JAGS McCartney International Airport
JAGS McCartney International Airport, also known as Grand Turk International Airport, is an airport located south of Cockburn Town on Grand Turk in the Turks and Caicos Islands, an overseas territory of the United Kingdom. It is the second largest airport in the territory, after Providenciales International Airport.
However, the airport was classified as international but it mainly serves domestic flights. Previously, it also operates international flights to United States, Jamaica, Haiti and Dominican Republic from the past.
History
The airport is named for James Alexander George Smith McCartney, the territory's first Chief Minister, who died in a plane crash in New Jersey, United States in 1980.Bahamas Airways was serving the airport by the late 1950s with weekly flights to Nassau via an intermediate stop at Inagua operated with small de Havilland Heron prop aircraft. By the early 1960s Bahamas Airways was operating the same routing and weekly schedule with larger Douglas DC-3 prop aircraft.
During the mid 1970s, two airlines were operating international flights from Grand Turk including Mackey International Airlines with Douglas DC-6 propliner service to Miami with continuing service to Fort Lauderdale three days a week and Turks & Caicos Airways in association with Haiti Air Inter with direct flights to Cap-Haitien, Haiti continuing on Port au Prince, Haiti operated with Britten-Norman BN-2 Islander commuter prop aircraft. During the late 1970s, Southeast Airlines was operating direct no change of plane service to Miami three days a week via a stop in South Caicos with a Lockheed L-188 Electra turboprop aircraft. In 1978, Trans-Jamaican Airlines was operating nonstop service once a week to Kingston with Britten-Norman Trislander prop aircraft. In 1994, Turks and Caicos Airways Ltd., which was based in Grand Turk, was operating flights with Beechcraft 1900C turboprops as well as Britten-Norman Islander and Cessna prop aircraft with flights from Cap-Haitien, Haiti and Puerto Plata, Dominican Republic in addition to local flights in the Turks & Caicos Islands including service from Middle Caicos, North Caicos, Providenciales, Salt Cay and South Caicos.