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Buchannan Field (at Concord, California)
Within the immediate vicinity of Buchannan Field, Concord CA
there have been over seven airports over the years. One of the
very first was a company strip in the flatlands just north of
the Mallard reservoir. This was used by Tosco refinery officials
during the twenties and thirties. Another was on the Martinez
shoreline between the railroad bridge and the train station.
There was also a small private strip along the hillside north
west of downtown Clayton. It was private and depending on winds
and density altitudes you had to decide on whether to take off
over or under the power lines to the west. Been there done that.
More famous was Mahoney Field approximately located where
the Concord BART station is now. It was 1200' long and unpaved.
The local businesses leased the field for commercial flights
in 1920 to a one-plane airline that flew hotel customers from
San Francisco to cities in the Central Valley and Los Angeles.
The Curtiss Eagle tri-motor flew the route daily from May to
near the end of June. Operations stopped when the plane crashed.
No further use was ever made of Mahoney Field
The U.S. Mail service had a reliever airport at Concord to
be used when Crissy Field at the San Francisco Presideo was socked
in by weather. Service began in 1924 and continued until Mills
Field (SFO) opened in 1927. Air mail from Concord would be re-routed
via truck, train and ferryboat to S. F. Even with perfect connections
this would add an additional two hours to the delivery time.
This unnamed field was without designated runways at the northeast
corner of West and Clayton Road in Concord. With the diversion
of the mail service this field was a minimum service facility
used by private aviation until Sherman Field somewhere near where
the WWI Monument stands in Pleasant Hill offered both fuel and
repair service beginning in the 1930's. The Pleasant Hill Subdivision
of Sherman Oaks is all that remains as a memory of this airport
that closed when Buchannan Field was released as war surplus
in 1946.
Buchannan Field began with a slightly more than 400 acre purchase
of farmland in 1942. Federal funds were used and two 5000' runways
with large cement end pads were constructed with standby pads
for the use of P-39 fighters. With an additional 120 acres the
Military Transport Command based C-46 transports as a service
and training facility. Total WWII cost of the field was over
thirteen million with the county spending about a half-million.
The County, in order to promote development of the field,
has entered into 50-year lease agreements that must be the 'sweetest'
deals in the history of the county. Insiders have been able to
lease and use property with only a 1% average increase in payments
to the county per year. To my knowledge one hangar group of offices
more than make the county payments from just one rental, all
the others are gravy. The county operation of the airport would
not stand a close investigation as to the differing long-term
treatment of the insiders and outsiders at the airport. All airport
security is paid for by the individual tie-downs. Businesses
pay nothing.
Written by Gene Whitt
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