History & Culture · Long Island
Republic Airport Keeps Babylon's Aviation Factory Memory in View
Republic Airport in East Farmingdale connects Babylon's Route 110 edge to aircraft testing, general aviation, and Long Island's aviation memory.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026
Babylon has a beach side. It also has a runway side. Republic Airport sits at the East Farmingdale edge near the Route 110 business corridor.
Republic Airport is a public-use general aviation airport owned by the New York State Department of Transportation. Its history reaches back to Sherman Fairchild and operations that began in 1928.
The same history ties the field to early aircraft testing by Fairchild, American, Grumman, and Seversky. That gives East Farmingdale a workday aviation feel: hangars, business flights, industrial parcels, and old factory names near the town line.
For Babylon, Republic Airport keeps that aviation layer visible beside the shoreline story many people already know.
That makes East Farmingdale feel less like a plain industrial edge. It is part of a Long Island route where work, transport, and aviation memory still sit close to everyday roads. The airport gives Babylon a second map, one with runways and shop floors beside the bays and beaches.
That second map is easy to overlook, but it gives the town a sharper sense of range: beach roads and runway roads, both belonging to Babylon’s wider story.