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Teesside International Airport (IATA: MME, ICAO: EGNV), formerly Durham Tees Valley Airport, is a medium sized international airport in the Borough of Darlington, County Durham, England. It primarily serves Teesside (including Middlesbrough and Stockton-on-Tees ) south and mid County Durham (including Darlington ) and north North Yorkshire .
Teesside Airport railway station is on the Tees Valley line which runs between Bishop Auckland and Saltburn via Darlington in County Durham, England. The station is 5.5 miles (9 km) east of Darlington and about 1 mile (1.6 km) from Teesside International Airport , which owns the station.
Feethams is a cricket and former football grounds in Darlington, EnglandThe cricket ground has hosted Durham CCC matches. [1]The football ground was the home of Darlington F.C. for from 1883 to 2003 until the club moved into another ground, now known as The Darlington Arena, in Darlington's outskirts.
The Darlington Arena is a rugby union stadium, located in Darlington, County Durham. The arena was opened in the summer of 2003, as the new home ground of Darlington F.C. , following the decision to leave their previous ground, Feethams , after the 2002–03 season .
The accident happened at 10:17 a.m., the airport announced on X, with the taxiing plane’s wing striking the tail of the parked Delta plane as it passed.
Darlington railway station is a principal stop on the East Coast Main Line, serving the town of Darlington in County Durham, England. It is 232 miles 50 chains (232.63 miles; 374.37 kilometres) north of London King's Cross. It is situated between Northallerton to the south and Durham to the north. Its three-letter station code is DAR.
The woman, who the Baltimore Banner called "M.," said in an interview that she had reached out to a reporter in 2015, soon after the incident, but stopped communicating out of fear of retaliation.
The RAF left the station in 1964 and handed it over to the Ministry of Civil Aviation who reopened the site as a civil airport. [9] The airfield was named Tees-Side Airport until 1987, then Teesside International Airport until 2004 when it became Durham Tees Valley Airport before reverting to Teesside International in 2019.