Southend Airport has seen it all since opening in 1914, but it has been claimed it could even be the oldest airport in the world.
It has been an RAF base, hit our screens in a hit James Bond film and undergone a £120million transformation since its humble beginnings.
College Park Airport, in the American state of Maryland, is in the record books as having the honour of being the world’s oldest airport, but a south Essex YouTuber has alleged our own airport could actually date back even further.
Jay Rose, when looking back at the lost airfields of Southend, said: “Officially, College Park, in Maryland, is the oldest airport in the world after opening in August 1909.
“But something else was happening in Southend in 1909 which may mean that Southend Airport, at least on a technicality, is actually the oldest airport in the world.
“One of the very first attempted flying activities in the area allegedly came from two men from Leigh named Victor Forbes and Arthur Arnold.
“Their very primitive heavier-than-air design made mostly of bamboo struts began being tested on the flat fields of what was then West Barrow Hall Farm in 1909.
“The land belonging to this farm is now at least partially part of the airport. It’s strange to think that some of the earliest attempts to gain heavier-than-air flight not only occurred in Essex but actually on the very site of our modern airport.”
Southend Airport was initially created as a flying base and listed as a landing ground by the War Office in the First World War.
The first recorded flight at Southend Airport was on May 31, 1915, when Flight Sub Lieutenant A W Robinson took off in a Bleriot aircraft in a failed attempt to intercept a German Zeppelin.
In the years which have followed, it has featured in the James Bond film Goldfinger and grown significantly since being purchased by the Stobart Group in 2008.
Scroll down to see more eye-catching photographs of Southend Airport through the years.
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