Jump to content

John H. Batten Airport

Coordinates: 42°45′38″N 087°48′55″W / 42.76056°N 87.81528°W / 42.76056; -87.81528
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 99.55.210.74 (talk) at 20:31, 22 April 2016 (3/16 based aircraft). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

42°45′38″N 087°48′55″W / 42.76056°N 87.81528°W / 42.76056; -87.81528

John H. Batten Airport
Summary
Airport typePublic
OwnerRacine Commercial Airport Corp.
ServesRacine, Wisconsin
Elevation AMSL674 ft / 205 m
Websitewww.BattenAirport.aero
Map
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
4/22 6,574 2,004 Concrete
14/32 4,422 1,348 Asphalt
Statistics
Aircraft operations (2015)47,000
Based aircraft (2016)79

John H. Batten Airport (IATA: RAC, ICAO: KRAC, FAA LID: RAC), also known as Batten International Airport, is a public use airport located 2 miles (3 km; 2 nmi) northwest of the central business district of Racine, a city in Racine County, Wisconsin, United States, North America. It is privately owned by the Racine Commercial Airport Corporation.[1]

History

The airport was founded in 1941 by Carlyle Godske on roughly 160 acres (65 ha) of land purchased from local businessman J.A. Horlick. For most of its history, the airport was known as Racine-Horlick Field, but on September 5, 1989, the name was changed to John H. Batten Field. John H. Batten was one of the airport's early founders and supporters as well as the longtime CEO of Racine's Twin Disc, Inc.[2]

During World War II (ca 1941-1945), the newly established airport was used as a flight and ground school for the Army. Students were housed at Racine College on the south side of Racine. Ground school instruction was given at Horlick High School and the actual flight training took place at the airport. Today, the airport is used primarily by local aviation enthusiasts and by the corporate jets of large local companies such as S.C. Johnson & Son and Twin Disc, Inc.[2]

Facilities and aircraft

On July 30 2010, plans were announced to have a full time aviation maintenance firm on the field, planned to have opened on September 1 2010.[3]

John H. Batten Airport covers an area of 467 acres (189 ha), including two paved runways:[1]

  • 4/22 with a 6,574 x 100 ft (2,004 x 30 m) concrete surface
  • 14/32 measuring 4,422 x 100 ft (1,348 x 30 m) with asphalt pavement

For the 12-month period ending August 4, 2015, the airport had 47,000 aircraft operations, an average of 129 per day: 96% general aviation and 4% air taxi. In March of 2016, 79 aircraft were based at this airport: 60 single engine, 13 multi-engine, 5 jet aircraft and 1 helicopter.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d FAA Airport Form 5010 for RAC PDF, effective 2007-07-05
  2. ^ a b UW-Parkside Archives, John Sullivan Collection, MC 011
  3. ^ Burke, Michael (2010-07-30). Aviation maintenance firm coming to Batten Airport. Journal Times, 30 July 2010. Retrieved from http://www.journaltimes.com/news/local/article_3b728e8e-9c12-11df-94b5-001cc4c002e0.html.