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  1. During his term, the airport received many improvements. By the time the previous airport terminal building opened in 1959, the name Moisant International Airport was being used for the New Orleans facility. In 1961, the name was changed to New Orleans International Airport. [7] In the early 1970s, the airport was expanded.

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    The international airport of New Orleans was originally named Moisant Field and the MSY identification comes from the airports origins as Moisant Stock Yards, the name given to the land where the U. S. aviator John Bevins Moisant (Illinois 1868 New Orleans 1910) crashed where the airport was later built.

    John Bevins Moisant was born in Kankakee, Illinois, to French-Canadian immigrant parents but lived in El Salvador for around a decade. In 1909, at the request of José Santos Zelaya, President of El Salvador, John went to France to investigate airplanes.

    Consequently, John went to the Reims Air Meeting in France and became very interested in aviation: he took flying lessons and started his short but remarkable aviation career. John won a number races and contests and, most impressive, he built and flew the first all metal frame aircraft made in aluminum (1909) and flew the first flight with passeng...

    The following year, he participated in the Belmont Air Show at Belmont Park, New York, where he flew his Blériot monoplane around a balloon 10 miles away and returned to the racetrack in only 39 minutes, winning an $850 prize. A few days later, he competed and won in a race around the Statue of Liberty beating out Claude Grahame-White, a British av...

    John Moisant died of a broken neck in December 31, 1910 in an air crash while making a preparatory flight in his attempt to win the Michelin Cap. The accident took place in the current location of Luis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport. The owners wanted to honor him, so they called the stock yards the Moisant Stock Yards, or MSY for shor...

  2. Nov 6, 2019 · Passengers flying in and out of the airport (which was renamed Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport in 2001) often wonder about the facility's MSY designation. It stands for Moisant ...

  3. Mar 24, 2015 · BDL, Hartford’s airport, is named for US Air Force Lieutenant Eugene M. Bradley. MSY in New Orleans is named for Louis Armstrong today, but it used to be named for aviator John Moisant and the ...

  4. The first major expansion occurred in 1974 with the addition of two new concourses at the east end of the main terminal. This brought the total number of gates to 42. In August 2001, the Airport’s name was changed to the Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport in honor of the famous native-born musician’s 100th birthday.

  5. Sep 15, 2021 · New Orleans RTA bus. The New Orleans airport is easily accessible from the city center via I-10. Two public buses run from the airport into the city. Jefferson Transit Authority (JET)’s E-2 bus and the Regional Transportation Authority (RTA)’s Route 202 run from the Level 3 ticket lobby curb. Fares are $2 and $1.50, respectively.

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  7. Apr 4, 2023 · To honor famous New Orleans' native Louis Armstrong, his name was added to the airport moniker in 2001, the year that would have marked his 100th birthday. The newfangled, cutting-edge terminal as we know it today opened on November 6, 2019—a $1.3 billion project that took four years from initiation to completion.

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