Timeline of Gatwick Airport

Gatwick Airport was located in Surrey until 1974, when it became part of West Sussex as a result of a county boundary change. The original, pre-World War II airport was built on the site of a manor in the parish of Charlwood. The land was first used as an aerodrome in the 1920s, and in 1933 commercial flights were approved by the Air Ministry.

Origins

Old map of Gatwick Airport area
Gatwick Airport area in about 1925, with airport boundary in green. Gatwick Manor is at the northwest end of the racecourse. The modern runway runs roughly from the racecourse to the lane junction at Hydefield Farm, southeast of Charlwood.

1920–1945

Biplane at terminal at night, with people in background
British Airways Ltd. DH.86 at the Beehive terminal building in 1936

1945–1958

BEA Bristol Sycamore helicopter at its Gatwick base in 1955.

1958–1969

Small planes parked next to a runway, with terminal building in background
Gatwick in 1961
The main passenger terminal at Gatwick in 1964 taken from one of the two piers looking SE.

1970–1979

Plane on tarmac, with other planes in the background
Apron in 1973
Braniff Boeing 747-127 N601BN. The aircraft was nicknamed "Big Orange" and flew into Gatwick from Dallas/Fort Worth between 1978 and 1982.

1980–1989

Larger planes lined up at a terminal
Apron in 1981 (note the prominence of wide-bodied aircraft)
Planes on tarmac
Gatwick in 1984, with new control tower in background

1990–1999

2000–2009

Long, enclosed bridge
The bridge to Pier 6 in the North Terminal opened in 2005.

2010–present

An Emirates Airbus A380 at Gatwick in 2013

References

  1. independent from government-owned corporations
  2. launched on 8 June 1959
  3. holders of supplemental air carrier certificates authorised to operate non-scheduled passenger and cargo services to supplement the scheduled operations of certificated route air carriers; airlines holding supplemental air carrier certificates were also known as "nonskeds" in the US
  4. 1 April 1966 to 31 March 1967
  5. former holder of a Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity issued by the now defunct US Civil Aeronautics Board authorising the operation of frequent, regular scheduled passenger and cargo services
  6. using a BAC One-Eleven 500 operating once a day each way from Gatwick to Düsseldorf and Frankfurt respectively and six-times-a-week each way from Gatwick to Zürich, in addition to the daily Gatwick–Dublin return flight
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External links

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