Leesburg Executive Airport was built in 1963 to replace an earlier grass field on the eastern edge of the town, which was owned and used by radio personality
Arthur Godfrey for his private
DC-3 aircraft. Godfrey sold the field and shared a portion of the funds with the Town of Leesburg, which used the proceeds to help fund a new airport 3 miles south of town. The town used matching funds from the FAA. Originally named
Godfrey Field, it is now known as
Leesburg Executive Airport at Godfrey Field. In 1986, the
Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) consolidated its 308
Flight Service Stations into 61 'automated' stations (to be known as "AFSS"). The Flight Service Station at Leesburg was scheduled to close, but local lobbying convinced the FAA to rent space from the town and locate an AFSS at the airport. In 1993, when the airport fixed-base operator went bankrupt, the Town of Leesburg assumed direct operation of airport services, lengthening the runway twice to an eventual length of to support business jets and adding a
localizer approach and automated weather observation equipment to support all-weather operations. The airport is currently a designated
general aviation reliever airport for Dulles International, to the southeast, and in 2008 hosted 231 aircraft based on the field and an average of 265 aircraft operations per day. The FAA funded an
ILS installation that was completed in April 2011. The field also has a GNSS RNAV approach to runway 17 with vertical guidance available. A VOR-A approach was removed in 2010. In 2015, Leesburg became the first airport in America to operate a remote air traffic control tower, in a test co-sponsored by the Commonwealth of Virginia and Saab-Sensis Corporation. The facility is located and operated onsite during the trial period. In February 2023 the FAA announced they were ending support for the remote control tower effective June 20, 2023. The remote tower was replaced with a mobile control tower on-site at the airport. == Facilities and aircraft ==