The People and Planes of Santa Paula
There's a hard-to-define quality that can't be found on a flight chart or listed in an airport directory.
- By Marshall Lumsden
- Air & Space magazine, March 2004
(Page 5 of 6)
Hang around the airport long enough and you’ll begin to hear about Santa Paula’s brushes with celebrity. On September 28, 1968, a 66-year-old Charles Lindbergh visited the airport at the invitation of an old friend, Bud Gurney, who had barnstormed with him in the 1920s and then taken over his mail route when he left to make his historic flight to Paris. Gurney, long since retired as a United Airlines captain, had hangared his Gypsy Moth at Santa Paula since 1963. Together, Gurney and Lindbergh went flying that day, and Bud’s son, John, followed in a second Gypsy Moth. John recounts that they had all flown up to a little country strip in the mountains, sat around on the grass and talked for a couple of hours, and then had flown back.
Actor Cliff Robertson once had a fleet of antique biplanes here, and even though he now lives in New York, he still maintains a hangar at Santa Paula and a Stampe biplane in flying condition. Actors Gene Hackman and Leonard Nimoy and famed Lockheed test pilot Tony LeVier all used to fly here often. Apollo 11 astronaut Buzz Aldrin visited several times, once thrilling the airport crowd when he arranged for a Boeing 747 carrying a space shuttle to fly by. And anyone can point out the hangar where the late film star Steve McQueen, who was taught to fly by Mike Dewey, kept his Stearman and his racing motorcycles. McQueen once described Santa Paula as “my kind of country club,” and he was no doubt attracted to the unpretentious atmosphere.
It had been Ralph Dickenson’s dream to build a plain and simple airfield, and the Santa Paula of today is a reflection of Dickenson’s long rule; he stayed on as president of the board of the Santa Paula Airport Association for 45 years and continued to manage the airport for another five. After he retired as association president, his son, Don, served for 16 years, and then in 1997, grandson Bruce took over for four years and still serves on the board.
Ralph Dickenson continued to fly until he was 89, and in the last few years he owned a Cessna 180, which he bought without a radio. (His hearing was going, and he never liked radios much anyhow.) He died in 1985, at the age of 91. Up to the end, though, he came to his airport and pulled weeds to keep the place tidy.
Sidebar: The Details
Almost equidistant between the airports of Santa Barbara and Los Angeles, Santa Paula is on Route 126, 12 miles inland from the coastal highway. Nearby airports at Camarillo, Van Nuys, and Oxnard all cater to light general aviation aircraft, small jets, and regional airliners.
Sidebar: Vital Stats
Opened: Dedicated on August 8 & 9, 1930.
Dining: Try Logsdon’s Restaurant, located at the airport. For information on food and lodging, check out www.santapaulaairport.com.
Don’t Miss: Watching old movies of Golden Age pilots in the airport’s museum at the open houses held on the first Sunday of each month. Hours: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. For more information, visit www.amszp.org or call (805) 525-1109.
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Comments (3)
Trying to locate a member of the Gurney family. In particular John Gurney if anyone knows of him and his wife who at one time did biplane fabric/cloth installs and repairs. A Gurney family member was also a Equestienne Olympic medal winner.
Please have them reach me by email.
Thanks
Posted by Barrie Bartulski on November 7,2008 | 08:16 PM
john gurney probably still lives in or near the san fernando valley, ca. he worked for me in litton guidance and control systems division, woodland hills from about 1970-1975...he is quite a character...dennis d.
Posted by dennis depasse on September 10,2011 | 12:16 AM
Bud Gurney flew his Monocoupe, NC543W, from Santa Paula. I restored this 'Coupe and would like any photos or stories about it to add to its growing historical record. this bird is museum-bound one day, and Gurney's time with it at Santa Paula is an important part of that. Anyone who can help = please email! Thanks - Bob
monocoup [at] shentel [dot] net
Posted by Bob Coolbaugh on April 18,2012 | 07:13 AM