In the 1920s, cities in Northeast Pennsylvania recognized the need for an airport, and U.S. Representative
Laurence Hawley Watres of Scranton, the chairman of the U.S. House subcommittee that oversaw the growing commercial aviation industry, began to advocate for the project. Despite the depression and hard times affecting the coal mining industry, a windfall multimillion-dollar opportunity to build an airport was presented to Luzerne and Lackawanna Counties through their Public Works Administration. It became apparent that a modern airport would be needed for the economic survival of the region. The site in Avoca was first surveyed in 1939 by the County Commissioners boards of both counties. In 1941, John B. McDade, father of U.S. Congressman
Joseph M. McDade (whose name is on the current terminal building) and president of the Heidelberg Coal Co., donated 122 acres on which part of the airport now sits. Most of the land was previously owned by various coal companies. Many U.S. airfields built during World War II were motivated as much by military defense as they were by civil aviation. The government funded construction of many airfields to develop a network that could be used by the military. The proponents of a large bi-county airport continued their efforts in the early forties until late in 1944, when they succeeded in receiving a last-minute commitment from the Administrator of Civil Aeronautics of the United States Department of Commerce, with the approval of a Board composed of the Secretaries of Navy, War, and Commerce, designating the project as necessary for national defense. In early 1945, the two counties entered into a legal agreement to co-sponsor and operate the airport. During the negotiations of on-site selection and the bi-county operation plan, it was agreed that Scranton, the larger city and alphabetical first and closest in mileage should have second billing in name, since Luzerne County had the largest population. Thus, the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Airport was named. Construction of the airport took place from 1945 to June 1, 1947, when the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Airport was dedicated.
Colonial Airlines and
American Airlines were the first airlines at AVP (this three-letter code derives from its location near
Avoca, Pennsylvania). In April 1948
Transcontinental & Western Air (later TWA) arrived, and
All American Airways (later Allegheny Airlines) in June 1949. Colonial flew Montreal/Syracuse- Philadelphia/Washington with stops; American flew to Chicago/Buffalo-New York; TWA flew Kansas City/Pittsburgh-Albany/Boston; and All American had general interstate service and later a looping network to Newark, Atlantic City, Washington, and around again through Pennsylvania. Each airline started with DC-3s. The April 1957 OAG shows 32 departures a day: 14 Allegheny, 12 Eastern, 4 TWA, and 2 American. The first jets were Eastern 727s, in the May 1969 OAG; in March 1969 the longest runway was the 5200-ft runway 4, which grew to 6450 feet by 1972. The airport became "international" in 1975 when cargo flights to Canada began. The airport has had many celebrity visitors.
Air Force One has landed with
Bill Clinton,
George W. Bush,
Barack Obama,
Donald Trump and
Joe Biden for fundraisers and campaign trips. A charter plane carrying
Hillary Clinton used the airport during her presidential campaign in 2008. In August 2013, President Obama and 10 year Scranton-native Vice President
Joe Biden visited the region for a campaign event. President
Donald Trump visited the airport on November 2, 2020, and held a campaign rally on the tarmac. In May 2006, the airport completed an 80 million dollar new terminal and garage. The terminal, designed by
HNTB, has jetways, a larger waiting area, more gates and a shopping and dining area. A new control tower and TRACON facility opened on August 29, 2012, and was paid for with $13.3 million from the
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009. The old tower's view of the second runway had been blocked by the new terminal. All 25 controllers stayed to work in the new facility. On May 18, 2017, demolition began on the former airport terminal. The old terminal was demolished in early 2018. The site is now a parking lot for airport staff and passengers.
Former carriers •
All American Airways (renamed to
Allegheny Airlines, then to
USAir, then to
US Airways before merging with
American Airlines) •
Colonial Airlines (1947–1956, merged with
Eastern Air Lines) •
Delta Air Lines (ended in 2020) •
Eastern Airlines (1956–1989) •
TWA (1948–1966) • Vacation Express (March 11, 2003 – September 7, 2004) •
Hooters Airlines (October 26, 2005 – March 26, 2006) •
Allegiant Air (June 21, 2012 – January 4, 2018) ==Air Show==