Mt. Healthy Airport Stories
Charlie Conrad
The other mechanic was Harvey Kattleman. His family
resided in North College Hill. They were plasterers
originally. Among the people who kept their airplanes
there were Doc Edwards, the pharmacist in Mt. Healthy
and his brother, Dwight, he used to sell the tickets for
us when we would sell rides.
Another gentlemen who kept his Monocoupe there was Emil
Graf. He was the head engineer for Ahrens-Fox Engine Co.
George Benninghoffen out of Hamilton whose family had
the Benninghoffen Woolen Mills; he also kept his
airplane there. Johnny Jacobs, he learned to fly there.
I don’t know if he had an airplane there or not. He was
the butcher in Mt. Healthy.
Count Alfred Monteverde and his brother, they were
Portugese Counts, and they kept their plane there at the
airport. One was in the Air Force and met his demise on
one of the trips. And his brother was killed in a road
race down in Argentina.
George South operated the airport after Carl Muhlberger.
I think Carl went to Florida and was going to stay down
there. George South from the Hamilton Airport took over
and ran the flying school there for awhile. There was
another gentleman after George South went into the
F.A.A. out in the west. I think in Phoenix Arizona. A
gentleman by the name of Jerry Greenfield took it over
and started running the flying school.
There were people who bought time, of some consequence
out there, Michael Henn, he was a radio commentator.
Buying time is when you buy a certain amount of time in
the airplane, to fly it. Vaughn Monroe, the singer, kept
his airplane there for a while. Al Wineberg, I think he
had a Travelaire.
The
parachutists, Leonard Moore and Shirley Ronnert, they
were champion parachutists. Then there was Eugene Dells,
Charlie Rife and also Zeke Thomas who was a Brigidier
General when he got out of the Air Force. It also was
the home of Miss Suntan; it was a Little Cub. In which
they won the endurance record, think it was 1939. They
stayed up for several days.
I
think it closed around 1950, and went into the hands of
King Bee Leasing. I wasn’t much interested in it then,
as I had come back from the service, and was teaching
flying, at the seaplane base down in Cincinnati.
Mt.
Healthy was basically an airport where you kept
airplanes. During the flood of 1937 we used the airport
for either hauling passengers or dropping parachutes
with boxes of anti-toxins. I flew a couple of trips up
to Portsmouth and dropped anti-toxins there. And we also
did a little hauling of passengers over the flooded area
in Lawrenceburg.
I
believe the airport started, I think, if I’m not
mistaken about 1930. And Muhlberger was the F.B.O. that
was there. There was Suzie Bosserman, but I can’t
remember her brother’s name. That piece of property, I
still can’t understand how it got to be Northgate Mall.
There were no heirs to it. They were very nice people;
in fact they sort of wanted to adopt me. I’d go over
there and eat with them every once in a while.
They owned that property there, that the airport was on
and clear to Bevis. They had money, they really did. In
fact, when times were really poor, they gave a church
organ to a church, I think in Comminsville near Chase
Ave. They also had a telephone early on, because I used
their phone many times, and the Bossermans did lease the
airport to Pop Muhlberger for 99 years. Muhlberger was
pretty closed mouthed about anything financial. I knew
him for sixty years or better, about sixty-five years,
and never talked money or anything. But he did have
money.
Muhlberger lived on the airport property in that little
house and he had an old dog. I still can’t understand
how anybody acquired that airport property, the rights
to the property, unless there was a will that stated
that. Because I would have thought that would have gone
to the church, because they were very religious people.
The Bossermans lived in that White House on Springdale
Rd. opposite the airport land. I believe one of the
instigators of the airport was Doc Edwards, as far as I
know, he was the first one to have his airplane in the
hanger there. Doc was a very nice man, and I think where
he had his drugstore in Mt. Healthy, its still a
drugstore.
I
think the airport runway was close to 4000 ft long and
it was just top soil, and over to the south west, there
was sort of an indention in the ground and you didn’t
want to get over there, you could tear up the darn
airplane. There use to be some fishponds over there to
the west. I remember that, because I had an engine quit
on me one time, and I had to stick it between the ponds
there. They had hatcheries there.
Muhly wasn’t so lucky. He went between the house and
tore off the wings. In those days, the airplanes were
not as good as they are today. The engines weren’t up to
snuff, and of course we were all beginners I think.
I
learned to fly at Mt. Healthy in 1935. Harvey Kattleman
taught me to fly. I stayed out there until almost 1938.
Then I came here, it was called Western Hills Airport or
Frank’s or whatever. Western Hills Airport was in
operation until 1952. Then they sold their hanger to
Oxford, Miami University, and it’s up there yet.
Western Hills Airport was owned by Doc Simmons, he was a
medical doctor and he also ran racecars. Sometimes you’d
have to push the racecars out of the way to get to the
planes. Down around the Mt. Healthy Airport there was a
restaurant, on the northeast corner of Springdale and
Colerain, called Hudepohl’s.
Elmer practically lived at the airport. He did live
right across the street and we took him under our wing.
He learned the mechanic business right from those at the
airport, just being there and doing everything. We
enjoyed having him. He was real nice for sure.
Pop Muhlberger passed away a few years ago. George South
is gone. Elmer died last December. I don’t know about
Jerry Greenfield. But I do know that he went to Miami,
Florida and he became a factory representative of
Diamond Drills. That’s where the money was and I think
his son took over the business after Jerry retired.
Jerry had a pacemaker the last time I knew, when I was
down to his house down there. I don’t know if he is
still in working, order or not.
Jerry was an honest man. He previously operated a
furniture store down in Brighton. He went from furniture
to airplanes to Diamond Drills. Pop Muhlberger passed
away about two years ago. Pop had a boat down in
Florida, and he lived on the boat. Pop had a lady
friend, but it was years before they got married. I
guess he was just waiting. I don’t know what he was
waiting for.
At
Mt. Healthy I first had an International, I use to call
it “Woodpeckers Delight,” because it was made of
plywood. It was built in Ft. Ancient, not many people
know there was an airplane manufacturer up there. I
could never find it up there. It’s close to the
Salvation Army camp for children.
We
had Travelaires 2000 & 4000, a Tank Waco. Curtiss Robin,
the kind that Corrigan flew the drink with. Muhlberger
had SM8A Stinson, 5 or 6 place. We had a Kinnear Bird, a
bi-plane with a heavy top wing. We taught in Rearwins,
we taught in
Zeke Thomas would bring his airplane out there, he had
an old 712, it was an historical plane. One of the first
Waco 10's they put out. He also kept it there. I think
the biggest plane I flew in there, was a Ford Tri-Motor.
But that’s not a big plane and it lands shorter than a
Waco. I think I flew that in from Put-In-Bay. We also
had Cubs, Super Cubs that’s about all I can remember.
I
don’t remember the wires on Colerain Ave. being low, but
we could come in there and just miss the wires and had
ample room with those airplanes. The majority of those
planes didn’t have brakes. Understand in those days, not
until 1938 did we get airplanes with brakes. Otherwise
we had tailskids and kept on going, but no one ever got
to the end of the fence.
A
tailskid is the same as the tail dragger, and when it
would rain out there we had plenty of mud. During the
flood of 1937, I replaced one set of wheels on my
airplane because I just tore them up. In January, you’d
come in and hit that mud and it would go up under the
wings and freeze because it was cold. Then we’d have to
hose it off, before we could make another flight. The
mud got into the bearings and it just tore the heck out
of things.
Back in those days, aviation gasoline cost .12 a gallon.
We use to go down to Texaco, downtown where the bus
station is now. There use to be a distributor there and
we would pick up gasoline. There was never a gas truck
out at the airport. So we use to get it in these
wood-covered cans, the capacity was about 10 gallons. We
would burn about 8 gallons an hour, 7-8 gallons an hour.
That was the 100 h.p. 110. The J-5 burned about 14
gallons an hour, they were a
Little bit heavier on gas, all low compression engines.
We never had any radios in those planes for ages. We
were on our own. But then whom would you talk with. When
we went to Lunken Airport, there were no radios there
and that was the largest airport.
Shirley Ronnert and Leonard Moore, they were about the
best in the United States for accuracy with parachutes.
Every once in a while, they would jump there at the
airport and they would draw a crowd, help the gate. They
were up in Cleveland at the air races and of course they
took first money there.
We
only had one catastrophe at Mt. Healthy. Some boy
delayed his ‘chute’ too far and he went down, but he did
that on purpose. He told everybody, I didn’t know it
that I’m really going to delay that thing almost down to
the ground and then, I’m going to pop it up. When he
popped it, it deflated right away so he didn’t make it.
It
was just local fellows in the air shows out there, who
would do acrobatics such as they were. There was lots of
activity out there. When I had the Waco F-2 we’d keep it
pretty busy on a Sunday afternoon with rides. We were
only getting a dollar a head. You could only carry two
at a time in the Waco. People just didn’t have much
money back then.
I’m still flying and I’m flying a 182 Cessna. I fly it
regularly and it is my own airplane. I fly down to the
Dominican Republic. I fly to Washington. I have
relatives up there, other than that, I just teach
instrument flying that’s all. You ask my age, I’m
seventy-nine, once you get hit by the bug of flying it
never leaves you.
The first time I got in an airplane, I was up in
Chicago. You see I’m from Chicago. Then I went to Drake
University in Des Moines and took aeronautical
engineering there. I delivered laundry enough, to get
money to learn how to fly. Then I went out to Elmhurst
Airport there in Chicago. Like my teacher in high school
told me, when you get out there; ask him how I learned
to fly. Well all you have to do is go out there and take
fifty dollars and wave it up in the air and be sure to
hang onto the telephone so they won’t pull you down.
So I
would go out to the airport, American Airlines were flying
those old bi-planes then, and I would wash them. I’d get
$10.00 for that. That was a 2-3 day job. I finally found
somebody out there who would teach me to fly, but I never
got to solo, because I ran out of money.
Flying
was never a hobby with me. At the airport here, I had three
airplanes. One day a fellow wearing a suit came in there and
asked as he pointed whose airplane is that there. I said
mine. I kept working, he said whose is that, and I said
mine. After the third one, he asked, do you ever pay
personal property taxes?
The
Hogan brothers operated the Hamilton Airport, but before
that Pop Muhlberger was the operator up at Hamilton. The
Hogans flew into Mt. Healthy, but they never operated it.
Carl
Nilles was from the Hamilton Airport, and he would come down
periodically. He took off with some passengers to the east,
over the wires and the engine quit. I believe he killed both
of them in the front seat, but he was not hurt. On these
planes, the passengers were in the front and the pilot was
in the back. They crashed on the south side of Springdale
Rd. He just had no place to go.
Bill:
Pilots back then just kind of accepted power lines at the
end of runways too. Back then you didn’t get a lot of play
for having an airport. There had to be a road and power
lines, most of airports went right up to the road.
Bob:
The landing strip began basically at Colerain Ave. placed
back a little bit because of wires. At Colerain and
Springdale where presently there’s a BP station and the
theater and Friday’s Restaurant in that general area. There
were some hangers. I remember 3 or 4 different hanger
buildings, different sizes. There were a couple of bigger
ones. They were kind of grouped in an L, kind of along
Colerain and Springdale Rd. in that corner.
The
runway began a little bit south of there about where the
entrance to Northgate Mall is right by Friday’s Restaurant.
It began fairly close to the street there and the power
lines were up there. It ran southwest from there right
through the middle of Northgate Mall. The runway ran from
that corner to kind of southwest somewhere about 210 degrees
heading. Colerain School was not a problem on the other end.
Colerain School was fairly far away as airplanes go. You’d
be up high and above that.
Just
off the southwest end of the runway, there was a fish
hatchery, a number of lakes, a dozen little ponds. That was
always kind of a landmark to pick out from a distance as you
were approaching the airport. You could pick out those ponds
as a pretty distinctive landmark, and when you circled
around the airport and enter a pattern and to land there.
Bill: At that same southwest end of the runway, there was sort of a marshy area there, because I remember cattails growing there. I remember breaking off cattails and breaking them apart.
Bob:
That marsh, there was sort of a dump down there where they
dumped empty oil cans and other stuff. I remember finding
some old piston rings. This was on the southwest side of the
property off the end of the runway; it was kind of marshy.
They had all kinds of neat things in the dump; at least they
were neat to a 6 or 7 yr. old kid.
They
didn’t have a control tower, but the way it is still done
today at non-controlled fields, you enter a standard
pattern. You determine the active runway, and enter that
pattern, fly that pattern and land the aircraft.
Bill:
I heard the airport referred to as the Mt. Healthy Flying
Club. I believe Elmer mentioned the old Mt. Healthy Flying
Club. Events such as spot landing, bomb dropping those were
some of the unique things. People would just come out there
on the weekends and just fly their planes.
Bob:
I remember going to the airport more than once, Sundays, dad
usually went out there on Sundays, and often didn’t want to
really bother with the little kids. I remember on at least
one occasion, hiding in the back seat, under a blanket,
trying to hide. He probably knew I was there anyway, but I
remember stowing away in his car, just so I could go to the
airport.
At
that point in time there wasn’t much on Colerain Ave. at
all, out that way. The home I remember Elmer having on
Colerain Ave. was down approximately across from Northside
Bank on Colerain, maybe up just a little bit from Graeters.
Pretty much in that area. Elmer lived on Colerain, for
years, and years, and years. I remember his house very
distinctively, and I remember when he finally moved out of
there and sold it for commercial development.
The
only large thing in the area of the airport was Bevis
Tavern. Bevis Tavern was up around where Sun Electronics is
now. I don’t remember anything on the northwest corner. Our
father did have a plane at the Mt. Healthy Airport. It was
kept in hanger, and the hangers back in those days were
crammed full of planes, and sometimes to get your plane out
you had to move 4 or 5 other planes around, push them
around. It was a Cessna 170. It had fabric wings and metal
fuselage or vice versa.
Bill:
Yes, I think that was it. It was a metal fuselage.
Bob:
And fabric wings. Our father had other planes after that. He
went on to a Cessna 180, 1515 Charley, had that for a long
time. He did a lot of flying in that. Did he get that 180
when he was at Mt. Healthy?
Bill:
Must have been, because we had the 182 in 1956.
Bob:
We had our own airport about 1956. We went from Mt. Healthy,
which had shut down prior to that because we were at
Lakewood Airport for a brief period. In fact, Lakewood was
active after Mt. Healthy closed. Lakewood closed pretty
quickly thereafter too. Lakewood was kind of surrounded by
Northbrook, they built houses everywhere in Northbrook. I
don’t know, there may have been some financial problems too.
Lakewood was paved. They story about the jets landing at
Lakewood is they were F-86's, there was a flight of two I
thought.
Bill:
I thought it was a flight of two and I thought one landed.
Bob:
One made it to greater Cincinnati, the other guy didn’t make
it to Greater Cincinnati, and he landed at Lakewood. They
were looking for Wright-Patterson. They had come from over
in the southwest. The flight was running out of fuel, and I
thought the one guy made it to Greater Cincinnati, and the
other guy did not and he landed at Lakewood, and managed
somehow not to go through the fence at the end.
But it
was a big event, and we were there when they took off again,
because they brought in a bunch of experts and they strapped
rockets on the side of this thing, had minimum fuel to fly
it to Wright-Patterson. They got a test pilot who was brave
enough to try this, cleared everybody back from the take off
end, fired those rockets, and that was really a sight to
behold, when they blasted that thing out of Lakewood
Airport.
I’m
sure the guy that landed there probably lost his wings. But
that was exciting. But I think it was just the one, that had
to be ‘54-’55.
Bill:
It was pretty close to the end of that airport.
Bob:
I’m sure the flight that landed there didn’t help the
community support, for the airport there. Probably the
biggest plane to land at Mt. Healthy was a Beech 18, twin
engine, radial engine, and 7-8 seater. That was the plane
Sky King used to fly.
Bill:
He flew a Cessna before that, what was that?
Bob:
No he flew the Beech first and then he got into the Cessna.
Bill:
He flew a 310 Cessna toward the end, but earlier than that,
there was a real boxy Cessna. It was real boxy.
Bob:
It was something they built during the war to train
Bombardiers in. It had the Delta tail, the double tail.
Bill:
The Constellation sort of tail in the back.
Bob:
As the crow flies, our airport, the Clippard Airport, was
about a half a mile northeast of the old Mt. Healthy
Airport. Present day, one end of it is in Wal-Mart’s parking
lot, the middle of it was covered by I-275, and the other
end is now present day Clippard Park, Colerain Township,
Clippard Park.
It was
33 acres of ground, it did not front on Colerain Ave. but it
had an easement along Colerain Ave. Where Stehlin’s Meat
Market is, just to the north of Stehlins property.
Bill:
I have a map of the airport.
Bob:
We can give you a copy of that. It was 33 acres of ground
and had a few rolling hills on it and dad spent quite a bit
of money on it. Getting it graded, cut and filled to get the
runway in there. He built a 50 x 80 ft building, Butler
Steel building with a concrete floor. He put a 2000 gal.
fuel tank in the ground and a fuel tip underground for
refueling. The only pavement there was a taxi way from the
hanger out to the runway, a little asphalt taxiway. This was
about 1955 that he built that. It operated from 1955 until
I-275 went in the early 1960's.
Bill:
Our Debonair flew in and out of there and it was a 1960
Debonair. We had that for awhile, the early 60's.
Bob:
I’m thinking it was right around 1962 when the state took
the property for the expressway, so it was about 7-8 years.
We hoped to be there longer than that, but we had a heck of
a battle with the state of Ohio. They wouldn’t move their
expressway, but we had a battle with them because they
wanted to cut the property in two, and take the middle
piece, and leave us the piece of each end and the back piece
would be landlocked. We had to fight them on that to get
access to the back piece, which is now the access to the
park.
This
was a private airport; it was a grass field, 1500 ft by
approximately 125 ft. There had been an old farm house, and
an old barn. The barn was demolished during construction.
The farm house remained, and the hanger was built. I
remember the old well on the property and dad had another
well dug, deeper well for water, so we had water out there.
Water and electric.
There
were just 2 planes out there. Dad had gone from the 170 to
the 180 1515 Charley and then about 1956, he bought this
brand new 182 Cessna, with the variable pitch prop and that
aircraft crashed at the airport. It crashed on takeoff, and
Bill was in it. The prop broke; the pitch on one blade went
flat. It lost power.
Bill:
We were maybe 50 ft. in the air when the thing let loose. I
broke my jaw in 4 places, fractured my skull, a few little
cuts and things, but it was mostly head injuries. My father
on the other hand had a lot of injuries. The engine kind of
came back into his lap more or less. His right ankle was
crushed, his left leg was compound fractured on the lower
leg. His left hand was laid over backward, bones broken in
there. His right elbow was crushed, his face was flattened,
broke every bone in the face up here. He lost his right eye.
He was in pretty bad shape after that.
Bob:
Bill and dad both lost a number of teeth.
Bill:
I was fifteen then. There was an old pear orchard down in
front of the runway. In fact, the way the runway heading
toward the west, we were taking off to the west, it drops
off a hill kind of going down like this, and then the hill
comes back up. This was a pear orchard, an old pear orchard,
over grown.
When
something obviously went wrong, it wouldn’t climb anymore,
climbing out, had to put in straight ahead basically, and as
it turned out a tree, a tall tree, caught the wing about a
foot in from the wing tip, and just kind of spun the plane.
The last thing I remember were patches of green and blue,
green and blue, the sky and the ground flashing around. It
cut off 2 pretty good size trees. The propeller going in,
about 4 inch trees just wacked them off.
The
engine was running quite well, but the propeller just wasn’t
pulling. So it just kind of hit this tree and flipped up and
cartwheeled in. That’s really why the injuries were as
extensive as they were. These trees were not helpful at all,
no, not really they would have been helpful to go between
them and I think that’s what dad sort of planned, intended,
but there was one big one over on the right, that kind of
spun it in.
Bob:
He had been flying about 10 years.
Bill:
I don’t remember a lot about the Lakewood Airport but I did
fly in and out of there. It was a long narrow piece of
ground right there, hangers right along the side. The
approach butted up right to Pippin Rd. right where Pippin
makes it turn there up near the Northbrook Market, right
were the road makes a 90 degree turn. The runway was right
there.
Bob:
That runway was pretty much east and west, more true than
Mt. Healthy. Glenaire, the street could very well have been
part of the runway.
Bill:
I remember Elmer flying that old purple fuselage, an orange
winged plane. And when you saw it flying around you knew it
was Elmer. Plus he’d be doing some acrobatics.
Bob:
I remember taking off from our field to the east in this
little Piper Cub. He’s in the back; I’m in the front. The
fuel tank was right in the front of the wind screen, and
they had a rod with a cork on it. Little rod sticking up,
that’s how you told how much gas you had, how much rod was
sticking up.
We took
off, and he just cruised up on down the runway a little bit, got
about 20 ft. off the runway and we were getting close to the
end. And there are some trees at the end, and I was kind of
unconsciously pulling back on the stick a little bit and Elmer
said, Oh you want to go up, and he pulled that stick back and we
went up all right.