A History of Orange County Airport

The Eddie Martin Airport was located where Newport Avenue and Main Street came together in south Santa Ana. In 1941, the airport was closed and operations moved about a mile southeast along the “South Main Street Extension” in an agreement between Martin and Orange County. (Photo via ASCE)
Orange County Airport as it opened in 1941. The diagonal road is soon-to-be MacArthur Rd. (named for the general). The road that bisects it is Palisades Road, also under construction. The two buildings on the field are the hangar and the hard-to-see administration building/control tower adjoining the hangar. That administration building was expanded and rebuilt several times, and served the airport until the mid-1960s when it was demolished when the airport was rebuilt. Their are two runways built, the somewhat paved obvious one and the shorter dirt or sod runway just beyond it. The main runway appears to be finished with oil over the leveled dirt surface, or some other early runway surfacing. Beginning in April 1942, the runway was lengthened and paved with asphalt to handle the P-38 fighters to be based there. (Photo from “From Jennies to Jets”)
Orange County Airport after it was upgraded by the Army in 1942. The civilian hangars and administration building are in the top center of the photo, which looks northeast. The taxiway on the west side of the airport extending to each end of the runway served concrete P-38 revetments. There was also one revetment on the east side of the filed. (Photo via “The SAAAB Story”)
A 1948 view of the airport looking southwards. This was shortly after the Army returned the airport to county use. The original Martin Aviation lies along MacArthur Road (diagonally across the bottom of the photo). The P-38 revetments remain visible on the extreme east end of the airport and along the western curved taxiway. (Orange County Archives via https://www.ochistoryland.com)
Flight line near Martin Aviation in the early 1950s. One wonders which B-17 this is. The loop antenna is a good clue but does not bring any civil B-17s to mind from the period. (County of Orange)
A July 1955 aerial view of Orange County Airport depicting its original runway layout. What is now Campus Drive parallels the runway on the bottom of the photo, and the original alignment of MacArthur Blvd is seen on the bottom right corner. The Mantz facility is on the southern end (left bottom area) of the airport. Many changes were forthcoming.
An early map depicting the location of the airport, surrounded by Palisades Road on the south, Paularino Road on the north, and Acacia Street on the east, with MacArthur Road from Santa Ana cutting the airport property on the northeast side. This map is from a blog post that discussed the establishment of drag racing on the old auxiliary runway located just west of Runway 21: For those unfamiliar, the Orange County Airport is essentially the birthplace of organized Drag Racing. In 1950, Pappy Hart, Creighton Hunter, and Frank Stillwell got together with the suits of the airport and arranged for their auxiliary runway to become the “Santa Ana Drags.”. See this for more.
Bonanza Airlines DC-3A-269B (N491 with quite a history of its own) on the ramp at Orange County circa 1958. The administration building also served as the passenger terminal and control tower from 1941 to the mid-1960s. The road seen in the upper right is MacArthur Road. Things were much more casual in 1958. (Photo via County of Orange)
Orange County Airport under reconstruction in 1964 looking south. The old runway is seen in the center, with the partially completed new runways in the lower part of the photo. Note the realignment of the runways to overfly the Newport back bay as a measure of noise abatement; it did not work. (Photo via Gary Winn)
A 1965-1955 view looking northwest. Runways are completed, or nearly so. The two old original airport hangars and the old administration building are seen at center left. The realignment of MacArthur Road (now Blvd) is obvious. The circled area in the center of the photo denotes where on the airport one might still find pavement from the original MacArthur Road. Eagle-eye Gary Winn raised this possibility; hard to tell from current photos and it would probably take an on-site close look. This is only for the obscure of heart. Anyone familiar with this part of Orange County will no doubt just shake their head at what millions of people have wrought. (Photo via Gary Winn)
Interesting view of the rebuilt airport as seen circa 1966 looking north. The runway layout is now two parallel runways, 01R-19L and 01L-19R, the runway designations denoting the magnetic course of the runway rounded to the nearest ten. The old runway has aircraft parking, later moved to the north end of the airport. The Tallmantz Aviation operation is seen in the center of the photo surrounding the large white hangar. The new airport terminal is not yet completed and will be located just beyond mid-field on the east side. The curving road in the upper left of the photo is the realigned MacArthur Blvd. with the expectation of the runway to be extended north to a length of 10,000 feet. Through a confusing period of planning and with numerous interested parties lobbying for varied interests, the San Diego Freeway (I-405) ended up being built immediately north of the approach end of the airport, thus confining the airport expansion.
Orange County Airport in late 1966 as the new airport layout is nearly complete. The remnants of the old runway and taxiway are obvious, with airplanes parked on them. The new FAA control tower is at the left in the empty field, the apparent road leading the tower actually an old taxiway for the revetments of the military field. The two blimp hangars of the Tustin Marine Corps Air Station are visible to the north. Tallmantz Aviation is located on the lower right side of the photo, on the southeastern corner of the air field. This photo was taken by Norm Thompson from an L.A. Airways Sikorsky helicopter that flew a route from Disneyland to the Newporter Inn, and back, on a regular schedule.

The airport in 1979, with business development pressing in from all sides. Hemmed in north and south by freeways, accidently or on purpose, the airport has nowhere to grow a without major impact. On the northeast corner of the airport is a large parking area for general aviation airplanes; within a few years those would be displaced to make room for a new passenger terminal. (Photo by Scott Thompson)

The new airport terminal that opened in 1967, and later renamed the “Eddie Martin Terminal” in a nod to airport history. With a dose of poor planning and unexpected demand, the terminal and ramp were designed to handle 40,000 passengers per year; as the terminal opened in May 1967, it immediately was serving 30.000 passengers a month. Part of the reason was the establishment of home-grown Air California, an Orange County-based intrastate airline that served the Bay Area and grew from there. It began service with Lockheed Electras and later added Boeing 737s and McDonnell-Douglas MD-80s to its fleet.
The blue depicts the approximate size and location of the original runway at Orange County prior to 1966. The runway was realigned to avoid overflights of nearby Costa Mesa neighborhoods. The airport has endured noise complaints from both Costa Mesa and Newport Beach since the mid-1960s, including more than a few from Newport Beach resident John Wayne, for whom the airport was ironically later named. In the yellow area was the location of the  long-gone Tallmantz facility.
The old Eddie Martin Terminal was replaced by a sprawling, sorta, new terminal that opened in 1990. The new terminal is shoe-horned into the available real estate at the north and east side of the airport. To someone visiting the airfield from 1955, the airport and surrounding area would be unrecognizable.
The airport layout plan from the current century showing the two parallel runways, as per the FAA airport chart. The runways have since been renumbered to 02L-20R and 02R-20L, drifting magnetic declination being what it is. Old ways have given way to progress; much is gone and much is forgotten.

A History of Orange County Airport

by Scott A. Thompson

Eddie Martin Airport

Aviation in central Orange County started at the end of Main Street as it ran out the southern end of Santa Ana, just where it met and ended at Newport Avenue. There, aviation pioneer Eddie Martin started his little flying operation in 1923 on very rural Irvine Ranch land. Within a few years he had developed it into a real airport. Martin’s airport was the original Orange County airport, and it gradually expanded to encompass a large sod field with lights and a few hangars. Eddie Martin and his brothers, Johnny and Floyd, operated the airport and the company that bore the family name. Martin offered flight instruction, charters, sightseeing, and whatever else people would pay money for with airplanes. a late 1920s listing of equipment shows that a Eaglerock, a Waco 9 , a Special Monoplane, and two JN-1s were operated by Martin. As of January 1936, the airport was described by the CAA as a 2040 ft. by 1320 ft. sod field, all of which was usable for takeoff or landing. A rotating beacon and field boundary lights were installed. The beacon was operated by the Dept. of Commerce. The field lights operated from dusk until 2:00 a.m.

Eddie Martin’s Airport enjoyed a measure of notoriety in the 1930s, being the only substantial airport in the area. Howard Hughes based at the field during his 1935 speed record attempt with the Hughes H-1 racer, one that ended with a gear-up landing in a nearby bean field when Hughes managed to run his airplane out of fuel. (Note the “NAA speed course” on the 1929 map above, just southeast of the airport.) Paul Mantz was airborne as an observer during Hughes’ 352 mph record-setting flight.

The “First” Orange County Airport

Orange County, for its part, selected another site for a county-run airport. Details are a bit confusing, as the site of the airport has been variously located a mile east of the Martin Airport and “near the head of Newport bay,” as per contemporary media accounts. In any event, the first “Orange County Airport” was dedicated on Saturday, April 7, 1928, with local dignitaries in attendance. However, nothing seems to have come of this airport; there is no record of it ever being developed further. 

Orange County Airport Relocated in 1940

As the 1930s drew to a close, the local governments decided to extend Main Street southward toward the ocean, right across the Martin Airport, the extension causing the airport to relocate. (This new road was renamed as MacArthur Road in 1942 and ran all the way to Corona del Mar, southeast of Newport Beach.)

As part of the deal, the County of Orange granted Eddie Martin and company an exclusive 17-year lease to operate the new airport, thus paving the way for the old Eddie Martin Airport to be closed.

To obtain the proposed site of the new airport, the County of Orange did a land swap using the 141-acre undeveloped airport site (the one dedicated in April 1928) with the major land holder in the area, the Irvine Company. The swap granted the county a new 138-acre parcel that adjoined the new South Main Street Extension (later MacArthur Road) where it intersected with the newly proposed Paularino Road. The airport site was bordered on the south side by Palisades Road (now Bristol Street), and on the east side by Acacia Street (now Campus Drive). On April 5, 1940, construction began on a new 2,500 foot runway and adjoining taxiway, earmarking $7,500 for the initial work. As part of the project, an administration building and hangar were added, as were an airport beacon and airfield lighting. There was little if any development in the area of the airport, with most of the surrounding property being used for cattle grazing and other ranching activities. The new Orange County Airport opened for operation in September 1941, with Eddie Martin the leased airport operator.

Just a few short months later, however, the situation quickly changed. Within a few weeks after December 7, 1941, the U.S. government severely restricted civilian flying within a 150-mile distance from the west coast. This effectively shut down the new airport. Martin soon moved most of his flight training operation to the desert airport at Baker, California, just outside the 150-mile limitation, and flight operations at Orange County slid to a standstill.

Orange County Army Air Field in 1942

However, in August 1942, the Air Corps selected Orange County Airport for use as a dispersal field for west coast defense, and leased the facility from the county. Orange County arranged for the lease of an additional 140 acre parcel south of the original site, to accommodate Air Corps expansion of the airport. As was the case with many airports developed by the military during World War II, airport improvements were made with an eye to the post-war environment. A 4780′ hard-surfaced runway (asphalt) was constructed, with associated taxiways, hardstands, revetments, and hangars built to handle an Air Corps interceptor squadron. The runway extended from Paularino Road on the north side southwestward toward the upper Newport Harbor and was oriented 030 degrees-210 degrees, in other words, Runways 03 and 21. Significant land fill was required on the south end of the runway to create the level surface required. Palisades Road formed the southern end of the air field, and it was depressed below the end of the runway as a result of the land fill.

Beginning in late 1942 or early 1943, the 332nd Fighter Squadron with its P-38s was based on the field, renamed as the Orange County Army Air Field (AAF). The 332nd was a component of the 329th Fighter Group headquartered at the Grand Central Air Terminal in Glendale. Revetments were built on the west side of the runway with a large ramp area dedicated to a large ramp area that extended for most of the length of runway. The P-38s were utilized for training and west coast patrols until mid-1944, when it was determined the Japanese were probably not going to invade after all.

Santa Ana Army Air Base

Also developed nearby was the Santa Ana Army Air Base (SAAAB) on a parcel of land surrounded by Newport Avenue on the east, Baker Road on the north, Wilson Ave. on the south, and Harbor Road on the west, in what is now Costa Mesa. The SAAAB was part of the West Coast Air Corps Training Center provided preflight training for Air Corps pilot, navigators, and bombardiers. Nearly 150,000 airmen were classified and trained at the base. The nearby airfield provided an auxiliary function for the SAAAB, which was deactivated in 1946. The Navy developed the Santa Ana Naval Air Station (Lighter Than Air) at Tustin, three miles north of Orange County Airport, beginning in 1942. The two huge blimp hangars, constructed the same year, have remained a landmark ever since. Also, the Marines came to town in 1942, developing the El Toro Marine Corps Air Station eight miles to the northeast of Orange County Airport, that facility also opening in 1942. Both El Toro and the Tustin facility remained active military installations, the LTA facility finally closing in 1997 and El Toro in 1999.

Post-War Orange County Airport

But the Army left the Orange County AAF in March 1946 and the facility was transferred as surplus property to the War Assets Administration (WAA). In May 1946, the county resumed operations of the airport under an agreement with the WAA, which released the airport completely back to the county in June 1948. The following year the heavy concrete P-38 revetments were removed, mostly by dynamite, and the airport resumed its civil role. Martin Aviation utilized two hangars just south of the small control tower and remained the primary operator on the airport. Balboa resident Paul Mantz commuted from Orange County to Burbank by plane on a regular basis, and he decided to move his operation to the airport in 1951.

The 1950s were relatively uneventful at the little county airport. The area was still largely undeveloped, with the airport bordered on two-lane Main Street on its east, Paularino on the north, and the narrow Palisades Road on its south. Not much else was around the field except grazing cattle and wide open spaces. As Orange County began to urbanize in the late 1950s and early 1960s, though, pressures began to mount to modernize the airport.

Orange County Airport Reborn in 1963-1967

In the early 1960s the county developed a plan to rebuild the airport to allow commuter airlines and larger airplanes to safely use the air field. The old northeast-southwest 4780′ runway would be mostly plowed under, replaced by a pair of modern parallel runways reoriented north and south (originally runways 01L-19R, 01R-19L, since renumbered), with a new taxiway, hangars, and a small passenger terminal constructed on the east side of the airport. The old Main Street, now MacArthur Road, was rerouted around the new runway layout, allowing the runways to be extended northward and providing for a 5200′ airline runway and a 2900′ general aviation runway. (Actually, MacArthur was moved far enough to allow a 10000′ runway, suggesting that there may have been a few long-range planners involved.) Paularino Road was cut by the new runways, the road now terminating on the west side of the airport, and the east side road eventually becoming an extension of Campus Drive, itself renamed from the old Acacia Street that paralleled the east side of the old airport. A new FAA control tower was constructed on the west side of the airport near where a P-38 revetment had once been. General aviation parking was along the east side and on the remnants of the old runway and taxiway on the south side of the airport. An FAA Instrument Landing System for RWY 19R was installed in 1969 to allow precision instrument approaches and a terminal VOR navaid named “Santa Ana” (SNA) was commissioned. Paul Mantz’s original leased parcel, now Tallmantz Aviation, remained in place on the southeast corner of the airport.

Construction moved forward and by 1966 the rebuilt airport was in operation. A grand opening of the rebuilt airport and new terminal was held in May 1967 with the Blue Angels giving a show and Governor Ronald Reagan giving a speech.

During construction, highway engineers were also building the San Diego Freeway (I-405) across the north edge of the airport parcel. An offer was made to work out a plan to bury the freeway under a runway bridge to allow expansion of the runway northward, maybe even to 10,000 feet, but that idea was nixed. The northern boundary of the airfield was firmly fixed by the new freeway, a problem in later years when noise complaints from residents in Newport Beach, off to the south, surfaced. The southern edge of the air field was marked by the renamed Palisades Road, now Bristol Street, and soon enough, by another planned freeway, State Route 73. On the eastern edge was Campus Street and on the west, Redhill Road, all built out over the rural fields but laying the infrastructure for a booming economy and thriving business community that came to simultaneously love and hate the airport, i.e. “It generates all the business, sure, but damn those airplanes. They are noisy and fly over my house” and/or “They should limit or maybe just ban all those jetliners (except when me or my company or my customers need convenient airline service).”

Airline Service at Orange County Airport

Speaking of airlines, Bonanza Airlines was flying DC-3s and, later, F-27s, from the airport in the early 1960s. Upstart Air California staked its airline future at Orange County, beginning service in 1967 with a few old Lockheed Electras but moving on to Boeing 737s and MD-80s before they were swallowed by American Airlines in the 1980s. Bonanza became Air West, and then was bought by Howard Hughes, becoming Hughes Air West, flying the famous yellow DC-9s. Hughes Air West soon enough became part of Republic Airlines, soon to become part of Northwest Airlines, etc. PSA, long dismissive of the Orange County potential, eagerly sought to get into the airport after Air California established the market, and succeeded only in 1979 after deregulation brought United, Alaska, America West, and a slew of others to the crowded little airport. PSA folded into US Air eventually as the few intrastate carriers dwindled away.

The little airport enjoyed a crushing success, with the huge Orange County economy being fueled and fueling an ever-increasing demand of airline and general aviation service. In the 1970s the airport was in the top five busiest airports in the country, with general aviation training and transportation flights making up most of that count. Companies like Martin Aviation, Mission Beechcraft, Newport Skyways, Shaw Airmotive, Sunrise Aviation, and Newport Jet, thrived through the busy 1970s. Long time FBO operator Cliff Frazier stubbornly held out as a tenant at the airport. Hundreds of general aviation airplanes were tied down on the northern edge of the airport alongside the San Diego Freeway and at the fixed-based operators on the east side. Lawsuits flew from wealthy Corona del Mar and Newport Beach customers who mostly hated the airplanes until they needed one. Noise limits were imposed, new traffic patterns developed, quieter jets used, and another 500 feet of runway squeezed into the northern edge of the airport, until a very uneasy peace was achieved.

New Terminal and “John Wayne Airport” (Ugh)

The 1967 passenger terminal was mostly inadequate from its opening, but it hobbled along using portable buildings and long lines to accommodate the users until the late 1980s when a new terminal was built on the northeast edge of the airport over the old general aviation tiedowns. The 1967 terminal building was ceremoniously named the Eddie Martin Terminal shortly before it was torn down, leaving the new terminal named after an Orange County politician.

And, the airport itself, in a note of irony, was renamed the John Wayne Airport-Orange County after a famous Newport Beach actor who actively opposed the airport because of those damned loud jets flying over his beach house at 2000 feet. There were numerous candidates (Martin, Mantz, and Tallman, for example) available for airport memorialization, who were skipped over by very noted and esteemed politicians promoting a higher cause. There are those amongst us who, nonetheless, still think of it as then, now, and always, Orange County Airport.

Anything to add to this? Perhaps a personal experience or more information? Please use our Tallmantz Guestbook.

Some Great References for Further Information

  • From Jennies to Jets: The Aviation History of Orange County, by Vi Smith (Sultana Press, 1974)
  • The SAAAB Story: The History of the Santa Ana Army Air Base, by Edrick J. Miller (Costa Mesa Historical Society & The SAAB Wing, 1981)
  • Historic Southern Santa Ana
  • OC Historyland
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