Connecting Through Midway

I hadn’t flown through Chicago’s Midway Airport much until recently. Then Southwest Airlines started offering flights at my local airport and many of its connections passed through Midway. I always hated connecting flights — and flying in general — although I admitted a preference for Midway over O’Hare. I never pondered its name though.


Midway

Battle Of Midway Memorial Located In The Midway Airport Terminal. Photo by AmateurArtGuy; (CC BY-ND 2.0)
Battle of Midway at the Midway Airport Terminal

Chicago, Illinois seemed to be a perfect spot for an airport called Midway, being placed just about midway across the continent (map). That’s where I thought the name would lead like the Definitely Halfway article. I’ve been wrong so many times before it shouldn’t surprise me anymore when something takes a strange turn. Still, this one caught me off guard. It started as Municipal Airport in 1927. The named changed to Midway in 1949, not because of its geography but to honor the Battle of Midway.

“In May 1942, Japanese Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto sought to draw the US Pacific Fleet into a battle where he could overwhelm and destroy it. To accomplish this he planned an invasion of Midway Island which would provide a base for attacking Hawaii. Using decrypted Japanese radio intercepts, Admiral Chester Nimitz was able to counter this offensive. On June 4, 1942, US aircraft flying from USS Enterprise, USS Hornet, and USS Yorktown attacked and sunk four Japanese carriers, forcing Yamamoto to withdrawal. The Battle of Midway marked the turning point of World War II in the Pacific.”

Midway Atoll marked an approximate midway point between North America and Asia (map), thus the name.


Midway Ships

USS Midway / San Diego. Photo by Michael Mayer; (CC BY 2.0)
USS Midway

Did the Battle of Midway inspire other names? Yes, of course.

A few months ago my connecting stop at Midway Airport took me onward to San Diego, California. I’ve always enjoyed San Diego and its downtown waterfront. Visitors there can see lots of attractions including the USS Midway Museum. It’s a vintage aircraft carrier converted into a massive floating exhibit.

The Naval History and Heritage Command’s Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships noted three ships with the Midway name. The War Shipping Administration first pressed a private freighter into service in 1942, naming it the Midway (AG-41). It operated mainly along the Pacific coastline and later became the Panay because the Navy wanted to use Midway for a more important ship. That first Midway ship got its name from the atoll anyway, not the battle, so now the battle needed to be commemorated.

The second Midway (CVE-63), an escort carrier, got its name in 1943 and it definitely honored the battle. However, the navy changed it in 1944 so an even larger aircraft carrier could become the Midway. The second Midway became the St. Lo to honor Saint-Lô, a town in France in the crosshairs of the Normandy Invasion. A kamikaze attack sank the St. Lo at the Battle of Leyte Gulf.

The final Midway (CVE-63) eventually became the museum that graced the San Diego waterfront (map). Its commissioning came a few days too late for World War II. However it served valiantly for nearly a half-century afterwards. The Midway ended its service as the flagship of the Persian Gulf fleet during Operation Desert Storm before its 1992 decommissioning.


Midway Streets

I couldn’t check every Midway Street to see if it traced back to the Battle of Midway. That would have involve thousands of data points. However, I did find a suburb of Adelaide, South Australia called Elizabeth East. The street names reflected the battle. Very quickly, I spotted Halsey Road, Nimitz Road, Hornet Crescent, Saratoga Road, and of course Midway Road. There were many others. These reflected the commanders and ships of the winners. I wondered how many of Elizabeth East’s four thousand residents understood the theme.

There must have been more. I couldn’t find them. They were lost amongst many more streets called Midway for other reasons.


Midway Theater

The Midway Theatre Forest Hills Queens NYC. Photo by BEVNorton; (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)
Midway Theatre

However, I did find an interesting movie theater that opened in 1942. Thomas White Lamb designed this wonderful Art Moderne structure placed in the Forest Hills neighborhood of Queens, New York (map).

“[It] was named after the World War II battle, opened later that year as a single-screen 1,933-seat theater, but it was converted to a nine-screen multiplex when United Artists took control of the building in 1998.”

Midway seemed as good a name for a theater as an airport.

Comments

2 responses to “Connecting Through Midway”

  1. Michael Avatar
    Michael

    I also vastly prefer Midway to O’Hare and have enjoyed the memorial exhibit. Did you happen to notice the topographical map of the bottom of Lake Michigan? It’s hanging over the re-combobulation area of the TSA checkpoint. Took me a good full minute of staring at it to realize what it is. No label or signage or anything, it’s just hanging there, minding its own business.

    1. Twelve Mile Circle Avatar

      I hadn’t noticed it! Looks like I have something to keep me busy the next time I pass through.

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