Hudson Valley Regional Airport was built by the
United States Department of Commerce in the 1930s and was used for pilot training during
World War II by the
US Army Air Forces. Known as New Hackensack Field at the time for the adjacent
hamlet in Wappingers, it was used by students at nearby
West Point and as an extension of
military training conducted at
Stewart Field. On British Prime Minister
Winston Churchill flew from
Naval Air Station Anacostia to New Hackensack Field, where he was met by
President Franklin D. Roosevelt, who had driven from his
Hyde Park home. After the Second World War, the airport was turned over to the county for the sum of $1 and guarantees that it would remain open as part of the
Surplus Property Act of 1944 by the
War Assets Administration. It was then used for
general aviation.
IBM built a hangar and based its corporate aircraft and helicopters at the airport, including
Gulfstream II jets in the 1970s–1980s. In the 1970s,
Cessna built and ran a
Cessna Citation maintenance facility on the airport grounds.
Scheduled air service Beginning in 1947, scheduled air carrier service was provided at Dutchess County Airport by
Colonial Airlines. Its service to POU in 1956 was a
DC-3 aircraft from
New York City's
LaGuardia Airport, making an 11:50 am Monday-Friday
flag stop en route to
Montreal, Quebec and
Ottawa, Ontario in Canada, with intermediate stops at
Albany, New York, and
Burlington, Vermont.
Mohawk Airlines began service in 1956 with flights to
Binghamton, New York. Mohawk merged into Allegheny Airlines in 1972 and service was discontinued. In the 1960s–1980s, the airport had
commuter airline service by
Command Airways,
Colgan Airways,
Air North, Henson,
Brockway Air, and
Metro Northeast. Command Airways, later known as
American Eagle Airlines, maintained its hub, executive offices, and maintenance facilities at the airport. Command qualified the
ATR 72 with the
Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) for U.S. flight operations at the airport. From the mid-1980's thru 1990,
Henson and Brockway operated as
Piedmont Commuter and Metro Northeast operated as
Trans World Express. In September 1980, the airport opened its current terminal building for airline passengers. When
Stewart International Airport, (located just across the Hudson River) started commercial operations in 1990, all airline service ended at Dutchess County Airport. However, in April 1991,
CommutAir, operating as
US Airways Express, began service on a Buffalo-White Plains-Poughkeepsie-Burlington-Plattsburgh route. CommutAir switched to operate as
Continental Connection in late 2000 but left POU on August 12, 2001. This was approved by the Dutchess County Legislature. In October 2022,
Tradewind Aviation took over two hangars at Hudson Valley Regional Airport, one of which is intended for in-house and open-market hangar space, and the other of which has been donated for use by two historic aviation nonprofits, the Tunison Foundation and the Hudson Valley Wing of the
Commemorative Air Force. == Facilities and aircraft ==