Aero Club of East Africa
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Entrance to the Aero Club of East Africa at Wilson Airport in Nairobi, 2019 | |
| Formation | 1927 |
|---|---|
| Location |
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| Website | www |
The Aero Club of East Africa was founded in Kenya in 1927. Built alongside Nairobi's Wilson Airport, the club featured prominently in 20th century African aeronautical history. The club remains active today and hosts facilities and events that are open to the public.
The Aero Club of Kenya was founded on July 31, 1927.[1][2][3] Its founding members included 24 pilots and aviation enthusiasts, who stated that the club's objectives were "To promote, encourage and regulate aeronautics in Kenya, and to provide information and advice about aviation to all authorities and persons as might be required."[2] The club's initial location was the Dagoretti airstrip.[3]
In March 1928 the club's first president Lieutenant Colonel A.C.E. Marsh renamed the club to the Aero Club of East Africa.[2][3] The club advised the Kenyan government on the appropriate site for a Nairobi airport, and in 1929 the Nairobi Aerodrome airport was built at this location. The club's clubhouse was also placed on this site, overlooking what in 1933 would become the airport's first runways.[2][4][3] Wild animals roamed the airstrip in the early years of the airport and Aero Club.[3]
The club had 209 members when its clubhouse was built in 1929 and by 1933, 25 of those members had acquired flying licenses.[2] In 1936 club member Beryl Markham was the first person to fly across the Atlantic Ocean from the east to the west, and in response the Aero Club gifted her lifelong membership.[2][5] Markham had first learned to fly at the club in 1929.[6]
Second World War
During World War II the Aerodrome was reorganized by British military authorities and the Aero Club moved to a temporary location near the Nairobi Dam.[2] Dozens of club members joined the war and were placed into a Kenya Auxiliary Air Unit, which saw combat in Europe and North Africa. Nineteen members were killed in the war.[2] The clubhouse was returned to its original aerodrome site in 1947.[2]
