opening times are not known). The viewing platform offers a view over the airport operations.[1]

History

Luftwaffe use 1939-1945

Originally named Fliegerhorst Ober-Olm, the airfield was built as a Luftwaffe military airfield, which opened in 1939. It was constructed by the Reich Labor Service from 1939 to 1942 as maintained by conscript laborers of the SS special camp Hinzert from 1942 until its capture by the United States Army in 1945.[1]

During the early part of World War II, the Luftwaffe stationed several combat units at Ober-Olm during April and May 1940 in preparation for the attack in the West, those being:[2]

From Ober-Olm JG 52 and 76 were involved in the air fighting during the Battle of France, both units moving west along with the advancing German forces. (KG 2) (Battle Wing 2) fielded 36 Dornier Do 17s, with 22 aircraft serviceable. KG2 supported German Army Group A’s crossing of the Meuse. It supported Heinz Guderian’s Panzerkorps in the vicinity of Sedan during the battle of the 12–14 May. It also hit French Air Force airfields in Amiens, Reims, Champagne and Arras. It moved into France in early June.[3][4]

After the combat in France ended, Ober-Olm became a "Defense of the Reich" airfield, with numerous night figher units (NJG) moving in and out until the spring of 1945.[1]

Allied Army units moved into the Mainz area in mid-March 1945 as part of the Western Allied invasion of Germany and Ober-Olm airfield was attacked by Ninth Air Force B-26 Marauder medium bombers and P-47 Thunderbolt fighter-bombers to deny the retreating German forces use of the facility.

American wartime use 1945

A 354th FG P-51D at Ober-Olm Airfield in April 1945.

The airfield was taken by elements of the XII Corps, 90th Division, of the Third United States Army under the command of General George S. Patton, Jr. on 22 March 1945. Combat engineers from IX Engineer command moved in with the 832d Engineering Aviation Battalion arriving on 25 March 1945, to repair the runway for use by combat aircraft. The engineers laid down a 5000' Square Mesh (SMT) all-weather runway over the existing east-west (07/25) bomb-cratered concrete runway, and laid out a second 4000' sod runway aligned 08/26. The engineers also performed minimal repairs to the facility to make it operational. On 27 March, the airfield was declared ready for Allied use and was designated as Advanced Landing Ground "Y-64 Ober Olm".[5]

Once repaired, the Ninth Air Force 10th Reconnaissance Group moved in, with photo-reconnaissance P-38 Lightning (F-4) and P-51 Mustang (F-5) aircraft to provide forward tactical reconnaissance to Army ground units moving into central Germany. On 8 April, P-47 Thunderbolts of the 354th Fighter Group moved in and attacked German army units, bridges and other ground targets of opportunity throughout Germany.[6] In addition to the combat units, C-47 Skytrain transports used the grass runway for combat resupply and casualty evacuation (S&E) missions constantly, moving munitions and supplies up to the battlefield and evacuating wounded to rear areas.[7]

With the end of the war, Ober Olm Airfield was closed on 20 June 1945.[7] United States Army forces moved out of Ober Olm, as French forces moved into the Rhineland as part of their occupation zone of Germany.

Postwar/Cold War use

The airport was taken over by the French military in July 1945, and engineers moved in to clear the wartime wreckage and rebuild the facility. The wartime runways were removed and a new, 1,000-meter-long asphalt runway was laid down. In the spring of 1949, the French withdrew from the Rhineland (Rhineland-Palatinate after 30 August 1946) as part of the establishment of the Federal Republic of Germany (German: Bundesrepublik Deutschland, BRD) on 23 May 1949.

As part of their commitment to NATO, United States Army forces returned to the Mainz area, and took over the airfield, which was renamed Finthen Army Airfield. As a result of the establishment of the United States Air Force in 1947, the Army could use the airfield for helicopters and light liaison and observation aircraft only.

The U.S. Army stationed in the mid-70s, the 205th Assault Support Helicopter Company (ASHC) "Geronimo" with some 20 helicopters, which are mostly to CH-acting 47C Chinooks. By 1988 the unit was moved to Mannheim, and here by the 295th ASHC Cyclones replaced.[1]

On 16 and 17 November 1980 Holy Mass was celebrated by Pope John Paul II during his first major pastoral visit to Germany on the airfield with thousands of believers attending.[1]

In the course of the war of the United States against Libya in 1986/87, the area was cordoned off because of the increased need for security fencing and militarily.[1]

Civil use

With the end of the Cold War and the subsequent reorganization of U.S. forces, Finthen Army Airfield began to be closed down beginning in December 1991. In September 1992 the airfield was decommissioned and the facility turned over the Federal Republic of Germany. The final United States Army personnel departed in November, with the exception of a small RADAR station and training area at the site which remained under United States control.

Since the withdrawal of the United States Army, the airfield has been operated by the Mainz Aviation Club beginning in 1994, and on 1 August 2008, turned over to a commercial airport operator.[1]

The airport has numerous World War II relics, the largest being the wartime German hangar. Several concrete dispersal hardstands can be found to the north side of the runway, along with the wartime parking apron. On the south side of the runway the wartime grass runway is still in use, along with the outline many dispersal pads and taxiways still visible in the grass area south of the runway. In addition to the airfield, many of the buildings in the former support area date back to their German wartime origins.

See also

References

 This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the Air Force Historical Research Agency.

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Translated from German Wikipedia Article Flugplatz Mainz-Finthen
  2. ^ The Luftwaffe, 1933-45
  3. ^ Kampfgeschwader2
  4. ^ Jagdgeschwader 52
  5. ^ IX Engineering Command ETO Airfields General Construction Information
  6. ^ Maurer, Maurer. Air Force Combat Units of World War II. Maxwell AFB, Alabama: Office of Air Force History, 1983. ISBN 0-89201-092-4.
  7. ^ a b Johnson, David C. (1988), U.S. Army Air Forces Continental Airfields (ETO), D-Day to V-E Day; Research Division, USAF Historical Research Center, Maxwell AFB, Alabama.

External links


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