Ghost Plane
The Las Vegas Chamber of Commerce leased the parcel beneath his
plane one year before, plunked down earnest money for a 40-acre
pasture. They drove out herds of thin cattle, a small handful of poor
squatters, declared the parched earth an airfield. A local booster club
gathered their men, carried buckets of thick white paint and heavy
boar's hair brushes to the pasture. They followed Herbert Hoover's
strict orders to label their space, painted "Las Vegas" on the hills, a
careful circle around the airfield, on the evaporated land so that
future aircraft would know they would be welcomed with home-cooked
meals, a stuffed cotton bed. The paint dried quickly in the New Mexican
sun. The men looked at their creation, added an arrow so that wayward
pilots could find the landing strip, even though one was not yet
smoothed into the crusty surface.
The residents of Las Vegas patted each other on the back. Not many
cities in the Southwest sported an official runway, a place of
potential international commerce. Men visited the spot, sometimes
taking wives sporting reed-woven picnic baskets filled with chili and
tortillas. No planes touched down, not then, not yet, but the city
people knew it would soon happen. They added gates at both ends of the
field for fuel trucks, and a tall wind sock made of tight white canvas.
The budding airfield caught the eye of Transcontinental Air
Transport. TAT sent a courier to north east New Mexico with an
important letter. Las Vegas may be one of our official stops, the
letter read. Your town may be famous, a place where weary travelers
stop on coast-to-coast journeys. We're sending our president, the
letter continued. Expect a visit from Charles Lindbergh on October
23rd.
Thousands of Las Vegans packed the airfield. Children carried tiny
American flags. Women wore their Sunday best and gently pressed fancy
combs of glazed horn into their hair. The sun shot patterns of
long-legged men across the soil as the people held handkerchiefs to
their noses as Lindbergh landed in a black plume of exhaust.
This moment echoes forever in the Depot's waiting room. The
hugging men speak for Las Vegas, for a future not yet realized, not yet
understood, a future desperately wanted. The TAT didn't share that hug.
They choose Clovis as their official stop. Las Vegas didn't stop
leaning into the prairie wind. They caught Lindbergh's passion for
flight, and eleven years later - after depression, after a decade of
sifting dust - opened the airfield to regular traffic.
Lindbergh never visited Las Vegas again. But somehow he still
lives here, on the edge of the grasslands, just behind the train
tracks, on a quiet wall only travelers see. His face is hidden in
shadowbox glare, but his adventurous spirit radiates, flies past the
perceptual boundaries of time and space, lands in the hearts of all Las
Vegas' people.



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