History of Cooking Lake
Airport
Before runways were built across the North, floatplanes and
skiplanes played an important role in early frontier aviation for
their ability to get into even the remotest community by landing on
the nearest lake or river.
Early floatplanes in the Edmonton region were based at Cooking
Lake Air Harbour, an outpost of the municipal Air Harbour at
Blatchford Field in Edmonton. The Province of Alberta established
Cooking Lake Airport at its current site in Strathcona County in
1935 with both a paved runway and seaplane docks. The province sold
it to Edmonton Airports in 1995.
In the pioneering years, Punch Dickens, Wop May and Leigh
Brintmell frequently flew north out of Cooking Lake. Western
Canadian Airways, an early ancestor of Canadian Airlines, was based
there in the 1920s. In the 1930s, Wiley Post and Will Rogers
stopped at Cooking Lake on an attempted around-the-world flight.
Edmonton aviator Max Ward took delivery of his first Twin Otter at
Cooking Lake in 1953 and used it to fly charters out of
Yellowknife. Within 20 years his international charter airline
Wardair (also eventually absorbed by Canadian) was flying Boeing
747s from Edmonton International Airport non-stop
to London, Frankfurt and Honolulu.