Wardwell Field
Wardwell Field was a public airport approximately north of Casper, Wyoming. Constructed in 1927, the airport was named two years later for Maj. Doyen Wardwell, a World War I aviator and advocate for aviation in the state of Wyoming who was killed in a crash near the airport in August 1929. Closed in 1952, the former airport site is now the location of the town of Bar Nunn.
History
In the mid-1920s, Maj. Wardwell, then a member of Wyoming's board of aeronautics, led a group of local entrepreneurs to develop an airport to serve Natrona County, in the central part of the state. The airfield opened in 1927 at a cost of $125,000. The airport consisted of three un-numbered runways and a large hangar, with the entire facility occupying 640 acres.Scheduled air service began in 1931, operated by Wyoming Air Service on a multi-stop route connecting Denver and Billings.
In 1942, the United States Army Air Forces opened Casper Army Airfield as a training facility for B-17 and B-24 bomber crews. Located to the west, the base was inactivated in March 1945 and divested to the Army Corps of Engineers six months later. In 1949, the former base was offered to Natrona County, who considered it a superior option for future development of air service given its longer runways and more extensive infrastructure. Wardwell Field was formally closed in 1952 and all services transferred to the new Natrona County Municipal Airport.