Initial development In 1927 the
Territory of Hawaii legislature passed Act 257, authorizing the expenditure of $25,000 for the construction of a landing strip in Hilo. The site was known as Keaukaha, on land belonging to the
Hawaiian Homes Commission. Inmates from a nearby prison camp cleared the area of brush and rocks. The new facility was dedicated on February 11, 1928, by Major
Clarence M. Young, then Secretary of Aeronautics of the
U.S. Department of Commerce. Sixteen months after the dedication, scheduled inter-island service began on November 11, 1929, by Inter-Island Airways, the forerunner of
Hawaiian Airlines. For $32, travelers could climb aboard an eight-passenger
Sikorsky S-38 on thrice-weekly flights between Hilo and
Honolulu. Five years later, in 1934, the company was awarded the right to carry air mail for the
U.S. Postal Service.
Early expansion Improvements to Hilo's airfield were minimal during its first decade. Between 1927 and 1937, just over $34,000 was spent in developing the site. Over the next five years, however, the
Works Progress Administration spent $261,613 to upgrade the airport. An additional $314,000 was provided by the
Civil Aeronautics Administration in 1941. On April 19, 1943, the Territorial Legislature renamed Hilo Airport "General Lyman Field", for General Albert Kualiʻi Brickwood Lyman (1885–1942), the first U.S. General of Hawaiian ancestry. He was one of three sons of
Rufus Anderson Lyman to attend the
United States Military Academy. The end of the war did not immediately bring about a return to civilian control of General Lyman Field. Although ownership of the airport was returned to the territory in September 1946, the Air Force leased the facilities and retained operational control of its tower for over three years after Japan's surrender. Meanwhile, Trans-Pacific Airlines, later renamed
Aloha Airlines, commenced inter-island flights on July 26, 1946. On April 8, 1952, the territory assumed full control, paving the way for another round of expansion.
Overseas growth During the late 1950s, Territorial leaders anticipated a boom in tourism, prompting plans for a second runway capable of accommodating large jet aircraft. The Hawaiʻi Aeronautics Commission recommended that General Lyman Field be expanded for overseas flights. In April 1958, the territory acquired on the eastern edge of the airport for a longer runway to enable non-stop flights to the west coast of the United States. In April 1967 the state finished new taxiways and aprons, finally allowing the airport to receive overseas flights. On October 1, 1967,
United Airlines Douglas DC-8 jets and
Pan American World Airways Boeing 707 jets initiated nonstop flights from San Francisco (SFO) and Los Angeles (LAX). Work began on an interim overseas terminal at General Lyman Field in November 1968. With a price tag of $775,000, this facility was designed for the burgeoning number of overseas passengers until a new terminal complex could be built. It was dedicated on July 4, 1969. The airlines, however, did not wait until the new terminal was built; on February 6, 1971, the first jumbo jet landed: a 747 operated by
Braniff International Airways. Groundbreaking for a new terminal was held in July 1974. Construction of the terminal was done in two phases. The first was completed in 1975 and work immediately commenced on phase two. On April 30, 1976, officials dedicated the new, much more modern facility. In order to better serve the airport and its lengthened runway, the FAA opened a new, taller air traffic control tower on November 2, 1979. In 1969, United was operating daily nonstop flights from Los Angeles (LAX) and San Francisco (SFO) with
Douglas DC-8 jets including stretched Super DC-8-61 jetliners with direct, no change of plane Super DC-8 service being flown daily to Hilo from Chicago
O'Hare Airport (ORD) and Boston (BOS) via
LAX while Pan American (
Pan Am) was flying daily nonstop
Boeing 707 service from Los Angeles (LAX) with 707 flights also being operated three days a week nonstop from San Francisco (SFO) and two days a week nonstop from Seattle (SEA) with this latter flight originating at Portland (PDX). Also in 1969, Braniff was operating
Boeing 707-320 jet service with weekly nonstop flights from
Dallas Love Field (DAL), Houston
Hobby Airport (HOU) and St. Louis (STL) with the airline also operating direct one-stop 707 service once a week to Hilo from Atlanta (ATL), Miami (MIA) and New Orleans (MSY). By 1971, Continental was flying
Boeing 707-320C jetliners nonstop from Los Angeles (LAX) with direct, no change of plane 707 service being operated from Denver (DEN), Kansas City (MCI), Portland (PDX) and Seattle (SEA) with flights from PDX and SEA making an intermediate stop in Honolulu. The number of overseas passengers flying through Hilo peaked at 313,428 in 1971 and remained between 250,000 and 300,000 for most of the decade. According to the
Official Airline Guide (OAG), in 1975 Northwest, United and Western were continuing to serve Hilo. At this time, Northwest was flying nonstop
Boeing 747 service once a week from Portland (PDX) with this flight originating in Seattle (SEA), United was operating daily
Boeing 747 service nonstop from Los Angeles (LAX) as well as nonstop
Douglas DC-8 flights from San Francisco (SFO) five days a week while Western was flying
Boeing 720B service nonstop from Los Angeles (LAX) twice a week. A year later in 1976, Continental was once again serving Hilo with a daily direct
McDonnell Douglas DC-10 flight from Denver (DEN) and Los Angeles (LAX) with this service making an intermediate stop in Honolulu while at this same time United was operating a
Douglas DC-8 flight four days a week with a westbound routing of New York
Newark Airport (EWR) – Cleveland (CLE) – San Francisco (SFO) – Hilo (ITO) in addition to operating daily nonstop
Boeing 747 service from Los Angeles (LAX). Beginning in 1979, however, overseas passenger traffic began to fall steadily, leading one carrier after another to suspend service to Hilo. The OAG lists only two air carriers operating nonstop service from the U.S. mainland to Hilo in 1979: United operating daily
McDonnell Douglas DC-10 flights with one nonstop flight a day from both Los Angeles (LAX) and San Francisco (SFO), and Western operating nonstop
DC-10 service once a week from
LAX. In early 1985, United was operating just one departure a day from Hilo: a daily nonstop to Los Angeles (LAX) flown with a stretched Super
DC-8. Also by the mid-1980s, overseas traffic had fallen by such an extent that United Airlines, the sole remaining overseas carrier, terminated scheduled service on December 1, 1986. The number of overseas passengers traveling to Hilo had declined in each of the previous eight years. During the first eleven months of 1986, United Airlines had served a mere 20,914 passengers in Hilo. Hilo would be left without nonstop service to North America for nearly two decades. At the same time, the state's other major airports added overseas service. United Airlines commenced service to
Kahului Airport on January 5, 1983, followed by service to
Kona International Airport on September 7 and finally to
Līhuʻe Airport in August 1984. Hilo struggled to attract another overseas air carrier. Meantime, in the summer of 1983 there were three airlines operating nonstop service on the interisland route between Hilo and Honolulu including
Aloha Airlines with
Boeing 737-200 jets,
Hawaiian Airlines with
McDonnell Douglas DC-9-50 jets and
de Havilland Canada DHC-7 Dash 7 turboprops, and
Mid Pacific Air with
NAMC YS-11 turboprops with the three air carriers operating a combined total of seventeen daily nonstop flights at this time from Hilo to Honolulu according to the OAG. Mid Pacific Air later introduced
Fokker F28 Fellowship jets on its nonstop flights to Honolulu. In May 1989, the state Legislature renamed General Lyman Field to "Hilo International Airport". Among the reasons given was to reorient the airport's image and to "conform to the practice of naming airports for their geographical locations". Efforts finally had some success on April 28, 2006, when
ATA Airlines re-established daily non-stop service between Hilo and
Oakland International Airport in California aboard its
Boeing 737-800 aircraft. ATA Airlines' inauguration of direct overseas service to Hilo for the first time in nearly two decades was met with great fanfare and proved so successful the airline eventually substituted the larger
Boeing 757-200 on its flights to Hilo during the peak traveling season around August. Just shy of two years later on April 2, 2008, ATA Airlines ceased operations, citing the cancellation of an agreement by
FedEx that provided most of the company's charter flights, and the unprecedented increase in fuel prices. ATA was acquired by U.S. carrier
Southwest Airlines, which did not operate any overseas routes at the time. Southwest then announced their intention to serve Hawaii from California. The demise of ATA Airlines left Hilo without overseas service once again. In the wake of ATA's bankruptcy, the
Hawaii Tribune-Herald reported an undisclosed major U.S. Airline was considering service to Hilo. New mainland service was announced on December 15, 2010, when
Continental Airlines announced that it would begin to fly to Hilo from both
San Francisco and
Los Angeles in June 2011. These flights were operated by
United Airlines after the merger between the two carriers in 2011. Daily flights to and from Los Angeles commenced on June 9, 2011, and Saturday-only service to and from San Francisco on June 11, 2011. In 2013, United dropped service to San Francisco. Service to Los Angeles was decreased to five flights per week. However, United dropped service to Los Angeles in 2023. == Facilities ==