Roswell Air Force Base

Roswell Air Center
Summary
Airport typePublic company
OwnerCity of Roswell
ServesRoswell, New Mexico
Elevation AMSL3,671 ft / 1,119 m
Coordinates33°18′5.6″N 104°31′50″W / 33.301556°N 104.53056°W / 33.301556; -104.53056
Websitewww.flyroswell.com
Map
ROW is located in New Mexico
ROW
ROW
Location of airport in New Mexico
ROW is located in the United States
ROW
ROW
ROW (the United States)
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
03/21 13,000 3,962 Concrete
17/35 10,008 3,048 Asphalt
Statistics (2021)
Aircraft operations27,690
Based aircraft38

Roswell Air Center (IATA: ROW, ICAO: KROW, FAA LID: ROW) (Roswell International Air Center; Roswell Industrial Air Center) is an airport five miles (8.0 km) south of Roswell, in Chaves County, New Mexico, United States.[1]

History

The airport was Roswell Army Airfield during World War II, and Walker Air Force Base during the Cold War. When it closed it was the largest base of the United States Air Force Strategic Air Command. Roswell Industrial Air Center was developed after the closure of Walker Air Force Base on June 30, 1967. Commercial airline flights were moved from the old Municipal airport to the Air Center shortly afterwards and Trans-Texas Airlines upgraded some of its flights serving Roswell to Douglas DC-9 jets.

Walker AFB was named after General Kenneth Newton Walker, a native of Los Cerrillos. He was killed during a bombing mission over Rabaul, New Britain, Papua New Guinea. on January 5, 1943. Though intercepted by enemy fighters, his group scored direct hits on nine Japanese ships. General Walker was last seen leaving the target area with one engine on fire and several fighters on his tail. For his actions, General Walker was awarded the Medal of Honor posthumously by President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1943.

The base was renamed in his honor on January 13, 1948. Walker Hall, at Maxwell Air Force Base, Alabama, home of the College of Aerospace Doctrine Research and Education, is also named after the general.

In 1966 the Air Force announced that Walker AFB would close. This was during a round of base closings and consolidations as the Defense Department struggled to pay the expenses of the Vietnam War within the budgetary limits set by Congress.

It is also known for the 1947 Roswell UFO incident.

The site was used for several years to launch stratospheric balloons for Air Force projects.

The airfield also serves as a storage facility for a fleet of retired airliners (aircraft) for a number of operators, including a number of Boeing 767 wide body jetliners, MD-80 narrow body jets, formerly operated by American Airlines.[2] A Lockheed JetStar, once owned by Elvis Presley, and sold at auction in May 2017, had spent over 30 years sitting on a tarmac at the airport. The Jetstar was again sold at auction in January 2023 for $286,000.

On April 2, 2011, a new Gulfstream G650 crashed shortly after takeoff from the airport during a test flight that was being conducted by the manufacturer of this large, twin engine business jet, killing all four aboard.[3]

The airport was used by Felix Baumgartner to launch his record-breaking freefall jump from the stratosphere on October 14, 2012.[4]

On August 23, 2016, as part of a dramatic fleet renewal plan, American Airlines retired 20 McDonnell Douglas MD-80 aircraft to Roswell, resulting in the most aircraft retired by a commercial airline in a single day.

On September 4, 2019, American Airlines retired its remaining McDonnell Douglas MD-80 aircraft to Roswell.[5]

Facilities

The airport covers 5,029 acres (2,035 ha) and has two paved runways:[1]

  • 3/21: 13,000 ft × 150 ft (3,962 m × 46 m) asphalt/concrete
  • 17/35: 10,008 ft × 100 ft (3,050 m × 30 m) asphalt

In the year ending December 31, 2021 the airport had 27,690 aircraft operations, average 76 per day: 38% general aviation, 46% military, 8% air taxi and 8% airline. 38 aircraft were then based at this airport: 22 single-engine, 9 multi-engine, 5 jet, and 2 helicopters.[1]

Below are annual total aircraft operations 2009–2013 from the FAA's Air Traffic Activity System. Average yearly increase was 5.11% over these five years.[6]

Aircraft operations: ROW 2009–2013[6]
Calendar year Aircraft operations %
2009 48,726
2010 51,958 6.63%
2011 35,673 −31.34%
2012 34,671 −2.81%
2013 53,075 53.08%

Museum

The Walker Aviation Museum is a museum displaying local aviation memorabilia located inside the terminal.[7]

Airline and destinations

AirlinesDestinations
American Eagle Dallas/Fort Worth