Indianapolis International Airport is an airport located in Indianapolis, Indiana. It has the IATA Airport Code IND. It is owned by the City of Indianapolis and operated by British airport operator BAA.
History
Before it got its International designation, it was called Weir-Cook Airport, after Lt. Col. Harvey
Weir-Cook of Wilkinson, Indiana, who was a US Army Air Corps pilot in World War I and World War II, where he was killed while flying a P-40 over New Zealand. He was a flying ace during WWI, with seven victories. The airport opened in 1931 and the name was changed to Weir-Cook in 1944.
On October 31, 1994, American Eagle Flight 4184, which was flying to Chicago, Illinois's O'Hare International Airport from Indianapolis, crashed into a soybean field, killing everyone on board.
Concourses
Concourse A
- Northwest Airlines (Detroit, Memphis, and Minneapolis/St. Paul)
- Pinnacle Airlines dba Northwest Airlink (Detroit)
- Southwest Airlines (Baltimore/Washington, Chicago/Midway, Jacksonville, Kansas City, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, New Orleans, Orlando, Phoenix, and Tampa)
Concourse B
Concourse C
Concourse D
External link