Aviation pioneer
Glenn Curtiss retired from aircraft development and manufacturing in the 1920s and became a real estate developer in Florida. In 1926, he founded the city of
Opa-locka, naming it Opa-tisha-woka-locka (quickly shortened to Opa-locka), a Native American name that translates into
the high land north of the little river with a camping place. In late 1925, he moved the Florida Aviation Camp from Hialeah to a parcel west of Opa-locka. This small airfield was surrounded by the Opa-locka Golf Course. In 1929, he transferred the land to the
City of Miami, which erected a World War I surplus hangar from
Key West. The field became known as the Municipal Blimp Hangar. The following year, the
Goodyear Blimp started operating out of this hangar. In 1928, Curtiss made a separate donation of land two miles south of Opa-locka for Miami's first Municipal Airport. The Curtiss Aviation School later moved from
Biscayne Bay to this airport. A larger area to the east of Miami Municipal Airport was developed during the 1930s as
All-American Airport. After Curtiss died in 1930, his estate transferred a parcel of land north of the golf course and the Florida Aviation Camp to the city of Miami. The city then leased it to the
United States Navy. Curtiss had been lobbying for the establishment of the Naval Reserve Base in Miami since 1928, and this property became a
Naval Reserve Aviation Training Base (NRATB), which later became an active installation renamed
Naval Air Station Miami. The installation was extremely active during World War II and saw significant military construction on the main base as well as several additional auxiliary airfields in the general area. Much of this construction is still in existence today. Training in fighter, dive-bombing and torpedo bombing skills took place at various times during the base's operation. The
Brewster F2A Buffalo fighter,
Douglas SBD Dauntless dive bomber,
Grumman TBF Avenger torpedo bomber, and the
Grumman F4F Wildcat fighter were some of the aircraft based at the facility. In addition to serving as headquarters for the 7th Naval District, the station supported a naval air gunnery school, a Marine Corps Air Station, a Coast Guard Station, and a small craft training center. The peak complement, reached in 1945, consisted of 7,200 officers and men and 3,100 civilian employees. Postwar, the installation returned to its former role as a Naval Air Reserve and Marine Air Reserve installation, but retained the name
NAS Miami and the colloquial name of Master Field. Following the departure of the
United States Navy, but the retention of
U.S. Marine Corps Reserve flying and aviation support units, Master Field became
Marine Corps Air Station Miami (MCAS Miami) on February 15, 1952. MCAS Miami was the home of the
3d Marine Aircraft Wing from May 1952 until September 1955. With the transfer of Marine Air Reserve squadrons and support units to
Naval Air Station Jacksonville, Florida in 1958 and 1959, MCAS Miami was marked for closure and the air station closed as a Department of the Navy installation in 1959. Much of the former military property was transferred to Dade County and the Dade County Junior College opened on the site in 1961. In 1962, the remainder of the former Naval Air Station Miami/Marine Corps Air Station Miami property, except for a portion reserved for the
United States Coast Guard for establishment of a new coast guard air station, was transferred to
Dade County and became Opa-locka Airport. However, events of the
Cuban Missile Crisis in October 1962 led to much of the former air station again being requisitioned by the
Department of Defense for use as an additional staging base for U.S. strike forces, augmenting the active duty air force bases and naval air stations in Florida in the event the crisis led to war.
United States Air Force civil engineers from the
Tactical Air Command (TAC) arrived at the airfield late in the evening of October 22 and proceeded to work around the clock. In one instance, TAC civil engineering personnel rehabilitated the aging petroleum, oil and lubricants (POL) fuel farm and distribution infrastructure originally constructed by the Navy in the 1940s, bringing the facility to fully operational status in just 3½ days. Other airfield and air base support improvements were also implemented to support tactical aircraft operations. However, the crisis passed through diplomatic means and the airfield was never required to serve as a strike installation against Soviet and Cuban forces. In 1965,
Coast Guard Air Station Miami transferred its aircraft and operations from its
Dinner Key seaplane installation to the Opa-locka Airport, re-establishing CGAS Miami on site. CGAS Miami continues to operate on site with
EADS HC-144 Ocean Sentry fixed-wing aircraft and
MH-65 Dolphin helicopters. For the year 1963, Opa-locka was the 42nd busiest civil airport in the country by total operations count. In 1964, it was ranked eighteenth, in 1965, it was third, and in 1966 and 1967, it was second behind O'Hare. In 1971, it was down to seventeenth. In 1979, 551,873 operations were recorded, making it the seventh busiest airport in the nation. According to
Sebastián Marroquín (born Juan Pablo Escobar), his father
Pablo Escobar and cousin
Gustavo Gaviria "did a practice run to test-ship a hundred kilos of cocaine in a twin-engine
Piper Seneca plane. It arrived at Opa Locka Airport, a private airport in the heart of Miami used exclusively by wealthy Americans, without a hitch." Subsequently, he wrote, "because they'd already successfully landed a shipment there, for more than a year Miami's Opa Locka Airport was my father's drug-trafficking destination." Some of the
hijackers in the September 11 attacks trained at the airport. On October 7, 2014, the Miami-Dade County Commission voted to change the name of the airport to "Miami-Opa Locka Executive Airport" as part of a rebranding scheme of all Miami-area airports to include the name "Miami". == Facilities==