For most people in Southwest Florida, the name Buckingham is just one
more dot on a map--a rural area east of U.S. Interstate 75. But for a
few years, it was so much more. Starting in 1942, it was the site of the
Buckingham Army Air Field--home to some 16,000 men and women supporting
the United States' World War II efforts. Airplanes roared in the skies
over Lee County and reflected off the azure waters of the Gulf of Mexico
as tens of thousands of young men trained as aerial gunners. Learning to
target and bring down enemy aircraft with their guns was critical to
America's success in both the European and Pacific theaters. On the
ground, trucks rumbled across the mammoth base, soldiers marched in
review under the hot Florida sun, and an entire town sprang up on what
was once swampland. Barracks were built, along with stores, nightclubs,
churches, and even a hospital with its own baby ward. Today the memories
of Buckingham Army Air Field can be found hiding in plain sight,
including a working airport that was once the heart of the base.