Larson Brothers Airport
The Larson Brothers Airport is an airport in rural Winnebago County, Wisconsin, United States along the former Wisconsin Highway 150. It was the first airport in the county and one of the first in the state outside of Milwaukee. It is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
History
The airport operated from 1922, three years after the state's first airport opened in Milwaukee, until 1990. It was formed when Clarence, Leonard, Newell, and Roy Larson cleared an 80 rod-long sod landing strip behind their barn. He had two Curtiss Canuck airplanes. They began barnstorming the United States at county fairs and offering flying lessons before building a hangar in 1924. Roy Larson barnstormed Wisconsin for Bob La Follette's 1924 Presidential campaign. The hangar allowed them to work and store on six airplanes.In 1926, the brothers formed the Roy Larson Aircraft Company for their repair work, and created a corporation for all of their ventures as the Wisconsin Airways in the following year. Roy Larson died in 1929 while a student was flying the airplane that he was riding in.
In 1932, the Milwaukee Journal called the airport the "finest airport in the state". Soon after, sod airports began fading as more powerful airplanes required longer paved runways. It temporarily closed following a federal mandate at the beginning of World War II.
Leonard Larson trained fighter pilots for the war.
By the late 1970s, it was the oldest airport in the state.