Initially a grass strip in a meadow established by local investors Barr Peat, Clifford A. Ball and Bo Phelan, it was gradually improved. Changing hands several times, it was operated by the Pittsburgh-McKeesport Airport Corporation. Curtiss-Wright sold the field to Gus Becker, who operated the Pittsburgh Institute of Aeronautics, which trained engine and aircraft mechanics in downtown Pittsburgh classrooms. During World War II PIA operated under government contracts, delivering training for the military. By 1944 the airstrip was a 2,500 feet (760 m) paved surface. Sold to Westinghouse in January 1949, the field was closed and redeveloped, becoming the Bettis Atomic Power Laboratory. The two paved runways, used for parking, and two hangars remain along with a maintenance building. The Art Deco terminal building was razed sometime in the 2000s.
There was a landing at Bettis sometime in the 1960s when a small plane landed claiming he confused it with Allegheny Co Airport, one mile (1.6 km) east, due to smoke obscuration.
Airlines
Clifford Ball Airline was a contract carrier for the U.S. Mail between Pittsburgh and Cleveland from July 1, 1925.
Transcontinental and Western Air, TWA, stopped at Bettis Field from 1930 through 1932 as one of eleven stops made on a transcontinental airline service between Los Angeles and New York. Service was then shifted to the Allegheny County Airport.[1]
Homestead & Mifflin Township Historical Society "Bettis: Pittsburgh's first airfield"Homestead & Mifflin Township Historical Society Newsletter April 2002 Volume 2, Issue 4, pp. 3–6
Further reading
William F. Trimble, "High frontier: a History of Aeronautics in Pennsylvania" University of Pittsburgh Press, 1982 OCLC8132981
W. David Lewis and William F. Trimble, "The airway to everywhere: a history of All American Aviation, 1937-1953" University of Pittsburgh Press, 1988 OCLC16757006
Brian Butko, Paul Roberts, William F. Trimble. "Pittsburgh history" Winter, 1993/94 ISSN1069-4706
Tony Kambic. "Bettis: the field that brought airmail to Pittsburgh", Clairton, Pennsylvania: The Progress, July 1976 OCLC19586192
Richard David Wissolik; David Wilmes et al. "A place in the sky: a pictorial and spoken history of the Arnold Palmer Regional Airport and aviation in western Pennsylvania" Latrobe, Pennsylvania: The Saint Vincent College Center for Northern Appalachian Studies, 2001 ISBN1-885851-17-0OCLC47136718