The eyes of the United States Navy first focused on Quincy's Squantum
peninsula in 1909, when daring young pilots from around the world
gathered for the Harvard Air Meet. By the 1930s, the Victory Plant--a
destroyer plant that set production records--had come and gone and the
navy had set up the nation's first naval reserve aviation training
center on the site. When air traffic over Boston Harbor thickened in the
1930s, the navy moved its aerial operations inland to the South Weymouth
Naval Air Station. That base and its ubiquitous hangar became South
Shore landmarks for more than a half-century. Squantum and South
Weymouth Naval Air Stations brings back to life the early age of naval
aviation on the South Shore, from biplanes to blimps to bombers and
beyond.