The Port Bucyrus/Crawford County Airport (FAA LID: 17G) is a publicly owned, public use airport located 1 mile south of Bucyrus in Crawford County, Ohio. The airport sits on 144 acres at an elevation of 1007 feet.
The airport began when Lauretta Schimmoler persuaded the owner of an airport where she worked to move his facility from Sycamore, Ohio to Bucyrus. The airport opened on south of the city on 24 November 1929.
It was announced that the airport would be called Port Bucyrus in late April 1931. Before the month was out, it began lobbying to be selected as a transfer point between airplanes on the Chicago Pittsburgh Air Express and trains on the Pennsylvania Railroad. A glider club, which had been established the year before, moved to the airport in mid May. The city council overrode the mayors veto in June to order the purchase of the airport. Despite this, Port Bucyrus had still not been acquired by the city when it was dedicated on 19 July 1931. This finally occurred in September. The month after it was announced that the airport would become a stop for Chicago and Eastern Airways, the city council again overrode the mayor's veto in February 1932 to approve the purchase of a hangar at the airport. The hangar and flight school closed the following month when Lauretta Schimmoler's lease on the airport expired.
The airport was again closed in late May 1939 after the death of its manager in an airplane crash. By 1940, a building for the storage of fuel and lubricants had been built, the parking lot enclosed with a cable and the runways partially flattened. A shop hangar was under construction in February 1946 and an administration building was completed the following May. The airport received a federal grant to surface its eastâÂÂwest runway in June 1956.
Encouraged by a proposal for a state grant by Governor Jim Rhodes, the city began planning the financing necessary to extend the runway in April 1965. The effort, which had started in November 1963, called for paving and lengthening the northeastâÂÂsouthwest runway to or more. As the grant was only available to county airports, the county commissioners were brought onboard in September. By the end of the month the start of work on a master plan had been authorized. The new runway was dedicated on 23 October 1966.
John Fairburn became airport manager in 1968 and announced plans for more commercial operations. However, an apparent dispute over vouchers resulted in him being made directly responsible to city council. Relations soured further and the situation eventually came to a head in a heated mid March 1970 meeting. During the meeting, Fairburn alleged that he was losing money and was not able to obtain an ICC certificate. As a result, he stated that he would be ending his contract in June.
Heck Flying Service took over operation of the airport in October 1970. However, by 1975, complaints were being raised about the poor condition of the airport. An airport commission was created, but by early September 1976 the state of the field had further deteriorated to the point of being unsafe. Heck sent a letter to the city the following year, stating its intention to leave the airport due to its inability to make a profit.
By mid June 1984, the airport manager had not been paid in over three months. It was noted that, starting in 1968, the airport had gone through six manager changes in a little under thirteen years. A contrast was also drawn with the nearby Galion Municipal Airport, which had been much more successful.
By the end of January 1993, work had begun on a master plan for the airport. A proposal to lengthen the runway to 5,000 was announced at the start of May 1998. An additional of land were purchased in 2002 to ensure it would remain open for future growth.
The airport received a grant worth nearly $750,000 in 2017 to rehabilitate its main runway. In 2021, the airport received nearly $160,000 as part of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, which was aimed at counteracting inflation in the United States. After the recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic began, the airport began working on a number of infrastructure improvements to ease airport usage. In early 2022, the airport extended and resurfaced its parallel taxiway: were added so that it ran the entire length of the main runway. The airport also installed new lighting system. Part of the funds were used to combat pathogens at the airport. Later that year, the airport's request for funding to resurface aircraft parking areas was denied by the FAA over concerns on the placement of the airport's administration building. The airport subsequently developed a new master plan, but the FAA proposed an alternate solution before the new master plan was completed.
Ground was broken on a new terminal in December 2025.
The airport has two runways. Runway 4/22 measures 3895 x 75 ft (1187 x 23 m) and is paved with asphalt. Runway 9/27 measures 2902 x 90 ft (885 x 27 m) and is made of turf. For the 12-month period ending September 16, 2021, the airport had 18,980 aircraft operations, an average of 52 per day. This included 97% general aviation, 3% air taxi, and <1% military. For the same time period, 31 aircraft were based at the airport, all airplanes: 30 single-engine and 1 multi-engine.
The airport has a fixed-base operator that sells avgas, and jet fuel is available on request. Other amenities include courtesy transportation, rental cars, a conference room, a crew lounge, snooze rooms, showers, and more.