8th Fighter Group - 11th Bombardment Group
8th Fighter Group
Authorized on the inactive list as 8th Pursuit Group on 24 Mar 1923.
Activated on 1 Apr 1931. Redesignated 8th Pursuit Group (Fighter) in
1939,
and 8th Pursuit Group (Interceptor) in 1941. Trained, took part in
maneuvers
and reviews, and tested planes and equipment, using PB-2, P-6, P-12,
P-35,
P-36, P-39, and P-40 aircraft prior to World War II. In Dec 1941, became
part
of the defense force for the New York metropolitan area. Moved to the
Asiatic-Pacific Theater early in 1942. Redesignated 8th Fighter Group in
May
1942. Became part of Fifth AF. Equipped first with P-39's, added P-38's
and
P-40's in 1943, and used P-38's after May 1944.
Established headquarters in Australia in Mar 1942 but sent
detachments to
New Guinea for operations. Moved to New Guinea in Sep 1942 and served in
combat until malaria forced the organization to withdraw to Australia in
Feb
1943. Resumed operations in Apr 1943 and served in the theater through
the
rest of the war. Covered Allied landings, escorted bombers, and attacked
enemy airfields in New Guinea; supported operations of the US Marines at
Cape
Gloucester, Feb-Mar 1944; flew long-range escort and attack missions to
Borneo, Ceram, Halmahera, and the southern Philippines; provided cover
for
convoys, attacked enemy shipping, and won a DUC for strafing a strong
Japanese
naval force off Mindoro (26 Dec 1944) covered landings at Lingayen;
supported
ground forces on Luzon; escorted bombers to targets on the Asiatic
mainland
and on Formosa; and, in the last days of the war, attacked airfields and
railways in Japan. Remained in the theater after V-J Day, being based in
Japan for duty with Far East Air Forces. Converted to P-51's early in
1946
and to F-80's early in 1950. Redesignated 8th Fighter-Bomber Group in
Jan
1950.
Began operations in the Korean War on 26 Jun 1950 by providing cover
for
the evacuation of US personnel from Seoul. Entered combat the following
day.
Shifted to F-51 aircraft in Oct 1950 but converted back to F-80's in Dec
1950.
Began operating from bases in Korea in Oct 1950, but resumed operations
from
Japan in Dec 1950 when Communist forces drove far south in Korea.
Returned to
Korea in Jun 1951. Served in combat until the end of the war, supporting
UN
ground forces and attacking such targets as airfields, supply lines, and
troop
concentrations. Maj Charles Loring Jr was awarded the Medal of Honor for
his
action on 22 Nov 1952: after his plane had been hit and badly crippled
as he
was leading a flight of four F-80's against enemy artillery at Sniper
Ridge,
Maj Loring deliberately dived his plane into the gun emplacements. The
group
converted to F-86's in the spring of 1953 and returned to Japan the
following
year.
Squadrons. 33d: 1932-1941. 35th: 1932-. 36th: 1931, 1932-. 55th:
1931-1932. 68th: 1945-1947. 80th: 1942-1945, 1947-.
Stations. Langley Field, Va, 1 Apr 1931; Mitchel Field, NY, c. 5 Nov
1940-26 Jan 1942; Brisbane, Australia, 6 Mar 1942; Townsville,
Australia, 29
Jul 1942; Milne Bay, New Guinea, 18 Sep 1942; Mareeba, Australia, Feb
1943;
Port Moresby, New Guinea, 16 May 1943; Finschhafen, New Guinea, 23 Dec
1943;
Cape Gloucester, New Britain, c. 20 Feb 1944; Nadzab, New Guinea, 14 Mar
1944;
Owi, Schouten Islands, 17 Jun 1944; Morotai, 19 Sep 1944; San Jose,
Mindoro,
20 Dec 1944; Ie Shima, 6 Aug 1945; Fukuoka, Japan, 22 Nov 1945; Ashiya,
Japan,
20 May 1946; Itazuke, Japan, Sep 1946; Ashiya, Japan, 13 Apr 1947;
Itazuke,
Japan, 25 Mar 1949; Tsuiki, Japan, 11 Aug 1950; Suwon, Korea, 7 Oct
1950;
Kimpo, Korea, 28 Oct 1950; Pyongyang, Korea, 25 Nov 1950; Seoul, Korea,
3 Dec
1950; Itazuke, Japan, 10 Dec 1950; Kimpo, Korea, 25 Jun 1951; Suwon,
Korea, 24
Aug 1951; Itazuke, Japan, 20 Oct 1954-.
Commanders. Unkn, 1931-1932; Maj Byron Q Jones, 25 Jun 1932; Capt
Albert
M Guidera, 31 Mar 1934; Lt Col Adlai H Gilkeson, 1 Jul 1935; Lt Col
William E
Kepner, 7 Jul 1938; Lt Col Edward M Morris, 1 Feb 1940; Lt Col Frederic
H
Smith Jr, 17 Jan 1941; Lt Col William H Wise, 22 May 1942; Lt Col
Leonard B
Storm, 8 Mar 1943; Lt Col Philip H Greasley, 10 Apr 1943; Lt Col Emmett
S
Davis, 18 Jan 1944; Lt Col Philip H Greasley, 28 Jun 1944; Col Earl H
Dunham,
8 Aug 1944; Lt Col Emmett S Davis, 16 Jun 1945; Lt Col Robert L Harriger,
Dec
1945; Lt Col Fergus C Fay, 24 May 1946; Lt Col Luther H Richmond, Jul
1946;
Col Stanley R Stewart, Feb 1947; Col Henry G Thorne Jr, 12 Apr 1947; Col
Charles T Olmstead, c. 28 May 1948; Lt Col Richard C Banbury, 18 Aug
1948; Lt
Col Woodrow W Ramsey, 18 Mar 1949; Lt Col Charles D Chitty Jr, 21 May
1949;
Col William T Samways, 1 May 1950; Col Edward O McComas, 19 May 1951;
Col
Harvey L Case Jr, 31 Jul 1951; Col Levi R Chase, 22 Jan 1952; Col Walter
G
Benz Jr, 12 Sep 1952; Col John L Locke, 16 Sep 1953; Lt Col Walter A
Rosenfield, 13 May 1954; Col Woodrow B Wilmot, 16 Jul 1954-.
Campaigns. World War II: East Indies; Air Offensive, Japan; China
Defensive; Papua; New Guinea; Bismarck Archipelago; Western Pacific;
Leyte;
Luzon; Southern Philippines. Korean War: UN Defensive; UN Offensive; CCF
Intervention; 1st UN Counteroffensive; CCF Spring Offensive; UN
Summer-Fall
Offensive; Second Korean Winter; Korea Summer-Fall, 1952; Third Korean
Winter;
Korea Summer-Fall, 1953.
Decorations. Distinguished Unit Citations: Papua, [Sep] 1942-23 Jan
1943; Philippine Islands, 26 Dec 1944; Korea, 16 Sep-2 Nov 1950.
Philippine
Presidential Unit Citation. Republic of Korea Presidential Unit
Citations:
27 Jun 1950-31 Jan 1951; 1 Feb 1951-31 Mar 1953.
Insigne. Shield: Azure, a chevron nebule or. Crest: On a wreath of
the colors (or and azure) three fleur-de-lis or in front of a propeller
fesswise azure. Motto: Attaquez Et Conquerez - Attack and Conquer.
(Approved 6 Sep 1934.)
8th Reconnaissance Group
Constituted as 8th Photographic Reconnaissance Group on 15 Sep 1943.
Activated on 1 Oct 1943. Trained to provide photographic intelligence
for air
and ground forces. Moved to India, Feb-Mar 1944. Equipped with F-5, F-6,
F-7, and P-40 aircraft. Conducted photographic reconnaissance,
photographic
mapping, and visual-reconnaissance missions. Produced maps, mosaics,
terrain
models, and target charts of areas in Burma, China, French Indochina,
and
Thailand. Also bombed and strafed enemy installations and provided
escort for
bombardment units. Redesignated 8th Reconnaissance Group in Jun 1945.
Returned to the US, Oct-Nov 1945. Inactivated on 5 Nov 1945. Disbanded
on 6
Mar 1947.
Squadrons. 9th: 1944-1945. 20th: 1944-1945. 24th: 1944-1945. 40th:
1944-1945.
Stations. Peterson Field, Colo, 1 Oct 1943; Gainesville AAFld, Tex,
26
Oct 1943-12 Feb 1944; Bally, India, 31 Mar 1944-7 Oct 1945; Camp Kilmer,
NJ,
3-5 Nov 1945.
Commanders. Lt Col Paul A Zartman, 1 Oct 1943; Col Charles P
Hollstein,
12 Dec 1943; Col James W Anderson Jr, 24 Jan 1945; Lt Col John R Gee,
Oct
1945-c. 5 Nov 1945.
Campaigns. India-Burma; China Defensive; Central Burma.
Decorations. None.
Insigne. None.
9th Bombardment Group
Authorized as 9th Group (Observation) on 19 Jul 1922. Organized on 1
Aug
1922. Redesignated 9th Bombardment Group in 1935, 9th Bombardment Group
(Medium) in 1939, and 9th Bombardment Group (Heavy) in 1940. Trained,
took
part in maneuvers, and participated in air shows, during the period
1922-1940.
Equipped with B-10's and B-18's in the late 1930's and early 1940's.
Moved to
Panama late in 1940 to serve as part of the defense force for the canal.
Used
B-17's for antisubmarine operations in the Caribbean. Returned to the US
in
1942. Equipped with B-17, B-24, and B-26 aircraft. Trained cadres for
bombardment units and tested equipment.
Redesignated 9th Bombardment Group (Very Heavy) in Mar 1944. Prepared
for combat with B-29's. Moved to the Pacific theater, Nov 1944-Feb 1945,
and
assigned to Twentieth AF. Commenced operations late in Jan 1945 with
attacks
against Japanese-held Maug. After that, struck industrial targets in
Japan,
conducting the missions in daylight and at high altitude. Received a DUC
for
bombing the industrial area of Kawasaki in Apr 1945. Beginning in Mar
1945
the group carried out incendiary raids at night on area targets in
Japan.
During Apr and May it assisted the Allied assault on Okinawa by hitting
airfields that the Japanese were using to launch planes against the
invasion
force. Also conducted mining operations against Japanese shipping,
receiving
second DUC for such actions in the Inland Sea during May 1945. After the
war,
dropped food and supplies to Allied prisoners and took part in
show-of-force
missions over the Japanese home islands. Moved to the Philippines in Apr
1946
and to the Marianas in Jun 1947. Inactivated on Guam on 20 Oct 1948.
Redesignated 9th Strategic Reconnaissance Group. Activated in the US
on
1 May 1949. Assigned to Strategic Air Command. Equipped primarily with
B-29's although a few B-36's were assigned during 1949-1950.
Redesignated 9th
Bombardment Group (Heavy) in Apr 1950, and 9th Bombardment Group
(Medium) in
Oct 1950. Inactivated on 16 Jun 1952.
Squadrons. 1st: 1922-1923; 1929-1948; 1949-1952. 5th: 1922-1923;
1929-1948; 1949-1952. 99th: 1929-1948; 1949-1952. 430th: 1943-1944.
Stations. Mitchel Field, NY, 1 Aug 1922-6 Nov 1940; Rio Hato, Panama,
12
Nov 1940; Waller Field, Trinidad, 30 Oct 1941; Orlando AB, Fla, 31 Oct
1942;
Dalhart AAFld, Tex, 9 Mar 1944; McCook AAFld, Neb, 19 May-18 Nov 1944;
North
Field, Tinian, 28 Dec 1944; Clark Field, Luzon, 15 Apr 1946; Harmon
Field,
Guam, 9 Jun 1947-20 Oct 1948. Fairfield Suisun AFB, Calif, 1 May 1949-16
Jun
1952.
Commanders. Unkn 122 929; Maj William O Ryan, 1929-unkn; Col Follett
Bradley, Jun 1933-May 1934; Col Walter H Frank, Aug 1934-1936; Lt Col
Carl W
Connell, 1 Sep 1936-unkn; Col Ross F Cole, Apr 1940; Maj Charles F Born,
Aug
1941-unkn; Lt Col Stuart P Wright, 1942; Lt Col Gerald E Williams, 1942;
Col
Harry G Montgomery, 10 Nov 1942; Col James T Connally, 15 Dec 1942; Col
Donald
W Eisenhart, 1 May 1944; Col Henry C Huglin, 6 Mar-Aug 1945; Col David
Wade,
Sep 1945-c. 25 Apr 1947; unkn, Apr 1947-20 Oct 1948. Lt Col Walter Y
Lucas, 1
May 1949; Col Donald W Eisenhart, 24 Aug 1949; Col William P. Brett, 27
Mar
1950; Lt Col Walter Y Lucas, 24 Jun 1950; Col Clifford Heflin, 6 Jul
1950-16
Jun 1952.
Campaigns. Antisubmarine, American Theater; Air Offensive, Japan;
Western Pacific.
Decorations. Distinguished Unit Citations: Kawasaki, Japan, 15/16 Apr
1945; Japan, 13-28 May 1945.
Insigne. Shield: Per pale vert and sable a pallet wavy argent; over
all
on a fess or four crosses patee of the second (sable). Crest: On a
wreath of
the colors (argent and vert) a rattlesnake entwined about a prickly pear
cactus all proper. Motto: Semper Paratus - Always Ready. (Approved 20
Mar
1924.)
9th Reconnaissance Group
Constituted as 9th Photographic Reconnaissance Group on 15 Sep 1943.
Activated on 1 Oct 1943. Assigned to Third AF. With squadrons attached
but
none assigned, the group trained crews and units for photographic
reconnaissance and combat mapping. Aircraft included B-17's, B-24's,
F-4's,
F-5's, F-7's, and A-20's. Disbanded on 6 May 1944.
Squadrons. (See narrative.)
Stations. Will Rogers Field, Okla, 1 Oct 1943-6 May 1944.
Commanders. Lt Col Paul A Zartman, 11 Nov 1943; Lt Col Hiette S
Williams
Jr, c. 5 Dec 1943-unkn.
Campaigns. None.
Decorations. None.
Insigne. None.
10th Reconnaissance Group
Constituted as 73rd Observation Group on 21 Aug 1941. Activated on 1
Sep
1941. Engaged in training activities, participating in the Tennessee
Maneuvers in 1943. Redesignated 73rd Reconnaissance Group in Apr 1943,
73rd
Tactical Reconnaissance Group in Aug 1943, and 10th Photographic Group
(Reconnaissance) in Dec 1943. Moved to the European theater, Jan-Feb
1944,
for duty with Ninth AF. Used F-3, F-5, F-6, L-1, L-4, and L-5 aircraft
for
operations, Feb 1944-May 1945. Photographed airfields, coastal defenses,
and
ports, and made bomb-damage assessment photographs of airfields,
marshalling
yards, bridges, and other targets, in preparation for the Normandy
invasion;
received a DUC for flying at low altitude to photograph the coast from
Blankenberghe to Dunkirk and from Le Touquet to St-Vaast-la-Hougue, 6-20
May
1944. Supported the invasion in Jun by making visual and photographic
reconnaissance of bridges, artillery, road and railroad junctions,
traffic
centers, airfields, and other targets. Assisted the Allied drive toward
the
German border during the summer and early fall of 1944 by flying
daylight and
night photographic missions; also performed tactical reconnaissance for
ground
and air units, directing artillery to enemy positions and
fighter-bombers to
opportune targets. Aided Third Army and other Allied organizations in
the
battle to breach the Siegfried Line, Sep-Dec 1944. Participated in the
Battle
of the Bulge, Dec 1944-Jan 1945, by flying reconnaissance missions in
the
combat zone. From Feb 1945 to V-E Day, assisted the advance of Third
Army
across the Rhine, to Czechoslovakia, and into Austria. Remained in
Germany
after the war as part of the army of occupation, being assigned to
United
States Air Forces in Europe. Redesignated 10th Reconnaissance Group in
Jun
1945. Transferred, without personnel and equipment, to the US in Jun
1947.
Remanned and equipped with RF-51's. Redesignated 10th Tactical
Reconnaissance
Group in Jun 1948. Inactivated on 1 Apr 1949.
Activated in Germany on 10 Jul 1952. Assigned to United States Air
Forces in Europe. Equipped with RB-26, RB-57, RF-80, and RF-84 aircraft.
Squadrons. 1st: 1945-1949; 1952-. 12th: 1941-1942, 1944-1946. 14th:
1943. 15th (formerly Observation): 1942-1943, 1944-1945, 1947-1949. 15th
(formerly Photographic): 1947. 16th: 1941-1942. 22d: 1941-1942. 30th:
1944. 31st: 1944-1945. 32d: 1952-. 33d: 1944. 34th: 1944, 1945. 36th
(formerly 28th): 1942-1943. 38th: 1952-. 39th: 1945. 42d: 1952-. 91st:
1941-1942, 1942-1943. 111th: 1945. 152d: 1943. 155th (formerly 423rd,
later 45th): 1944-1945, 1945-1947. 160th: 1945-1947. 162d: 1945.
Stations. Harrisburg, Pa, 1 Sep 1941; Godman Field, Ky, c. 7 Nov
1941;
Camp Campbell AAFld Ky c. 23 Jun 1943; Key Field, Miss, Nov 1943-Jan
1944;
Chalgrove, England, Feb 1944; Rennes/St-Jacques, France, c. 11 Aug 1944;
Chateau-dun, France, c. 24 Aug 1944; St-Dizier/Robinson, France Sep
1944;
Conflans/Doncourt, France, Nov 1944; Trier/Evren, Germany, Mar 1945;
Ober Olm,
Germany, c. 5 Apr 1945; Furth, Germany, c. 28 Apr 1945; Furstenfeldbruck,
Germany, Apr-Jun 1947; Langley Field, Va, 25 Jun 1947; Lawson Field, Ga,
c. 8
Sep 1947; Pope Field, NC, 27 Sep 1947-1 Apr 1949. Furstenfeldbruck AB,
Germany, 10 Jul 1952; Toul/Rosiere AB, France, Nov 1952; Spangdahlem AB,
Germany, May 1953-.
Commanders. Maj Edgar M Scattergood Jr, 1 Sep 1941; Lt Col John C
Kennedy, c. 6 Nov 1941; Capt Phillip H Hatch, c. 24 Jan 1942; Lt Col
Robert M
Lee, c. 9 Feb 1942; Maj Burton L Austin, c. 26 Dec 1942; Lt Col Bernard
C
Rose, c. 19 Jan 1943; Lt Col Crawford H Hollidge, c. 28 Jan 1943; Maj
William
A Daniel, c. 4 Aug 1943; Col William B Reed, 9 Sep 1943; Col Russell A
Berg,
20 Jun 1944-unkn; Lt Col W D Hayes Jr, 1945; Col Marvin S Zipp, 11 Jan
1946-19
Jun 1947; Lt Col James L Rose, 1 Oct 1947; Lt Col Harrison R Christy Jr,
16
Dec 1947; Lt Col Edward O McComas, 6 Jan 1948; Col William A Daniel, 26
Jan
1948-unkn. Lt Col Barnie B McEntire Jr, 10 Jul 1952; Col Willie O
Jackson Jr,
Dec 1952; Lt Col Steven R Wilkerson, c. 22 Sep 1953; Col Howard
Withycombe, 23
Feb 1954; Col Arthur E Smith, 13 Jul 1954; Col Fred W Dyer, c. 23 Jun
1955-.
Campaigns. American Theater; Air Offensive, Europe; Normandy;
Northern
France; Rhineland; Ardennes-Alsace; Central Europe.
Decorations. Distinguished Unit Citation: France, 6-20 May 1944.
Insigne. Shield: Azure a sphere or, latitude and longitude lines
sable,
in chief the head and arms of the Greek mythical god Argus, head facing
base,
arms fesswise both hands toward dexter of the second, outlined of the
field.
Motto: Argus - Ceaseless Watch. (Approved 29 Dec 1942.)
10th Troop Carrier Group
Constituted on the inactive list as 1st Transport Group on 1 Oct
1933.
Consolidated with the 10th Observation Group (which had been constituted
on
the inactive list on 1 Oct 1933), redesignated 10th Transport Group, and
activated, on 20 May 1937. Trained with C-27's and C-33's. As part of
the
logistic organization, assigned first to Office of Chief of the Air
Corps and
later (1941) to Air Service Command, the group transported supplies,
materiel,
and personnel within the US. Assigned to Air Transport Command (later I
Troop
Carrier Command) in Apr 1942. Redesignated 10th Troop Carrier Group in
Jul
1942. Converted to C-47's. Trained cadres for troop carrier groups and
in
1943 was given the additional duty of training replacement crews.
Disbanded
on 14 Apr 1944.
Squadrons. 1st: 1937-1943. 2d: 1937-1943. 3d: 1937-1940. 4th:
1937-1940. 5th: 1937-1944. 27th: 1942-1943, 1943-1944. 38th: 1942-1944.
307th: 1943-1944. 308th: 1943-1944.
Stations. Patterson Field, Ohio, 20 May 1937; Wright Field, Ohio, 20
Jun
1938; Patterson Field, Ohio, 17 Jan 1941; General Billy Mitchell Field,
Wis,
25 May 1942; Pope Field, NC, 4 Oct 1942; Dunnellon AAFld, Fla, 13 Feb
1943;
Lawson Field, Ga, 30 Nov 1943; Grenada AAFld, Miss, 21 Jan 1944;
Alliance
AAFld, Neb, 8 Mar-14 Apr 1944.
Commanders. Maj Hugh A Bevins, May 1937; Capt Lyman Whitten, Jun
1938;
Maj Fred Borum, 1939; Capt Murray E Woodbury, Jan 1941; Capt Theodore Q
Graff,
2 Sep 1941; Capt Maurice Beach, 1 Apr 1942; Maj Loren Cornell, 1 Aug
1942; Maj
Douglas M Swisher, 30 Aug 1942; Lt Col Boyd R Ertwine, 25 Oct 1942; Lt
Col
Erickson S Nichols, 28 Jan 1943; Lt Col Henry P King, 12 May 1943-14 Apr
1944.
Campaigns. American Theater.
Decorations. None.
Insigne. Shield: Azure, ten bendlets or surmounted by a torteau
fimbriated of the second charged with a wheel winged bend sinisterwise
of the
like. Motto: Alatum Servitium - Winged Service. (Approved 9 Dec 1941.)
11th Bombardment Group
Constituted as 11th Observation Group in 1933. Redesignated 11th
Bombardment Group (Medium) in 1938. Activated in Hawaii on 1 Feb 1940.
Redesignated 11th Bombardment Group (Heavy) in Nov 1940. Assigned to
Seventh
AF in Feb 1942. Trained with B-18's; received B-17's for operations.
Flew
patrol and search missions off Hawaii after the Japanese attacked Pearl
Harbor. Moved to the New Hebrides in Jul 1942. Became part of Thirteenth
AF.
Struck airfields, supply dumps, ships, docks, troop positions, and other
objectives in the South Pacific, Jul-Nov 1942, and received a DUC for
those
operations. Continued operations, attacking Japanese airfields,
installations, and shipping in the Solomons, until late in Mar 1943.
Returned
to Hawaii, reassigned to Seventh AF, and trained with B-24's. Resumed
combat
in Nov 1943 and participated in the Allied offensive through the
Gilberts,
Marshalls, and Marianas, while operating from Funafuti, Tarawa, and
Kwajalein.
Moved to Guam in Oct 1944 and attacked shipping and airfields in the
Volcano
and Bonin Islands. Moved to Okinawa in Jul 1945 to take part in the
final
phases of the air offensive against Japan, bombing railways, airfields,
and
harbor facilities on Kyushu and striking airfields in China. After the
war,
flew reconnaissance and surveillance missions to China and ferried
liberated
prisoners of war from Okinawa to Luzon. Remained in the theater as part
of
Far East Air Forces but had no personnel assigned after mid-Dec 1945
when the
group was transferred to the Philippines. Redesignated 11th Bombardment
Group
(Very Heavy) in Apr 1946. Transferred to Guam in May 1946, remanned, and
equipped with B-29's. Terminated training and operations in Oct 1946.
Inactivated on Guam on 20 Oct 1948.
Redesignated 11th Bombardment Group (Heavy). Activated in the US on 1
Dec 1948. Assigned to Strategic Air Command. Equipped with B-36
aircraft.
Inactivated on 16 Jun 1952.
Squadrons. 14th: 1940-1941. 26th: 1940-1948; 1948-1952. 42d:
1919-1948; 1948-1952. 98th: 1941-1948; 1948-1952. 431st: 1942-1946.
Stations. Hickam Field, TH, 1 Feb 1940; New Hebrides, Jul 1942;
Hickam
Field, TN, 8 Apr 1943; Funafuti, Nov 1943; Tarawa, 20 Jan 1944;
Kwajalein, 5
Apr 1944; Guam, 25 Oct 1944; Okinawa, 2 Jul 1945; Manila, Dec 1945;
Guam, May
1946-20 Oct 1948. Carswell AFB, Tex, 1 Dec 1948-16 Jun 1952.
Commanders. Lt Col Walter F Kraus, Feb 1940; Lt Col St Clair Streett,
15
Jun 1940; Lt Col Albert F Hegenberger, 1 Apr 1941; Col LaVerne G
Saunders, Mar
1942; Col Frank F Everest, Dec 1942; Col William J. Holzapfel Jr, 26 Apr
1943;
Col Russell L. Waldron, 7 Jul 1944; Col John Morrow, Mar 1945-c. Dec
1945; Col
Vincent M Miles Jr, 20 May 1946; Capt Thomas B Ragland Jr, Nov 1946;
Capt
Thomas B Hoxie, 27 Dec 1947-20 Oct 1948. Maj Russell F Ireland, Dec
1948; Lt
Col Harry E Goldsworthy, 11 Jan 1949; Col Richard H Carmichael, May
1949; Col
Bertram C Harrison, 4 Mar 1950; Col Thomas P Gerrity, 3 Apr 1950-16 Jun
1952.
Campaigns. Central Pacific; Air Offensive, Japan; Guadalcanal;
Northern
Solomons; Eastern Mandates; Western Pacific; Ryukyus; China Offensive.
Decorations. Distinguished Unit Citation: South Pacific, 31 Jul-30
Nov
1942.
Insigne. Shield: Azure (Air Force blue), on a bend or (Air Force
yellow), three grey geese volant proper (in their natural colors).
Crest: On
a wreath or and azure a grey goose proper with wings displayed and
inverted.
Motto: Progressio Sine Timore Aut Praejudicio - Progress without Fear or
Prejudice. (Approved 11 Jun 1941.)
11th Photographic Group - 17th Bombardment Group
11th Photographic Group
Constituted as 11th Photographic Group (Mapping) on 19 Nov 1943.
Activated on 1 Dec 1943. Engaged in photographic mapping in the US and
sent
detachments to carry out similar operations in Africa, the CBI theater,
the
Near and Middle East, Mexico, Canada, Alaska, and the Caribbean. Used
B-17,
B-24, B-25, B-29, F-2, F-9, F-10, and A-20 aircraft. Disbanded on 5 Oct
1944.
Squadrons. 1st: 1943-1944. 3d: 1943-1944. 19th: 1943-1944.
Stations. Reading AAFld, Pa, 1 Dec 1943; MacDill Field, Fla, Jan-5
Oct
1944.
Commanders. Lt Col Thomas D Brown, 8 Jan-5 Oct 1944.
Campaigns. None.
Decorations. None.
Insigne. None.
12th Bombardment Group
Constituted as 12th Bombardment Group (Light) on 20 Nov-1940.
Activated
on 15 Jan 1941. Trained with B-18, B-23, and PT-17 aircraft. Patrolled
the
west coast after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. Redesignated 12th
Bombardment Group (Medium) in Dec 1941. Using B-25's, began training
early in
1942 for duty overseas. Moved to the Middle East, Jul-Aug 1942, and
assigned
to Ninth AF. Attacked storage areas, motor transports, troop
concentrations,
airdromes, bridges, shipping, marshalling yards, and other targets in
Egypt,
Libya, Tunisia, Pantelleria, Lampedusa, Crete, Sicily, and Italy, Aug
1942-Jan
1944. Supported the Allied drive from Egypt to Tunisia, Oct 1942-Apr
1943.
Early in 1943 two squadrons operated with Twelfth AF, assisting Allied
forces
moving eastward across North Africa, while the other squadrons continued
operations with Ninth AF, bombing enemy defenses along the Mareth Line.
Received a DUC for action against the enemy in North Africa and Sicily
from
Oct 1942 to Aug 1943. While attached to Twelfth AF, Jun-Aug 1943, the
group
operated from bases in Tunisia and Sicily against targets in Pantelleria,
Lampedusa, Sicily, and Italy. Assigned to Twelfth AF in Aug 1943 and
operated
primarily against targets in Italy until Jan 1944. Flew some missions to
Albania and Yugoslavia.
Moved to India, Feb-Apr 1944, and assigned to Tenth AF. Engaged
chiefly
in missions against the enemy in Burma, Apr 1944-May 1945. Bombed
communications, military installations, and other objectives. Delivered
ammunition to Allied forces at Imphal. Also attacked some targets in
China.
Began training with A-26 aircraft in the summer of 1945. Returned to the
US,
Dec 1945-Jan 1946. Inactivated on 22 Jan 1946.
Redesignated 12th Bombardment Group (Light). Activated on 19 May
1947.
Not manned during 1947-1948. Inactivated on 10 Sep 1948.
Redesignated 12th Fighter-Escort Group. Activated on 1 Nov 1950.
Assigned to Strategic Air Command. Trained with F-84's. Inactivated on
16
Jun 1952.
Squadrons. 81st: 1941-1946; 1947-1948. 82d: 1941-1946; 1947-1948.
83d: 1941-1946; 1947-1948. 434th (formerly 94th): 1941-1942, 1942-1946.
559th: 1950-1952. 560th: 1950-1952. 561st: 1950-1952.
Stations. McChord Field, Wash, 15 Jan 1941; Esler Field, La, c. 21
Feb-3
Jul 1942; Deversoir, Egypt, c. 31 Jul 1942; Egypt and Libya, Oct 1942;
Medenine, Tunisia, 3 Apr 1943; Sfax, Tunisia, c. 15 Apr 1943; Hergla,
Tunisia,
2 Jun 1943; Ponte Olivo, Sicily, c. 2 Aug 1943; Gerbini, Sicily, c. 22
Aug
1943; Foggia, Italy, c. 2 Nov 1943; Gaudo Airfield, Italy, 19 Jane Feb
1944;
Tezgaon, India, c. 21 Mar 1944; Pandaveswar, India, 13 Jun 1944, Fenny,
India,
16 Jul 1944; Pandaveswar, India, 8 Jun 1945; Karachi, India, 15 Nov-24
Dec
1945; Ft Lawton, Wash, 21-22 Jan 1946. Langley Field, Va, 19 May 1947-10
Sep
1948. Turner AFB, Ga, 1 Nov 1950; Bergstrom AFB, Tex, Dec 1950-16 Jun
1952.
Commanders. Unkn, Jan-May 1941; Col Charles G Goodrich, 6 May 1941;
Col
Edward N Backus, 16 Sep 1942; Lt Col William W Wilcox, 21 Sep 1943; Col
Lloyd
H Dalton Jr, c. 29 Sep 1944; Lt Col Samuel C Galbreath, 4 Sep 1945; Lt
Col
Lewis B Wilson, 23 Sep 1945-22 Jan 1946. Capt H Carney, Nov 1950; Col
Charles
A Gayle, 20 Nov 1950; Col Cy Wilson, Feb 1951; Col Charles A Gayle,
Apr-16 Jun
1952.
Campaigns. Air Combat, EAME Theater; Egypt-Libya; Tunisia; Sicily;
Naples-Foggia; Rome-Arno; India-Burma; China Defensive; Central Burma.
Decorations. Distinguished Unit Citation: North Africa and Sicily,
Oct
1942-17 Aug 1943.
Insigne. Shield: Azure, a sword point to base or, hilt flamant
proper;
a bordure gyronny of twelve of the second and the first. Motto: Spiritus
Omnia Vincit - Spirit Conquers All. (Approved Feb 1942.)
13th Bombardment Group
Constituted as 13th Bombardment Group (Medium) on 20 Nov 1940.
Activated
on 15 Jan 1941. After the US entered the war the group searched for
enemy
U-boats and covered friendly convoys off the east coast of the US.
Served
with First AF and later with AAF Antisubmarine Command, using B-28,
B-25, and
A-29 aircraft for operations. Inactivated on 30 Nov 1942.
Squadrons. 3rd Antisubmarine (formerly 39th Bombardment): 1941-1942.
4th Antisubmarine (formerly 40th Bombardment): 1941-1942. 5th
Antisubmarine
(formerly 41st Bombardment): 1941-1942. 6th Antisubmarine (formerly
393rd
Bombardment): 1942.
Stations. Langley Field, Va, 15 Jan 1941; Orlando, Fla, c. 6 Jun
1941;
Westover Field, Mass, 20 Jan-30 Nov 1942.
Commanders. Brig Gen Westside T Larson, 21 Jan 1941; Col Walter G
Bryte
Jr, c. 4 Mar 1942; Col John G Fowler, c. 2 May-c. Nov 1942.
Campaigns. Antisubmarine, American Theater.
Decorations. None.
Insigne. Shield: Per bend azure and or, a sword point to base with
wings displayed and inverted argent, that portion to base fimbriated of
the
first. Motto: Alert Day Or Night. (Approved 2 Jan 1942.)
14th Fighter Group
Constituted as 14th Pursuit Group (Fighter) on 20 Nov 1940. Activated
on
15 Jan 1941. Trained with P-40's and P-43's. Converted to P-38's, which
were
used in flying patrols on the west coast of the US after the Japanese
attack
on Pearl Harbor. Redesignated 14th Fighter Group in May 1942. Moved to
England, Jul-Aug 1942. Began operations with Eighth AF in Oct 1942,
escorting
bombers to targets in France. Arrived in North Africa shortly after the
campaign for Algeria and French Morocco (8-11 Nov 1942) had ended, and
remained in the Mediterranean theater until the end of the war, being
assigned
first to Twelfth AF and later (Nov 1943) to Fifteenth. Flew escort,
strafing,
and reconnaissance missions from the middle of Nov 1942 to late in Jan
1943
and then withdrew from combat, some of the men and planes being
reassigned.
Resumed operations in May. Flew dive-bombing missions during the Allied
assault on Pantelleria. Helped prepare for and support the invasions of
Sicily and Italy. Engaged primarily in escort work after Nov 1943,
flying
many missions to cover bombers engaged in long-range operations against
strategic objectives in Italy, France, Germany, Czechoslovakia, Austria,
Hungary, Yugoslavia, Rumania, and Bulgaria. Received a DUC for a mission
on 2
Apr 1944 when the group, by beating off attacks by enemy fighters,
enabled
bombers to strike important ball-bearing works in Austria. Also provided
escort for reconnaissance operations, supported the invasion of Southern
France in Aug 1944, and on numerous occasions flew long-range missions
to
strafe and dive-bomb motor vehicles, trains, bridges, supply areas,
airdromes,
and troop concentrations in an area extending from France to the
Balkans.
Inactivated in Italy on 9 Sep 1945.
Activated in the US on 20 Nov 1946. Equipped first with P-47's and
later
with F-84's. Inactivated on 2 Oct 1949.
Redesignated 14th Fighter Group (Air Defense). Activated on 18 Aug
1955.
Assigned to Air Defense Command and equipped with F-86 aircraft.
Squadrons. 37th: 1943-1945; 1946-1949; 1955-. 48th: 1941-1945;
1946-1949. 49th: 1941-1945; 1946-1949. 50th: 1941-1942.
Stations. Hamilton Field, Calif, 15 Jan 1941; March Field, Calif, c.
10
Jun 1941; Hamilton Field, Calif, 7 Feb-16 Jul 1942; Atcham, England, 18
Aug-Nov 1942; Tafaraoui, Algeria, 15 Nov 1942; Maison Blanche, Algeria,
18 Nov
1942; Youks-les-Bains, Algeria, 22 Nov 1942; Berteaux, Algeria, 9 Jan
1943;
Mediouna, French Morocco, 5 Mar 1943; Telergma, Algeria, 5 May 1943; El
Bathan, Tunisia, 3 Jun 1943; Ste-Marie-du-Zit, Tunisia, 25 Jul 1943;
Triolo
Airfield, Italy, 12 Dec 1943; Lesina, Italy, Sep-9 Sep 1945. Dow Field,
Maine, 20 Nov 19462 Oct 1949. Ethan Allen AFB, Vt, 18 Aug 1955-.
Commanders. 1st Lt Troy Keith, 15 Jan 1941; Col Thayer S Olds, 18 Apr
1941; Lt Col Troy Keith, 28 Jan 1943; Col Oliver B Taylor, 26 Sep 1943;
Col
Daniel S Campbell, 18 Jul 1944; Col Thomas B Whitehouse, Mar 1945-unkn.
Lt
Col Lewis W Chick Jr, 24 Dec 1946; Col Loring F Stetson Jr, 7 Jan 1948;
Col
George A McHenry, Jul 1949; Lt Col Arvie E Olson Jr, Aug 1949-unkn. Col
Harry
L Downing, 1955-.
Campaigns. Air Combat, EAME Theater; Air Offensive, Europe; Tunisia;
Sicily; Naples-Foggia; Rome-Arno; Normandy; Northern France; Southern
France;
North Apennines; Rhineland; Central Europe; Po Valley.
Decorations. Distinguished Unit Citation: Austria, 2 Apr 1944.
Insigne. Shield: Per bend argent and sable. Motto: To Fight To Death.
(Approved 17 Jun 1942.)
15th Fighter Group
Constituted as 15th Pursuit Group (Fighter) on 20 Nov 1940. Activated
in
Hawaii on 1 Dec 1940. Redesignated 15th Pursuit Group (Interceptor) in
Feb
1942, and 15th Fighter Group in May 1942. Served as part of the defense
force
for the Hawaiian Islands, using A-12, OA-9, B-12, P-36, P-39, and P-40
aircraft. The Japanese attack on Hawaii on 7 Dec 1941 caused numerous
casualties in the group and destroyed many of its aircraft;
nevertheless,
during the raid several of the group's pilots succeeded in taking off
and in
destroying some enemy planes, including four shot down by Lt George
Welch and
two credited to Lt Kenneth M Taylor. Afterward the group, which was
remanned,
reorganized, and assigned to Seventh AF, remained part of the Hawaiian
defense
system. Sent squadrons (including some that had been attached) to the
Central
or South Pacific at various times for operations against the Japanese.
Began
training in Apr 1944 for very-long-range escort missions. Obtained P-51
aircraft late in 1944. Moved to Iwo Jima in Feb 1945. Supported the
invasion
force on Iwo early in Mar by bombing and strafing trenches, cave
entrances,
troop concentrations, and storage areas. Began strikes against enemy
airfields, shipping, and military installations in the Bonin Islands by
the
middle of Mar. Flew its first mission to Japan on 7 Apr 1945, receiving
a DUC
for escorting 8=29's that bombed the Nakajima aircraft plant near Tokyo.
Struck Japanese airfields on Kyushu late in Apr and early in May 1945 to
curtail the enemy's suicide attacks against the invasion force at
Okinawa.
Also hit enemy troop trains, small factories, gun positions, and hangars
in
the Bonins and Japan. Assigned to Twentieth AF during the summer of
1945.
Continued its fighter sweeps against Japanese airfields and other
targets, and
flew longrange escort missions to Japanese cities until the end of the
war.
Transferred, without personnel and equipment, in Nov 1945 to Hawaii,
where the
group was remanned and re-equipped. Inactivated on 15 Oct 1946.
Redesignated 15th Fighter Group (Air Defense). Activated in the US on
18
Aug 1955. Assigned to Air Defense Command.
Squadrons. 6th: 1943-1944. 12th: 1942. 18th: 1943-1944. 45th:
1940-1946. 46th: 1940-1944. 47th: 1940-1946; 1955-. 78th: 1943-1946.
Stations. Wheeler Field, TH, 1 Dec 1940; Bellows Field, TH, 3 Jun
1944-5
Feb 1945; South Field, Iwo Jima, 6 Mar 1945; Bellows Field, TH, 25 Nov
1945;
Wheeler Field, TH, Feb-15 Oct 1946. Niagara Falls Mun Aprt, NY, 18 Aug
1955-.
Commanders. Maj Clyde K Rich, 1 Dec 1940; Maj Lorry N Tindal, 6 Dec
1940; Lt Col Paul W Blanchard, 20 Sep 1941; Lt Col William 5 Steele, 12
Feb
1942; Lt Col Sherwood E Buckland, 5 Mar 1943; Col James O Beckwith Jr,
27 Sep
1943; Lt Col DeWitt S Spain, 16 Apr 1945; Lt Col Julian E Thomas, 17 May
1945
Col John W Mitchell, 21 Jul 1945; Col William Eades, c. Nov 1945; Col
Oswald W
Lunde, 25 Nov 1945-15 Oct 1946. Col Stanley E Matthews, 1955-.
Campaigns. Central Pacific; Air Offensive, Japan.
Decorations. Distinguished Unit Citation: Japan, 7 Apr 1945.
Insigne. Shield: Or, on a bend azure, two (2) terrestrial lightning
flashes issuant from base of the first, over all a gunsight
counterchanged.
Motto: Prosequor Alibi - Pursue with Wings. (Approved - Oct 1942.)
16th Bombardment Group
Constituted as 16th Bombardment Group (Very Heavy) on 28 Mar 1944.
Activated on 1 Apr 1944. Trained for combat with B-29's. Moved to Guam,
Mar-Apr 1945, and assigned to Twentieth AF. Entered combat on 16 Jun
1945
with a bombing raid against an airfield on Moen. Flew first mission
against
the Japanese home islands on 26 Jun 1945 and afterwards operated
principally
against the enemy's petroleum industry. Flying unescorted in the face of
severe enemy attack, the 16th bombed the oil refinery at Shimotsu, the
Mitsubishi refinery and oil installations at Kawasaki, and the coal
liquefaction plants at Ube, Jul-Aug 1945, and was awarded a DUC for the
missions. After the war the group dropped food and supplies to Allied
prisoners of war in Japan, Manchuria, and Korea, and participated in
several
show-of-force missions over Japan. Inactivated on Guam on 15 Apr 1946.
Squadrons. 15th: 1944-1946. 16th: 1944-1946. 17th: 1944-1946.
21st: 1944.
Stations. Dalhart AAFld, Tex, 1 Apr 1944; Fairmont AAFld, Neb, 15 Aug
1944-7 Mar 1945; Northwest Field, Guam, 14 Apr 1945-15 Apr 1946.
Commanders. Unkn, Apr-Jun 1944; Capt William W Hosler Jr, 24 Jun
1944;
Maj Richard W Lavin, 1 Jul 1944; Col Samuel C Gurney Jr, 11 Jul 1944; Lt
Col
Andre F Castellotti, 11 Jul 1945-1946.
Campaigns. Air Offensive, Japan; Eastern Mandates; Western Pacific.
Decorations. Distinguished Unit Citation: Japan, 29 July Aug 1945.
Insigne. None.
16th Fighter Group
Authorized on the inactive list as 16th Pursuit Group on 24 Mar 1923.
Activated in the Panama Canal Zone on 1 Dec 1932. Served as a part of
the
defense force for the canal. Used various types of aircraft, including
P-12's, P-26's, P-36's, and P-39's, prior to World War II; equipped with
P-40's in 1941. Redesignated 16th Pursuit Group (Interceptor) in 1939,
and
16th Fighter Group in 1942. Disbanded in the Canal Zone on 1 Nov 1943.
Squadrons. 24th: 1932-1943. 29th: 1933-1943. 43d: 1940-1943. 44th:
1938-1939. 74th: 1934-1938. 78th: 1932-1937.
Stations. Albrook Field, CZ, 1 Dec 1932-1 Nov 1943.
Commanders. Unkn, 1932-1933; Maj Robert L Walsh, c. 2 Sep 1933-c. 14
Aug
1935; Lt Col Willis H Hale, c. 11 Jul 1938-c. 8 Aug 1939; Maj Arthur L
Bump,
c. 1939-c. Feb 1941; Capt Roger Browne, 24 Feb 1941; Lt Col Otto P
Weyland, 20
May 1941; Lt Col Philip B Klein, 10 Apr 1942; Lt Col Hiette S Williams
Jr, Sep
1942; Maj James K Johnson, 1943; Maj Erwin Bishop Jr, 25 Sep 1943-unkn.
Campaigns. American Theater.
Decorations. None.
Insigne. Shield: Azure, four lightning flashes bendwise or. Crest: On
a wreath of the colors (or and azure) a portcullis or. Motto: Purgamus
Coelum - We Clear the Skies. (Approved 4 Dec 1934.)
17th Bombardment Group
Authorized as 17th Observation Group on 18 Oct 1927. Redesignated
17th
Pursuit Group in 1929. Activated on 15 Jul 1931. Redesignated 17th
Attack
Group in 1935, and 17th Bombardment Group (Medium) in 1939. Trained and
participated in maneuvers, using P-12 and P-26 (1931-1932), A-17
(1933-1939),
and B-18 (1940-1941) aircraft. Used B-25's for patrol duty on the west
coast
after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, and later patrolled the Gulf
of
Mexico and the Atlantic coast. Converted to B-26's in the summer of
1942.
Moved to North Africa late in 1942 and began operations on 30 Dec.
Served in combat in the Mediterranean theater until the end of the war,
being
assigned first to Twelfth AF, then to Fifteenth (Nov 1943), and again to
Twelfth (Jan 1944). Flew interdictory and close-support missions,
bombing
bridges, rail lines, marshalling yards, harbors, shipping, gun
emplacements,
troop concentrations, and other targets. Helped to bring about the
defeat of
Axis forces in North Africa in May 1943; assisted in the reduction of
Pantelleria and Lampedusa in Jun 1943; participated in the invasions of
Sicily
in Jul and of Italy in Sep 1943; and took part in the drive toward Rome,
receiving a DUC for a bombing attack on airdromes at Rome on 13 Jan
1944.
Also received the French Croix de Guerre with Palm for operations in
Italy,
Apr-Jun 1944. Took part in the invasion of Southern France in Aug 1944,
and
continued bombardment operations in northern Italy, France, and later in
Germany. Received second DUC for bombing attacks on enemy defenses near
Schweinfurt on 10 Apr 1945. Assisted in the disarmament of Germany after
V-E
Day. Returned to the US in Nov. Inactivated on 26 Nov 1945. Redesignated
17th Bombardment Group (Light). Activated on 19 May 1947. Apparently did
not
become operative. Inactivated on 10 Sep 1948. Activated in Korea on io
May
1952. Assigned to Far East Air Forces and equipped with B-26's for
service in
the Korean War. Engaged in interdiction and provided close support for
UN
ground forces until the armistice in Jul 1953. Moved to Japan in Oct
1954;
returned to the US, Mar-Apr 1955. Assigned to Tactical Air Command and
equipped with B-57 aircraft. Redesignated 17th Bombardment Group
(Tactical)
in Oct 1955.
Squadrons. 34th: 1931-1945; 1947-1948; 1952-. 37th: 1931-1945;
1947-1948; 1952-. 73d: 1947-1948; 1952-. 95th: 1931-1945; 1947-1948;
1952-. 432d: 1942-1945.
Stations. March Field, Calif, 15 Jul 1931; McChord Field, Wash, 24
Jun
1940; Pendleton, Ore, 29 Jun 1941; Lexington County Aprt, SC, 9 Feb
1942;
Barksdale Field, La, 23 Jun-Nov 1942; Telergma, Algeria, Dec 1942;
Sedrata,
Algeria, c. 10 May 1943; Djedeida, Tunisia, 23 Jun 1943; Sardinia, Nov
1943;
Corsica, c. 14 Sep 1944; Dijon, France, c. 20 Nov 1944; Horsching,
Austria,
Jun 1945; Clastres, France, c. 3 Oct-Nov 1945; Camp Myles Standish,
Mass,
Nov-26 Nov 1945. Langley Field, Va, 19 May 1947-10 Sep 1948. Pusan,
Korea,
10 May 1952; Miho, Japan, 10 Oct 1954-16 Mar 1955; Eglin AF Aux Field No
9,
Apr 1955-.
Commanders. Capt Frank O'D Hunter, 1931-unkn; Lt Col Walter R Peck,
Mar
1941; Lt Col William C Mills, Feb 1942; Lt Col Flint Garrison, 16 Jun
1942; Lt
Col Curtis D Sluman, 26 Jun 1942; Lt Col Karl E Baumeister, 11 Mar 1943;
Lt
Col Charles R Greening, 25 May 1943; Lt Col Robert A Zaiser, 18 Jul
1943; Col
Donald L Gilbert, 14 Oct 1943; Col R O Harrell, 21 Jul 1944; Col Wallace
C
Barrett, 20 Mar 1945; Lt Col Stanford W Gregory, 1 Jun 1945-unkn. Unkn,
1947-1948. Col James D Kemp, 10 May 1952; Col William C Lindley Jr, 11
Jul
1952; Col Robert E Keating, 14 Feb 1953; Col Gordon D Timmons, 8 Apr
1953; Col
George D Hughes, 1954; Col Norton W Sanders, 1954-.
Campaigns. World War II: Antisubmarine, American Theater; Air Combat,
EAME Theater; Tunisia; Sicily; Naples-Foggia; Anzio; Rome-Arno; Southern
France; North Apennines; Rhineland; Central Europe. Korean War: Korea
Summer-Fall, 1952; Third Korean Winter; Korea Summer-Fall, 1953.
Decorations. Distinguished Unit Citations: Italy, 13 Jan 1944;
Schweinfurt, Germany, 10 Apr 1945; Korea, 1 Dec 1952-30 Apr 1953. French
Croix de Guerre with Palm: Apr, May, and Jun 1944. Republic of Korea
Presidential Unit Citation: 24 May 1952-31 Mar 1953.
Insigne. Shield: Or, seven crosses pattee in pale sable. Crest: On a
wreath of the colors (or and sable) a griffin rampant of the first,
beaked,
fore-legged and winged of the second, and langued gules. Motto: Toujours
Au
Danger - Ever Into Danger. (Approved 19 Jan 1934.)
11th Photographic Group - 17th Bombardment Group
11th Photographic Group
Constituted as 11th Photographic Group (Mapping) on 19 Nov 1943.
Activated on 1 Dec 1943. Engaged in photographic mapping in the US and
sent
detachments to carry out similar operations in Africa, the CBI theater,
the
Near and Middle East, Mexico, Canada, Alaska, and the Caribbean. Used
B-17,
B-24, B-25, B-29, F-2, F-9, F-10, and A-20 aircraft. Disbanded on 5 Oct
1944.
Squadrons. 1st: 1943-1944. 3d: 1943-1944. 19th: 1943-1944.
Stations. Reading AAFld, Pa, 1 Dec 1943; MacDill Field, Fla, Jan-5
Oct
1944.
Commanders. Lt Col Thomas D Brown, 8 Jan-5 Oct 1944.
Campaigns. None.
Decorations. None.
Insigne. None.
12th Bombardment Group
Constituted as 12th Bombardment Group (Light) on 20 Nov-1940.
Activated
on 15 Jan 1941. Trained with B-18, B-23, and PT-17 aircraft. Patrolled
the
west coast after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. Redesignated 12th
Bombardment Group (Medium) in Dec 1941. Using B-25's, began training
early in
1942 for duty overseas. Moved to the Middle East, Jul-Aug 1942, and
assigned
to Ninth AF. Attacked storage areas, motor transports, troop
concentrations,
airdromes, bridges, shipping, marshalling yards, and other targets in
Egypt,
Libya, Tunisia, Pantelleria, Lampedusa, Crete, Sicily, and Italy, Aug
1942-Jan
1944. Supported the Allied drive from Egypt to Tunisia, Oct 1942-Apr
1943.
Early in 1943 two squadrons operated with Twelfth AF, assisting Allied
forces
moving eastward across North Africa, while the other squadrons continued
operations with Ninth AF, bombing enemy defenses along the Mareth Line.
Received a DUC for action against the enemy in North Africa and Sicily
from
Oct 1942 to Aug 1943. While attached to Twelfth AF, Jun-Aug 1943, the
group
operated from bases in Tunisia and Sicily against targets in Pantelleria,
Lampedusa, Sicily, and Italy. Assigned to Twelfth AF in Aug 1943 and
operated
primarily against targets in Italy until Jan 1944. Flew some missions to
Albania and Yugoslavia.
Moved to India, Feb-Apr 1944, and assigned to Tenth AF. Engaged
chiefly
in missions against the enemy in Burma, Apr 1944-May 1945. Bombed
communications, military installations, and other objectives. Delivered
ammunition to Allied forces at Imphal. Also attacked some targets in
China.
Began training with A-26 aircraft in the summer of 1945. Returned to the
US,
Dec 1945-Jan 1946. Inactivated on 22 Jan 1946.
Redesignated 12th Bombardment Group (Light). Activated on 19 May
1947.
Not manned during 1947-1948. Inactivated on 10 Sep 1948.
Redesignated 12th Fighter-Escort Group. Activated on 1 Nov 1950.
Assigned to Strategic Air Command. Trained with F-84's. Inactivated on
16
Jun 1952.
Squadrons. 81st: 1941-1946; 1947-1948. 82d: 1941-1946; 1947-1948.
83d: 1941-1946; 1947-1948. 434th (formerly 94th): 1941-1942, 1942-1946.
559th: 1950-1952. 560th: 1950-1952. 561st: 1950-1952.
Stations. McChord Field, Wash, 15 Jan 1941; Esler Field, La, c. 21
Feb-3
Jul 1942; Deversoir, Egypt, c. 31 Jul 1942; Egypt and Libya, Oct 1942;
Medenine, Tunisia, 3 Apr 1943; Sfax, Tunisia, c. 15 Apr 1943; Hergla,
Tunisia,
2 Jun 1943; Ponte Olivo, Sicily, c. 2 Aug 1943; Gerbini, Sicily, c. 22
Aug
1943; Foggia, Italy, c. 2 Nov 1943; Gaudo Airfield, Italy, 19 Jane Feb
1944;
Tezgaon, India, c. 21 Mar 1944; Pandaveswar, India, 13 Jun 1944, Fenny,
India,
16 Jul 1944; Pandaveswar, India, 8 Jun 1945; Karachi, India, 15 Nov-24
Dec
1945; Ft Lawton, Wash, 21-22 Jan 1946. Langley Field, Va, 19 May 1947-10
Sep
1948. Turner AFB, Ga, 1 Nov 1950; Bergstrom AFB, Tex, Dec 1950-16 Jun
1952.
Commanders. Unkn, Jan-May 1941; Col Charles G Goodrich, 6 May 1941;
Col
Edward N Backus, 16 Sep 1942; Lt Col William W Wilcox, 21 Sep 1943; Col
Lloyd
H Dalton Jr, c. 29 Sep 1944; Lt Col Samuel C Galbreath, 4 Sep 1945; Lt
Col
Lewis B Wilson, 23 Sep 1945-22 Jan 1946. Capt H Carney, Nov 1950; Col
Charles
A Gayle, 20 Nov 1950; Col Cy Wilson, Feb 1951; Col Charles A Gayle,
Apr-16 Jun
1952.
Campaigns. Air Combat, EAME Theater; Egypt-Libya; Tunisia; Sicily;
Naples-Foggia; Rome-Arno; India-Burma; China Defensive; Central Burma.
Decorations. Distinguished Unit Citation: North Africa and Sicily,
Oct
1942-17 Aug 1943.
Insigne. Shield: Azure, a sword point to base or, hilt flamant
proper;
a bordure gyronny of twelve of the second and the first. Motto: Spiritus
Omnia Vincit - Spirit Conquers All. (Approved Feb 1942.)
13th Bombardment Group
Constituted as 13th Bombardment Group (Medium) on 20 Nov 1940.
Activated
on 15 Jan 1941. After the US entered the war the group searched for
enemy
U-boats and covered friendly convoys off the east coast of the US.
Served
with First AF and later with AAF Antisubmarine Command, using B-28,
B-25, and
A-29 aircraft for operations. Inactivated on 30 Nov 1942.
Squadrons. 3rd Antisubmarine (formerly 39th Bombardment): 1941-1942.
4th Antisubmarine (formerly 40th Bombardment): 1941-1942. 5th
Antisubmarine
(formerly 41st Bombardment): 1941-1942. 6th Antisubmarine (formerly
393rd
Bombardment): 1942.
Stations. Langley Field, Va, 15 Jan 1941; Orlando, Fla, c. 6 Jun
1941;
Westover Field, Mass, 20 Jan-30 Nov 1942.
Commanders. Brig Gen Westside T Larson, 21 Jan 1941; Col Walter G
Bryte
Jr, c. 4 Mar 1942; Col John G Fowler, c. 2 May-c. Nov 1942.
Campaigns. Antisubmarine, American Theater.
Decorations. None.
Insigne. Shield: Per bend azure and or, a sword point to base with
wings displayed and inverted argent, that portion to base fimbriated of
the
first. Motto: Alert Day Or Night. (Approved 2 Jan 1942.)
14th Fighter Group
Constituted as 14th Pursuit Group (Fighter) on 20 Nov 1940. Activated
on
15 Jan 1941. Trained with P-40's and P-43's. Converted to P-38's, which
were
used in flying patrols on the west coast of the US after the Japanese
attack
on Pearl Harbor. Redesignated 14th Fighter Group in May 1942. Moved to
England, Jul-Aug 1942. Began operations with Eighth AF in Oct 1942,
escorting
bombers to targets in France. Arrived in North Africa shortly after the
campaign for Algeria and French Morocco (8-11 Nov 1942) had ended, and
remained in the Mediterranean theater until the end of the war, being
assigned
first to Twelfth AF and later (Nov 1943) to Fifteenth. Flew escort,
strafing,
and reconnaissance missions from the middle of Nov 1942 to late in Jan
1943
and then withdrew from combat, some of the men and planes being
reassigned.
Resumed operations in May. Flew dive-bombing missions during the Allied
assault on Pantelleria. Helped prepare for and support the invasions of
Sicily and Italy. Engaged primarily in escort work after Nov 1943,
flying
many missions to cover bombers engaged in long-range operations against
strategic objectives in Italy, France, Germany, Czechoslovakia, Austria,
Hungary, Yugoslavia, Rumania, and Bulgaria. Received a DUC for a mission
on 2
Apr 1944 when the group, by beating off attacks by enemy fighters,
enabled
bombers to strike important ball-bearing works in Austria. Also provided
escort for reconnaissance operations, supported the invasion of Southern
France in Aug 1944, and on numerous occasions flew long-range missions
to
strafe and dive-bomb motor vehicles, trains, bridges, supply areas,
airdromes,
and troop concentrations in an area extending from France to the
Balkans.
Inactivated in Italy on 9 Sep 1945.
Activated in the US on 20 Nov 1946. Equipped first with P-47's and
later
with F-84's. Inactivated on 2 Oct 1949.
Redesignated 14th Fighter Group (Air Defense). Activated on 18 Aug
1955.
Assigned to Air Defense Command and equipped with F-86 aircraft.
Squadrons. 37th: 1943-1945; 1946-1949; 1955-. 48th: 1941-1945;
1946-1949. 49th: 1941-1945; 1946-1949. 50th: 1941-1942.
Stations. Hamilton Field, Calif, 15 Jan 1941; March Field, Calif, c.
10
Jun 1941; Hamilton Field, Calif, 7 Feb-16 Jul 1942; Atcham, England, 18
Aug-Nov 1942; Tafaraoui, Algeria, 15 Nov 1942; Maison Blanche, Algeria,
18 Nov
1942; Youks-les-Bains, Algeria, 22 Nov 1942; Berteaux, Algeria, 9 Jan
1943;
Mediouna, French Morocco, 5 Mar 1943; Telergma, Algeria, 5 May 1943; El
Bathan, Tunisia, 3 Jun 1943; Ste-Marie-du-Zit, Tunisia, 25 Jul 1943;
Triolo
Airfield, Italy, 12 Dec 1943; Lesina, Italy, Sep-9 Sep 1945. Dow Field,
Maine, 20 Nov 19462 Oct 1949. Ethan Allen AFB, Vt, 18 Aug 1955-.
Commanders. 1st Lt Troy Keith, 15 Jan 1941; Col Thayer S Olds, 18 Apr
1941; Lt Col Troy Keith, 28 Jan 1943; Col Oliver B Taylor, 26 Sep 1943;
Col
Daniel S Campbell, 18 Jul 1944; Col Thomas B Whitehouse, Mar 1945-unkn.
Lt
Col Lewis W Chick Jr, 24 Dec 1946; Col Loring F Stetson Jr, 7 Jan 1948;
Col
George A McHenry, Jul 1949; Lt Col Arvie E Olson Jr, Aug 1949-unkn. Col
Harry
L Downing, 1955-.
Campaigns. Air Combat, EAME Theater; Air Offensive, Europe; Tunisia;
Sicily; Naples-Foggia; Rome-Arno; Normandy; Northern France; Southern
France;
North Apennines; Rhineland; Central Europe; Po Valley.
Decorations. Distinguished Unit Citation: Austria, 2 Apr 1944.
Insigne. Shield: Per bend argent and sable. Motto: To Fight To Death.
(Approved 17 Jun 1942.)
15th Fighter Group
Constituted as 15th Pursuit Group (Fighter) on 20 Nov 1940. Activated
in
Hawaii on 1 Dec 1940. Redesignated 15th Pursuit Group (Interceptor) in
Feb
1942, and 15th Fighter Group in May 1942. Served as part of the defense
force
for the Hawaiian Islands, using A-12, OA-9, B-12, P-36, P-39, and P-40
aircraft. The Japanese attack on Hawaii on 7 Dec 1941 caused numerous
casualties in the group and destroyed many of its aircraft;
nevertheless,
during the raid several of the group's pilots succeeded in taking off
and in
destroying some enemy planes, including four shot down by Lt George
Welch and
two credited to Lt Kenneth M Taylor. Afterward the group, which was
remanned,
reorganized, and assigned to Seventh AF, remained part of the Hawaiian
defense
system. Sent squadrons (including some that had been attached) to the
Central
or South Pacific at various times for operations against the Japanese.
Began
training in Apr 1944 for very-long-range escort missions. Obtained P-51
aircraft late in 1944. Moved to Iwo Jima in Feb 1945. Supported the
invasion
force on Iwo early in Mar by bombing and strafing trenches, cave
entrances,
troop concentrations, and storage areas. Began strikes against enemy
airfields, shipping, and military installations in the Bonin Islands by
the
middle of Mar. Flew its first mission to Japan on 7 Apr 1945, receiving
a DUC
for escorting 8=29's that bombed the Nakajima aircraft plant near Tokyo.
Struck Japanese airfields on Kyushu late in Apr and early in May 1945 to
curtail the enemy's suicide attacks against the invasion force at
Okinawa.
Also hit enemy troop trains, small factories, gun positions, and hangars
in
the Bonins and Japan. Assigned to Twentieth AF during the summer of
1945.
Continued its fighter sweeps against Japanese airfields and other
targets, and
flew longrange escort missions to Japanese cities until the end of the
war.
Transferred, without personnel and equipment, in Nov 1945 to Hawaii,
where the
group was remanned and re-equipped. Inactivated on 15 Oct 1946.
Redesignated 15th Fighter Group (Air Defense). Activated in the US on
18
Aug 1955. Assigned to Air Defense Command.
Squadrons. 6th: 1943-1944. 12th: 1942. 18th: 1943-1944. 45th:
1940-1946. 46th: 1940-1944. 47th: 1940-1946; 1955-. 78th: 1943-1946.
Stations. Wheeler Field, TH, 1 Dec 1940; Bellows Field, TH, 3 Jun
1944-5
Feb 1945; South Field, Iwo Jima, 6 Mar 1945; Bellows Field, TH, 25 Nov
1945;
Wheeler Field, TH, Feb-15 Oct 1946. Niagara Falls Mun Aprt, NY, 18 Aug
1955-.
Commanders. Maj Clyde K Rich, 1 Dec 1940; Maj Lorry N Tindal, 6 Dec
1940; Lt Col Paul W Blanchard, 20 Sep 1941; Lt Col William 5 Steele, 12
Feb
1942; Lt Col Sherwood E Buckland, 5 Mar 1943; Col James O Beckwith Jr,
27 Sep
1943; Lt Col DeWitt S Spain, 16 Apr 1945; Lt Col Julian E Thomas, 17 May
1945
Col John W Mitchell, 21 Jul 1945; Col William Eades, c. Nov 1945; Col
Oswald W
Lunde, 25 Nov 1945-15 Oct 1946. Col Stanley E Matthews, 1955-.
Campaigns. Central Pacific; Air Offensive, Japan.
Decorations. Distinguished Unit Citation: Japan, 7 Apr 1945.
Insigne. Shield: Or, on a bend azure, two (2) terrestrial lightning
flashes issuant from base of the first, over all a gunsight
counterchanged.
Motto: Prosequor Alibi - Pursue with Wings. (Approved - Oct 1942.)
16th Bombardment Group
Constituted as 16th Bombardment Group (Very Heavy) on 28 Mar 1944.
Activated on 1 Apr 1944. Trained for combat with B-29's. Moved to Guam,
Mar-Apr 1945, and assigned to Twentieth AF. Entered combat on 16 Jun
1945
with a bombing raid against an airfield on Moen. Flew first mission
against
the Japanese home islands on 26 Jun 1945 and afterwards operated
principally
against the enemy's petroleum industry. Flying unescorted in the face of
severe enemy attack, the 16th bombed the oil refinery at Shimotsu, the
Mitsubishi refinery and oil installations at Kawasaki, and the coal
liquefaction plants at Ube, Jul-Aug 1945, and was awarded a DUC for the
missions. After the war the group dropped food and supplies to Allied
prisoners of war in Japan, Manchuria, and Korea, and participated in
several
show-of-force missions over Japan. Inactivated on Guam on 15 Apr 1946.
Squadrons. 15th: 1944-1946. 16th: 1944-1946. 17th: 1944-1946.
21st: 1944.
Stations. Dalhart AAFld, Tex, 1 Apr 1944; Fairmont AAFld, Neb, 15 Aug
1944-7 Mar 1945; Northwest Field, Guam, 14 Apr 1945-15 Apr 1946.
Commanders. Unkn, Apr-Jun 1944; Capt William W Hosler Jr, 24 Jun
1944;
Maj Richard W Lavin, 1 Jul 1944; Col Samuel C Gurney Jr, 11 Jul 1944; Lt
Col
Andre F Castellotti, 11 Jul 1945-1946.
Campaigns. Air Offensive, Japan; Eastern Mandates; Western Pacific.
Decorations. Distinguished Unit Citation: Japan, 29 July Aug 1945.
Insigne. None.
16th Fighter Group
Authorized on the inactive list as 16th Pursuit Group on 24 Mar 1923.
Activated in the Panama Canal Zone on 1 Dec 1932. Served as a part of
the
defense force for the canal. Used various types of aircraft, including
P-12's, P-26's, P-36's, and P-39's, prior to World War II; equipped with
P-40's in 1941. Redesignated 16th Pursuit Group (Interceptor) in 1939,
and
16th Fighter Group in 1942. Disbanded in the Canal Zone on 1 Nov 1943.
Squadrons. 24th: 1932-1943. 29th: 1933-1943. 43d: 1940-1943. 44th:
1938-1939. 74th: 1934-1938. 78th: 1932-1937.
Stations. Albrook Field, CZ, 1 Dec 1932-1 Nov 1943.
Commanders. Unkn, 1932-1933; Maj Robert L Walsh, c. 2 Sep 1933-c. 14
Aug
1935; Lt Col Willis H Hale, c. 11 Jul 1938-c. 8 Aug 1939; Maj Arthur L
Bump,
c. 1939-c. Feb 1941; Capt Roger Browne, 24 Feb 1941; Lt Col Otto P
Weyland, 20
May 1941; Lt Col Philip B Klein, 10 Apr 1942; Lt Col Hiette S Williams
Jr, Sep
1942; Maj James K Johnson, 1943; Maj Erwin Bishop Jr, 25 Sep 1943-unkn.
Campaigns. American Theater.
Decorations. None.
Insigne. Shield: Azure, four lightning flashes bendwise or. Crest: On
a wreath of the colors (or and azure) a portcullis or. Motto: Purgamus
Coelum - We Clear the Skies. (Approved 4 Dec 1934.)
17th Bombardment Group
Authorized as 17th Observation Group on 18 Oct 1927. Redesignated
17th
Pursuit Group in 1929. Activated on 15 Jul 1931. Redesignated 17th
Attack
Group in 1935, and 17th Bombardment Group (Medium) in 1939. Trained and
participated in maneuvers, using P-12 and P-26 (1931-1932), A-17
(1933-1939),
and B-18 (1940-1941) aircraft. Used B-25's for patrol duty on the west
coast
after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, and later patrolled the Gulf
of
Mexico and the Atlantic coast. Converted to B-26's in the summer of
1942.
Moved to North Africa late in 1942 and began operations on 30 Dec.
Served in combat in the Mediterranean theater until the end of the war,
being
assigned first to Twelfth AF, then to Fifteenth (Nov 1943), and again to
Twelfth (Jan 1944). Flew interdictory and close-support missions,
bombing
bridges, rail lines, marshalling yards, harbors, shipping, gun
emplacements,
troop concentrations, and other targets. Helped to bring about the
defeat of
Axis forces in North Africa in May 1943; assisted in the reduction of
Pantelleria and Lampedusa in Jun 1943; participated in the invasions of
Sicily
in Jul and of Italy in Sep 1943; and took part in the drive toward Rome,
receiving a DUC for a bombing attack on airdromes at Rome on 13 Jan
1944.
Also received the French Croix de Guerre with Palm for operations in
Italy,
Apr-Jun 1944. Took part in the invasion of Southern France in Aug 1944,
and
continued bombardment operations in northern Italy, France, and later in
Germany. Received second DUC for bombing attacks on enemy defenses near
Schweinfurt on 10 Apr 1945. Assisted in the disarmament of Germany after
V-E
Day. Returned to the US in Nov. Inactivated on 26 Nov 1945. Redesignated
17th Bombardment Group (Light). Activated on 19 May 1947. Apparently did
not
become operative. Inactivated on 10 Sep 1948. Activated in Korea on io
May
1952. Assigned to Far East Air Forces and equipped with B-26's for
service in
the Korean War. Engaged in interdiction and provided close support for
UN
ground forces until the armistice in Jul 1953. Moved to Japan in Oct
1954;
returned to the US, Mar-Apr 1955. Assigned to Tactical Air Command and
equipped with B-57 aircraft. Redesignated 17th Bombardment Group
(Tactical)
in Oct 1955.
Squadrons. 34th: 1931-1945; 1947-1948; 1952-. 37th: 1931-1945;
1947-1948; 1952-. 73d: 1947-1948; 1952-. 95th: 1931-1945; 1947-1948;
1952-. 432d: 1942-1945.
Stations. March Field, Calif, 15 Jul 1931; McChord Field, Wash, 24
Jun
1940; Pendleton, Ore, 29 Jun 1941; Lexington County Aprt, SC, 9 Feb
1942;
Barksdale Field, La, 23 Jun-Nov 1942; Telergma, Algeria, Dec 1942;
Sedrata,
Algeria, c. 10 May 1943; Djedeida, Tunisia, 23 Jun 1943; Sardinia, Nov
1943;
Corsica, c. 14 Sep 1944; Dijon, France, c. 20 Nov 1944; Horsching,
Austria,
Jun 1945; Clastres, France, c. 3 Oct-Nov 1945; Camp Myles Standish,
Mass,
Nov-26 Nov 1945. Langley Field, Va, 19 May 1947-10 Sep 1948. Pusan,
Korea,
10 May 1952; Miho, Japan, 10 Oct 1954-16 Mar 1955; Eglin AF Aux Field No
9,
Apr 1955-.
Commanders. Capt Frank O'D Hunter, 1931-unkn; Lt Col Walter R Peck,
Mar
1941; Lt Col William C Mills, Feb 1942; Lt Col Flint Garrison, 16 Jun
1942; Lt
Col Curtis D Sluman, 26 Jun 1942; Lt Col Karl E Baumeister, 11 Mar 1943;
Lt
Col Charles R Greening, 25 May 1943; Lt Col Robert A Zaiser, 18 Jul
1943; Col
Donald L Gilbert, 14 Oct 1943; Col R O Harrell, 21 Jul 1944; Col Wallace
C
Barrett, 20 Mar 1945; Lt Col Stanford W Gregory, 1 Jun 1945-unkn. Unkn,
1947-1948. Col James D Kemp, 10 May 1952; Col William C Lindley Jr, 11
Jul
1952; Col Robert E Keating, 14 Feb 1953; Col Gordon D Timmons, 8 Apr
1953; Col
George D Hughes, 1954; Col Norton W Sanders, 1954-.
Campaigns. World War II: Antisubmarine, American Theater; Air Combat,
EAME Theater; Tunisia; Sicily; Naples-Foggia; Anzio; Rome-Arno; Southern
France; North Apennines; Rhineland; Central Europe. Korean War: Korea
Summer-Fall, 1952; Third Korean Winter; Korea Summer-Fall, 1953.
Decorations. Distinguished Unit Citations: Italy, 13 Jan 1944;
Schweinfurt, Germany, 10 Apr 1945; Korea, 1 Dec 1952-30 Apr 1953. French
Croix de Guerre with Palm: Apr, May, and Jun 1944. Republic of Korea
Presidential Unit Citation: 24 May 1952-31 Mar 1953.
Insigne. Shield: Or, seven crosses pattee in pale sable. Crest: On a
wreath of the colors (or and sable) a griffin rampant of the first,
beaked,
fore-legged and winged of the second, and langued gules. Motto: Toujours
Au
Danger - Ever Into Danger. (Approved 19 Jan 1934.)
18th Fighter Group - 21st Fighter Group
18th Fighter Group
Organized as 18th Pursuit Group in Hawaii in Jan 1927. Redesignated
18th
Pursuit Group (Interceptor) in 1939, and 18th Fighter Group in 1942.
Before
World War II the group engaged in routine flying and gunnery training
and
participated in joint Army-Navy maneuvers, using DH-4, PW-9, P-12, P-26,
P-36,
and other aircraft. When the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor on 7 Dec
1941,
the group, which had recently converted to P-40's, sustained severe
losses.
The two planes that its pilots were able to get into the air during the
attack
were quickly shot down. The group, assigned to Seventh AF in Feb 1942,
had to
be re-equipped before it could resume training and begin patrol
missions.
Moved to the South Pacific in Mar 1943. Assigned to Thirteenth AF.
Began operations from Guadalcanal. Flew protective patrols over US bases
in
the Solomons; later, escorted bombers to the Bismarcks, supported ground
forces on Bougainville, and attacked enemy airfields and installations
in the
northern Solomons and New Britain. Used P-38, P-39, P-61, and P-70
aircraft.
Moved to New Guinea in Aug 1944. Equipped with P-38's. Escorted bombers
to
targets in the southern Philippines and Borneo, and attacked enemy
airfields
and installations in the Netherlands Indies. Received a DUC for actions
at
Ormoc Bay: on 10 Nov 1944 the group withstood intense flak and vigorous
opposition from enemy interceptors to attack a Japanese convoy that was
attempting to bring in additional troops for use against American forces
that
had landed on Leyte; on the following day a few of the group's planes
returned
to the same area, engaged a large force of enemy fighters, and destroyed
a
number of them. Moved to the Philippines in Jan 1945. Supported ground
forces on Luzon and Borneo, attacked shipping in the central
Philippines,
covered landings on Palawan, attacked airfields and railways on Formosa,
and
escorted bombers to such widely-scattered targets as Borneo, French
Indochina,
and Formosa.
Remained in the Philippines as part of Far East Air Forces after the
war.
Flew patrols and trained with F-80's. Lost all personnel in Mar 1947 but
was
remanned in Sep 1947. Equipped first with F-47's, later with F-51's, and
still later (1949) with F-80's. Redesignated 18th Fighter-Bomber Group
in Jan
1950.
Moved to Korea in Jul 1950 and entered combat, using F-51's.
Supported
UN ground forces and attacked enemy installations and supply lines. Maj
Louis
Sebille was posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor for his action on 5
Aug
1950: although his plane was badly damaged by flak while attacking a
concentration of enemy trucks, Maj Sebille continued his strafing passes
until
he crashed into an armored vehicle. The group converted to F-86's early
in
1953 and remained in Korea for some time after the war. Moved to Okinawa
in
Nov 1954.
Squadrons. 6th: 1927-1943. 12th: 1943-. 19th: 1927-1943. 36th:
1931-1932. 44th: 1941-1942, 1943-. 55th: 1931. 67th: 1945-. 68th:
1945-. 70th: 1943-1945. 73d: 1929-1931, 1941-1942. 74th: 1929-1932.
78th: 1940-1943. 333d: 1942-1943. 419th: 1943-1944.
Stations. Wheeler Field, TH, Jan 1927; Espiritu Santo, 11 Mar 1943;
Guadalcanal, 17 Apr 1943; Sansapor, New Guinea, 23 Aug 1944; Lingayen,
Luzon,
c. 13 Jan 1945; San Jose, Mindoro, c. 1 Mar 1945; Zamboanga, Mindanao, 4
May
1945; Palawan, 10 Nov 1945; Floridablanca, Luzon, Mar 1946; Clark Field,
Luzon, 16 Sep 1947; Taegu, Korea, 28 Jul 1950; Ashiya, Japan, 8 Aug
1950;
Tongnae, Korea, 8 Sep 1950; Pyongyang, Korea, c. 21 Nov 1950; Suwon,
Korea, 1
Dec 1950; Chinhae, Korea, 9 Dec 1950; Hoengsong, Korea, 26 Dec 1952;
Osan-Ni,
Korea, 11 Jan 1953; Kadena AB, Okinawa, 1 Nov 1954-.
Commanders. Unkn, 1927-1940; Maj Kenneth M Walker, 22 Mar 1940; Maj
William R Morgan, 1941; Lt Col Aaron W Tyer, Dec 1941; Lt Col W H
Councill, 10
Dec 1943; Col Milton B Adams, 8 Jul 1944; Col Harry L Donicht, 24 May
1945; Lt
Col Bill Harris, 1 Aug 1945; Lt Col Wilbur Grumbles, 18 Oct 1945-unkn;
Col
Victor R Haugen, 1946; Col Homer A Boushey, 7 Aug 1946-Mar 1947; Maj
Kenneth M
Taylor, 16 Sep 1947; Lt Col Joseph Kruzel, 1 Oct 1947; Col Marion
Malcolm, 3
Sep Lt Col Henry H Norman Jr, 24 Jul 1949; Col Ira L Wintermute, 16 Jun
1950;
Lt Col Homer M Cox, 20 Feb 1951; Col William P McBride, May 1951; Col
Ralph H
Saltsman Jr, 5 Jun 1951; Col Seymour M Levenson, 30 Nov 1951; Col
Sheldon S
Brinson, 17 May 1952; Lt Col Albert Freund Jr, 25 Nov 1952; Col Maurice
L
Martin, 24 Jan 1953; Lt Col Edward L Rathbun, 17 Dec 1953; Col John H
Buckner,
1 Feb 1954; Lt Col Edward L Rathbun, 24 May 1954; Lt Col Clifford P
Patton, 17
Aug 1954; Col Nathan Adams, 7 Sep 1954; Col John B Murphy, 1 Nov 1954;
Lt Col
Clifford P Patton, 10 Nov 1954; Col Paul E Hoeper, 1 Jan 1955; Lt Col
Joseph E
Andres, 22 Jul 1955; Col Leo C Moon, 21 Nov 1955-.
Campaigns. World War II: Central Pacific; China Defensive; New
Guinea;
Northern Solomons; Bismarck Archipelago; Western Pacific; Leyte; Luzon;
Southern Philippines. Korean War: UN Defensive; UN Offensive; CCF
Intervention; 1st UN Counteroffensive; CCF Spring Offensive; UN
Summer-Fall
Offensive; Second Korean Winter; Korea Summer-Fall, 1952; Third Korean
Winter;
Korea Summer-Fall, 1953.
Decorations. Distinguished Unit Citations: Philippine Islands, 1-11
Nov
1944; Korea, 3 Nov 1950-24 Jan 1951; Korea, 22 Apr-8 Jul 1951.
Philippine
Presidential Unit Citation. Republic of Korea Presidential Unit
Citations:
24 Jul 1950-31 Jan 1951; 1 Feb 1951-31 Mar 1953.
Insigne. Shield: Or, a fighting cock with wings displayed sable
wattled
and combed gules. Crest: On a wreath or and sable two wings conjoined
and
displayed tenne (orange). Motto: Unguibus Et Rostro - With Talons and
Beak.
(Approved 21 Feb 1931.)
19th Bombardment Group
Authorized as 19th Observation Group on 18 Oct 1927. Redesignated
19th
Bombardment Group in 1929. Activated on 24 Jun 1932. Redesignated 19th
Bombardment Group (Heavy) in 1939. Equipped first with B-10's, later
with
B-18's, and still later (in 1941) with B-17's. Moved to the Philippine
Islands, Sep-Nov 1941.
On 7 Dec 1941 (8 Dec in the Philippines), when the Japanese first
attacked Clark Field, the group suffered numerous casualties and lost
many
planes. The 93rd squadron, however, was on maneuvers at Del Monte and
therefore missed the attack. Supplies and headquarters were hastily
moved
from Clark Field to comparatively safe points nearby, and planes that
had not
been too heavily damaged were given emergency repairs and dispatched to
Del
Monte. There the 19th began reconnaissance and bombardment operations
against
Japanese shipping and landing parties. Sustaining heavy losses, the
group
ceased these actions after about two weeks, and the ground personnel
joined
infantry units in fighting the invaders. Some of the men were evacuated,
some
escaped, but most were either killed or captured. Meanwhile, late in Dec
1941
the air echelon moved to Australia to transport medical and other
supplies to
the Philippine Islands and evacuate personnel from that area. The men in
Australia moved to Java at the end of 1941 and, flying B-17, LB-30, and
B-24
aircraft, earned a DUC for the group by attacking enemy aircraft, ground
installations, warships, and transports during the Japanese drive
through the
Philippines and Netherlands Indies early in 1942. The men returned to
Australia from Java early in Mar 1942, and later that month the group
evacuated Gen Douglas MacArthur, his family, and key members of his
staff from
the Philippines to Australia. After a brief rest the group resumed
combat
operations, participating in the Battle of the Coral Sea and raiding
Japanese
transportation, communications, and ground forces during the enemy's
invasion
of Papua. From 7 to 12 Aug 1942 the 19th bombed airdromes, ground
installations, and shipping near Rabaul, New Britain, being awarded
another
DUC for these missions. Capt Harl Pease Jr was posthumously awarded the
Medal
of Honor for his actions during 6-7 Aug 1942: when one engine of his
bomber
failed during a mission over New Britain, Capt Pease returned to
Australia to
obtain another plane; unable to find one fit for combat, he selected the
most
serviceable plane at the base and rejoined his squadron for an attack on
a
Japanese airdrome near Rabaul; by skillful flying lie maintained his
position
in the formation and withstood enemy attacks until his bombs had been
released
on the objective; in the air battle that continued after the bombers
left the
target, Capt Pease's aircraft fell behind the formation and was lost.
The
group returned to the US late in 1942 and served as a replacement
training
unit. Inactivated on 1 Apr 1944.
Redesignated 19th Bombardment Group (Very Heavy). Activated on 1 Apr
1944. Trained for combat with B-29's. Moved to Guam, Dec 1944-Feb 1945,
for
duty with Twentieth AF. Entered combat on 12 Feb 1945 with an attack
against
a Japanese airfield on Rota. Flew its first mission against the Japanese
home
islands by striking Tokyo on 25 Feb 1945. Conducted daylight raids
against
strategic objectives, bombing aircraft factories, chemical plants, oil
refineries, and other targets in Japan. Participated in incendiary
operations, receiving one DUC for its low-altitude attacks on the urban
industrial areas of Tokyo, Nagoya, Kobe, and Osaka, in Mar 1945, and
another
DUC for striking the industrial section of Kobe on 5 Jun. Struck
airfields
from which the enemy was launching kamikaze planes against the invasion
force
at Okinawa, Apr-May 1945. Dropped supplies to Allied prisoners and took
part
in show-of-force missions over Japan after the war. Remained overseas as
part
of Far East Air Forces. Trained, participated in sea-search operations,
and
flew photographic-mapping missions. Redesignated 19th Bombardment Group
(Medium) in Aug 1948.
On 28 Jun 1950 the group flew its first mission against the North
Korean
forces that had invaded the Republic of Korea. It moved to Okinawa early
in
Jul 1950 and continued operations against the enemy until 1953. Targets
included troops, supply dumps, airfields, steel mills, hydroelectric
plants,
and light metal industries. Inactivated on Okinawa on 1 Jun 1953.
Squadrons. 14th: 1941-1942. 23d: 1935-1938. 28th: 1941-1944;
1944-1953. 30th: 1932-1944; 1944-1953. 32d: 1932-1941. 76th: 1932-1936.
93d: 1939-1944; 1944-1953. 435th: (formerly 40th): 1941-1944.
Stations. Rockwell Field, Calif, 24 Jun 1932; March Field, Calif, 25
Oct
1935; Albuquerque, NM, 7 Jul-29 Sep 1941; Clark Field, Luzon, 23 Oct
1941;
Batchelor, Australia, 24 Dec 1941; Singosari, Java, 30 Dec 1941;
Melbourne,
Australia, 2 Mar 1942; Garbutt Field, Australia, 18 Apr 1942; Longreach,
Australia, 18 May 1942; Mareeba, Australia, 24 Jul-23 Oct 1942;
Pocatello,
Idaho, 9 Dec 1942; Pyote AAB, Tex, 1 Jan 1943-1 Apr 1944. Great Bend
AAFld,
Kan, 1 Apr-7 Dec 1944; North Field, Guam, 16 Jan 1945; Kadena, Okinawa,
5 Jul
1950-1 Jun 1953.
Commanders. Lt Col Harold M McClelland, c. 24 Jun 1932-1934; Col
Harvey
S Burwell, 1939; Col Eugene L Eubank, 2 Apr 1940; Maj David R Gibbs, 10
Dec
1941; Maj Emmett O'Donnell Jr, 12 Dec 1941; Lt Col Cecil E Combs, Jan
1942; Lt
Col Kenneth B Hobson, 14 Mar 1942; Lt 67 Col James T Connally, 15 Apr
1942; Lt
Col Richard N Carmichael, 10 Jul 1942; Lt Col Felix M Hardison, 1 Jan
1943; Lt
Col Elbert Helton, 13 Feb 1943; Col Louie P Turner, 5 May 1943; Lt Col
Frank P
Sturdivant, 27 Jan 1944; Col Bernard T Castor, 11 Feb-1 Apr 1944. Maj
Joseph
H Selliken, 28 Apr 1944; Col John G Fowler, 20 May 1944; Lt Col John C
Wilson,
29 May 1944; Lt Col Philip L Mathewson, 30 Jun 1944; Col John A Roberts
Jr, 16
Jul 1944; Lt Col George T Chadwell, Sep 1945; Col Vincent M Miles Jr, 1
Mar
1946; Col Elbert D Reynolds, 13 Apr 1946; Col David Wade, 26 Apr 1947;
Col
Francis C Shoemaker, 8 Nov 1947; Col Robert V DeShazo, 2 Dec 1947; Lt
Col
Clarence G Poff, 1949; Col Theodore Q Graff, 17 Sep 1949; Col Payne
Jennings,
26 Sep 1950; Col Donald O Tower, 29 Mar 1951; Col Adam K Breckenridge,
26 Jul
1951; Col Julian M Bleyer, 6 Feb 1952; Col Willard W Smith, 8 Jul 1952;
Col
Harvey C Dorney, 24 Dec 1952-1 Jun 1953.
Campaigns. World War II: American Theater; Philippine Islands; East
Indies; Air Offensive, Japan; Papua; Guadalcanal; Western Pacific.
Korean
War: UN Defensive; UN Offensive; CCF Intervention; 1st UN
Counteroffensive;
CCF Spring Offensive; UN Summer-Fall Offensive; Second Korean Winter;
Korea
Summer-Fall, 1952; Third Korean Winter; Korea Summer-Fall, 1953.
Decorations. Distinguished Unit Citations: Philippine Islands, 7 Dec
1941-10 May 1942; Philippine Islands, 8-22 Dec 1941; Philippine Islands
and
Netherlands Indies, 1 Jan-1 Mar 1942; Philippine Islands, 6 Jan-8 Mar
1942;
Papua, 23 Jul-[Oct 1942]; New Britain, 7-12 Aug 1942; Japan, 9-19 Mar
1945;
Kobe, Japan, 5 Jun 1945; Korea, 28 Jun-15 Sep 1950. Philippine
Presidential
Unit Citation. Republic of Korea Presidential Unit Citation: 7 Jul
1950-[1953].
Insigne. Shield: Azure, within the square of the constellation of
Pegasus, a winged sword, point to base, all or. Crest: On a wreath of
the
colors (or and azure) an osprey guardant, rising, wings elevated and
addorsed
proper. Motto: In Alis Vincimus - On Wings We Conquer. (Approved 19 Oct
1936.)
20th Fighter Group
Authorized on the inactive list as 20th Balloon Group on 18 Oct 1927.
Redesignated 20th Pursuit Group in 1929. Activated on 15 Nov 1930.
Redesignated 20th Pursuit Group (Fighter) in 1939, 20th Pursuit Group
(Interceptor) in 1941, and 20th Fighter Group in 1942. Equipped
successively
with P-12, P-16, and P-36 aircraft prior to World War II; used P-39's
and
P-40's during the early part of the war; converted to P-38's in Jan
1943.
Trained, participated in maneuvers and tactical exercises, and took part
in
aerial reviews and demonstrations during the period 1930-1939. Provided
personnel for and helped to train new units during 1940-1941. Served as
an
air defense organization after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.
Began
intensive training late in 1942 for combat duty overseas.
Moved to England in Aug 1943 and became part of Eighth AF. Entered
combat with P-38's late in Dec 1943 and for several months was engaged
primarily in escorting heavy and medium bombers to targets on the
Continent.
Frequently strafed targets of opportunity while on escort missions.
Retained
escort as its primary function until the end of the war, but in Mar 1944
began
to fly fighter-bomber missions, which became almost as frequent as
escort
operations. Strafed and dive-bombed airfields, trains, vehicles, barges,
tugs, bridges, flak positions, gun emplacements, barracks, radio
stations, and
other targets in France, Belgium, and Germany. Became known as the
"Loco
Group" because of its numerous and successful attacks on
locomotives.
Received a DUC for performance on 8 Apr 1944 when the group struck
airfields
in central Germany and then, after breaking up an attack by enemy
interceptors, proceeded to hit railroad equipment, oil facilities, power
plants, factories, and other targets. Flew patrols over the Channel
during
the invasion of Normandy in Jun 1944. Supported the invasion force later
that
month by escorting bombers that struck interdictory targets in France,
Belgium, and Holland, and by attacking troops, transportation targets,
and
airfields. Converted to P-51's in Jul 1944 and continued to fly escort
and
fighter-bomber missions as the enemy retreated across France to the
Siegfried
Line. Participated in the airborne attack on Holland in Sep 1944.
Escorted
bombers to Germany and struck rail lines, trains, vehicles, barges,
power
stations, and other targets in and beyond the Siegfried Line during the
period
Oct-Dec 1944. Took part in the Battle of the Bulge, Dec 1944-Jan 1945,
by
escorting bombers to the battle area. Flew patrols to support the
airborne
attack across the Rhine, Mar 1945. Carried out escort and fighter-bomber
missions as enemy resistance collapsed in Apr 1945. Returned to the US
in
Oct. Inactivated on 18 Oct 1945.
Activated on 29 Jul 1946. Equipped first with P-51's and later with
F-84's. Redesignated 20th Fighter-Bomber Group in Jan 1950. Moved to
England
in 1952 and became part of the United States Air Forces in Europe.
Inactivated in England on 8 Feb 1955.
Squadrons. 24th: 1930-1932. 55th: 1930-1931, 1932-1945; 1946-1955.
74th: 1932. 77th: 1930-1932, 1932-1945; 1946-1955. 78th: 1931-1932.
79th: 1933-1945; 1946-1955. 87th: 1935-1936.
Stations. Mather Field, Calif, 15 Nov 1930; Barksdale Field, La, Oct
1932; Moffett Field, Calif, Nov 1939; Hamilton Field, Calif, Sep 1940;
Wilmington, NC, c. 2 Feb 1942; Morris Field, NC, Apr 1942; Paine Field,
Wash,
Sep 1942; March Field, Calif, Jan-c. 11 Aug 1943; Kings Cliffe, England,
c. 26
Aug 1943-c. 11 Oct 1945; Camp Kilmer, NJ, c. 16-18 Oct 1945. Biggs
Field,
Tex, 29 Jul 1946; Shaw Field, SC, Oct 1946; Langley AFB, Va, Nov
1951-May
1952; Wethersfield, England, c. 1 Jun 1952-8 Feb 1955.
Commanders. Maj Clarence L Tinker, c. 15 Nov 1930; Capt Thomas
Boland,
c. 14 Oct 1932; Lt Col Millard F Harmon, c. 31 Oct 1932-unkn; Maj Armin
F
Herold, c. 7 Oct 1936-unkn; Lt Col Ross G Hoyt, 1937; Col Ira C Eaker,
c. 16
Jan 1941; Maj Jesse Auton, c. 1 Sep 1941; Maj Homer A Boushey, Jan 1942;
Lt
Col Edward W Anderson, c. 9 Mar 1942; Lt Col Jesse Auton, Aug 1942-unkn;
Col
Barton M Russell, 1943; Lt Col Mark E Hubbard, 2 Mar 1944; Maj Herbert E
Johnson Jr, 19 Mar 1944; Lt Col Harold Rau, 20 Mar 1944; Lt Col Cy
Wilson, Jun
1944; Col Harold Rau, 27 Aug 1944; Col Robert P Montgomery, 18 Dec 1944;
Maj
Jack C Price, 3 Oct 1945-unkn. Col Joseph L Laughlin, 29 Jul 1946; Col
Archie
Knight, c. 24 Feb 1947; Col William Cummings, 31 Jul 1947; Col George R
Bickell, Aug 1948-unkn; Col John A Dunning, 1949; Lt Col Jack R Brown,
c. 22
Oct 1951; Col William D Ritchie, 29 Apr 1952-unkn.
Campaigns. American Theater; Air Offensive, Europe; Normandy;
Northern
France; Rhineland; Ardennes-Alsace; Central Europe.
Decorations. Distinguished Unit Citation: Central Germany, 8 Apr
1944.
Insigne. Shield: Per fess azure and gules, a fess nebule or. Crest:
On a wreath of the colors (or and azure) a sun in splendor proper
radiating
from the center thereof thirteen darts gules. Motto: Victory By Valor.
(Approved 18 Dec 1934.)
21st Bombardment Group
Constituted as 21st Bombardment Group (Medium) on 13 Jan 1942.
Activated
on 1 Feb 1942. Began training with B-25's; later converted to B-26's.
Served
as an operational training unit in Third AF; also flew some
antisubmarine
patrols over the Gulf of Mexico. Disbanded on 10 Oct 1943.
Squadrons. 313th: 1942-1943. 314th: 1942-1943. 315th: 1942-1943.
398th: 1942-1943.
Stations. Bowman Field, Ky, 1 Feb 1942; Jackson AAB, Miss, 8 Feb
1942;
Columbia AAB, SC, 21 Apr 1942; Key Field, Miss, 24 May 1942; MacDill
Field,
Fla, 27 Jun 1942-10 Oct 1943.
Commanders. Col Robert D Knapp, 9 Feb 1942; Col William L Lee, 26 Apr
1942; Lt Col Jolin F Batjer, 13 Aug 1942; Col Carl R Storrie, 5 Oct
1942; Col
Guy L McNeil, 7 Nov 1942; Col Don Z Ziminerman, 19 Apr 1943; Lt Col L F
Brownfield, 6 June 1943; Col Richard T Coiner Jr, 6 Julio Oct 1943.
Campaigns. Antisubmarine, American Theater.
Decorations. None.
Insigne. Shield: Per fess nebule azure and or, three drop bombs, two
and one, counterchanged. Motto: Alis Et Animo - With Wings and Courage.
(Approved 26 Nov 1942.)
21st Fighter Group
Constituted as 21st Fighter Group on 31 Mar 1944. Activated in Hawaii
on
21 Apr 1944. Assigned to Seventh AF and served as part of the defense
force
for the Hawaiian Islands. Equipped first with P-39, later with P-38, and
still later (Jan 1945) with P-51 aircraft. Moved to Iwo Jima, Feb-Mar
1945.
Sustained some casualties when Japanese troops attacked the group's camp
on
the night of 26/27 Mar 1945, but flew first combat mission the following
day,
bombing and strafing airfields on Haha Jima. Flew its first mission to
Japan
on 7 Apr, being awarded a DUC for escorting B-29's that struck the
heavily-defended Nakajima aircraft factory near Tokyo. Operations from
Iwo
Jima included attacking airfields that the enemy was using to launch
suicide
planes against the Allied forces on Okinawa; striking enemy barracks,
airfields, and shipping in the Bonins and Japan; and escorting B-29's
that
bombed Japanese cities. Assigned to Twentieth AF during the summer of
1945.
Trained, participated in aerial reviews, and served as a part of the
defense
force for Iwo Jima, Saipan, and Guam after the war. Re-equipped with
P-47's
during the summer of 1946. Inactivated on Guam on 10 Oct 1946.
Redesignated 21st Fighter-Bomber Group. Activated in the US on 1 Jan
1953. Assigned to Tactical Air Command. Equipped for a few months with
F-51's, later with F-86's. Moved to France, Nov-Dec 1954, and assigned
to
United States Air Forces in Europe.
Squadrons. 46th: 1944-1946. 72d: 1944-1946; 1953-. 416th: 1953-.
531st: 1944-1946; 1953-.
Stations. Wheeler Field, TH, 21 Apr 1944; Mokuleia Field, TH, 13 Oct
1944-9 Feb 1945; Central Field, Iwo Jima, 26 Mar 1945; South Field, Iwo
Jima,
16 Jul 1945; Isley Field, Saipan, Dec 1945; Northwest Field, Guam, 17
Apr-10
Oct 1946. George AFB, Calif, 1 Jan 1953-26 Nov 1954; Chambley AB,
France, 13
Dec 1954-.
Commanders. Col Kenneth R Powell, 21 Apr 1944; Col Charles E Taylor,
14
Jun 1945; Lt Col Charles E Parsons, 15 Oct 1945; Col William Eades, 25
Nov
1945; Col Lester S Harris, Feb-10 Oct 1946. Col Paul P Douglas Jr, 1 Jan
1953; Col Verl D Luehring, 26 Apr 1954; Col R C Franklin Jr, 27 Apr
1955; Lt
Col Ira M Sussky, 6 May 1955; Col R C Franklin Jr, 1 Aug 1955-.
Campaigns. Air Offensive, Japan.
Decorations. Distinguished Unit Citation: Japan, 7 Apr 1945.
Insigne. Shield: Azure, a broad sword argent, shaded silver, hilt and
pommel or, shaded yellow, outlined of the field, between four red
lightning
streaks proper, two and two, bendwise. Motto: Fortitudo Et Preparatio -
Strength and Preparedness. (Approved 23 Jul 1957.) |