fbpx
Wikipedia

93rd Air-Ground Operations Wing

The 93d Air Ground Operations Wing (93d AGOW) is a United States Air Force unit assigned to Air Combat Command, Ninth Air Force. It is stationed as a tenant unit at Moody Air Force Base, Georgia.

93d Air Ground Operations Wing
93 AGOW
Active1947–1948; 1948–1995; 1996–2002; 2008–present
Country United States
Branch United States Air Force
Part ofAir Combat Command
Garrison/HQMoody Air Force Base, Georgia
Motto(s)Defend, Attack, Defeat!
DecorationsDistinguished Unit Citation
Air Force Outstanding Unit
Meritorious Unit Citation
Battle honoursWorld War II:
Antisubmarine American Theater
Egypt-Libya
Tunisia
Sicily
Naples-Foggia
Air Offensive Europe
Normandy
Northern France
Rhineland
Ardennes-Alsace
Central Europe
Air Combat
EAME Theater
Commanders
Current
commander
Colonel Timothy N. Hood
Notable
commanders
Insignia
93d Air Ground Operations Wing emblem (approved 4 September 1953)[1]

The wing directs the 3d Air Support Operations Group (3d ASOG) at Fort Cavazos, Texas (supporting III Corps), 18th Air Support Operations Group (18th ASOG) at Pope Field, North Carolina (supporting XVIII Airborne Corps of Fort Liberty), all Forward Air Control groups which arrange air support to ground forces. It also directs the 820th Base Defense Group (820th BDG), a Force Protection with an airborne capability, at Moody AFB, Georgia.

Its 93d Operations Group is a successor organization to the World War II 93d Bombardment Group. It was the first VIII Bomber Command B-24 Liberator heavy bombardment group to carry out strategic bombardment operations against targets in Occupied Europe and Nazi Germany from RAF Alconbury, England on 9 October 1942. Active for over 60 years, the 93d Bombardment Wing was a component organization of Strategic Air Command's deterrent force during the Cold War, as a strategic bombardment wing.

History edit

For additional history and lineage, see 93d Operations Group

Strategic Air Command: B-29s, B-50s, and B-47s edit

 
Emblem of the 93d Bombardment Wing

On 28 July 1947, the 93d Bombardment Wing, (Very Heavy) was established and maintained combat readiness for global strategic bombardment, flying the Boeing B-29 Superfortress. The wing was later redesignated as the 93d Bombardment Wing (Medium) as it was not chosen to be reequipped with the Convair B-36 Peacemaker, but remained with the B-29. In 1949, the wing received its first B-50 Superfortress aircraft, an improved version of the B-29. It began operations overseas with the deployment of its tactical force to RAF Mildenhall, England (July 1950 – January 1951) in response to communist aggression on the Korean peninsula. Meanwhile, the 93d Air Refueling Squadron was activated on 1 March 1949, equipped with the KB-29P (a B-29 bomber modified with a refueling boom).

The wing continued to move forward throughout the 1950s, replacing the propeller-driven B-50s with new B-47E Stratojet swept-wing medium bombers in 1954, capable of flying at high subsonic speeds and primarily designed for penetrating the airspace of the Soviet Union. It flew numerous training missions and participated in various SAC exercises and deployments with the Stratojet

Strategic Air Command: B-52s edit

 
Three B-52Bs of the 93d Bomb Wing prepare to depart Castle Air Force Base, Calif., for their record-setting round-the-world flight in 1957
 
A B-52D drops 500 pound bombs

SAC assigned its first Boeing B-52 Stratofortress to the wing in June 1955.[2][a 1] The wing was redesignated the 93d Bombardment Wing, Heavy on 1 February 1955 in anticipation of the arrival of the B-52.[1] Its B-52Bs were initially used for crew training. The wing was declared combat ready with the B-52 on 12 March 1956, but became nonoperational two months later when a second squadron began to equip with Stratofortresses. It became operational again on 26 June 1957, when its mission became primarily crew training.[2]

The wing retained some of its B-47s until 1956 for crew training purposes. It was one of the few wings to have operated both jet bombers simultaneously.

In 1956, the wing's three bombardment squadrons – 328th, 329th and 330th began receiving the new B-52D. The following year, they began receiving the B-52E model, while some B-52Bs remained with the 93 BW until well into the 1960s.

On 24 and 25 November 1956, in an operation known as Quick Kick, four B-52Bs of the 93d joined four B-52Cs of the 42d Bombardment Wing for a nonstop flight around the perimeter of North America. Four in-flight refuelings by Boeing KC-97 Stratofreighters were required for the 13,500-nautical-mile (25,000 km) journey.[a 2] Less than two months later, in Operation Power Flight, three 93d B-52Bs flew the first non-stop jet around-the-world flight. Taking off on 16 January 1957,[3] they flew via Newfoundland, Casablanca, Dhahran, Ceylon, the Malay Peninsula, Manila and Guam. Upon landing at March Air Force Base, California on 18 January, General Curtis LeMay, SAC Commander, greeted the crews and presented them with the Distinguished Flying Cross. Operation Power Flight was recognized by the National Aeronautical Association as the outstanding flight of 1957 and it awarded the wing the Mackay Trophy.[3]

It was assigned the Boeing KC-135A Stratotanker in January 1957, making it the first SAC bomb wing to receive the new aircraft. In June 1958, the wing received six B-52Fs, making it the first to fly this series of the Stratofortress.[4] Throughout the height of the Vietnam War (1968–1974) the wing operated a special B-52 aircrew replacement training unit to support SAC's B-52 operations in Southeast Asia. The wing recorded another first on 10 June 1982 when the first all female KC-135 crew, "Fair Force One", flew a five-hour training sortie.

Finally in August 1990 the wing found itself back at war. At home its support units operated an aerial port of embarkation for personnel and equipment deploying to Saudi Arabia for Operation Desert Shield. Overseas, its KC-135s refueled planes and ferried personnel and equipment to the region, while its B-52s bombed the Iraqi Republican Guard and targeted Iraqi infrastructure throughout January and February 1991.

The Air Force underwent major restructuring after the Cold War ended. On 1 September 1991, the 93d lost its air refueling commitment, (924th ARS), and its KC-135 aircrew training missions (329th CCTS). It also implemented the objective wing organization and was redesignated as the 93d Wing. On 1 June 1992 the 93d was relieved from assignment to SAC and was reassigned to the newly formed Air Combat Command (ACC). It was then redesignated as the 93d Bomb Wing.

Shortly afterwards it was announced that Castle AFB would close, under the Base Realignment and Closure Commission (BRAC) process. The 322d Bomb Squadron was inactivated 3 May 1994, and the wing became non-operational. The wing however continued to supervise the closure of Castle AFB, and was inactivated on 30 September 1995 with the closure of the base.

Strategic Air Command: B-52 crew training edit

When the first B-52s began to be assigned to SAC in 1955, Air Training Command had no school for the aircraft. Because of the need to get the bomber operational as soon as possible, SAC established the 4017th Combat Crew Training Squadron to conduct training on the Stratofortress. As the B-52 force expanded, the mission became too great for a single squadron and the wing's three bombardment squadrons took over the flight training program, while the 4017th conducted ground training and overall administration of the training program.[2] As SAC's involvement in the Vietnam War increased, on 15 April 1968, SAC established a replacement training unit within the 4017th. This unit was established to qualify aircrews flying B-52E, B-52F, B-52G and B-52H bombers to fly the B-52D, which (with its Big Belly modification) was SAC's conventional bomber in Southeast Asia. After two weeks of training, the crews augmented the cadre unit in the Pacific. This training enabled SAC to meet its commitments, while at the same time spreading the burden of deployment more equitably among its entire force of B-52 crews.[5]

Joint STARS from 1996 edit

 
93d Air Surveillance and Air Control Wing emblem
 
An E-8C Joint Surveillance Target Attack Radar System from the 93d Air Control Wing flies a refueling mission over the skies of Georgia.

While The 93d Wing had been inactivated in September 1995, the wing's history was too valuable, and Air Force leadership decided that it would rise in another guise. Just four months later it was redesignated as the 93d Air Control Wing (93 ACW), and was reactivated at Robins AFB, Georgia, on 29 January 1996. It was to be equipped with the Northrop Grumman E-8 Joint STARS (Joint Surveillance Target Attack Radar System), and it accepted its first production aircraft on 11 June 1996.

From late October through December 1996, the wing deployed to Rhein-Main Air Base, Germany for Operation Joint Endeavor and Operation Joint Guard, both in Bosnia and Herzegovina. It provided "top cover" for United Nations (UN) peacekeeping forces and monitored the warring factions for violations of UN resolutions. This deployment actually occurred before the wing had been declared as "Initial Operational Capable" by Air Combat Command, which took place on 18 December 1997.

As U.S. pressure on Iraq heightened in 1998, the 93d deployed an element to the Middle East to monitor Iraqi military movements. In February 1999 it deployed an aircraft to Europe to support NATO's monitoring of tensions between Serbia and Kosovo. The new wing saw its first combat during Operation Allied Force over Kosovo and Serbia, playing a major role in the destruction of enemy targets and compiling over 1,000 combat hours.

From November 2001 to April 2002, the wing deployed as part of Operation Enduring Freedom after the 11 September terrorist attacks on the United States.

The wing inactivated at Robins AFB on 30 September 2002. Its mission and resources became a part of Air Force history on that day as the Georgia Air National Guard's 116th Bomb Wing (now redesignated the 116th Air Control Wing (116th ACW)) assumed command responsibility for the Joint STARS mission and the first ever "blended wing", combining active-duty and Air National Guard personnel, aircraft, and facilities under one commander under the newly activated 116th ACW.

93d Air Ground Operations Wing edit

The 93d Air Ground Operations Wing (93 AGOW) is a non-flying active support wing activated on 25 January 2008. The 93d's mission is to manage and providing combat-ready tactical air control party personnel, battlefield weather, and force protection assets for joint forces commanders. The wing is based at Moody AFB, Georgia.

Lineage edit

  • Constituted as the 93d Bombardment Wing, Very Heavy on 28 July 1947
Organized on 15 August 1947
Redesignated 93d Bombardment Wing, Medium on 12 July 1948
Redesignated 93d Bombardment Wing, Heavy on 1 February 1955
Redesignated 93d Wing on 1 September 1991
Redesignated 93d Bomb Wing on 1 June 1992
Inactivated on 30 September 1995
  • Redesignated 93d Air Control Wing on 15 January 1996
Activated on 29 January 1996
Inactivated on 1 October 2002
  • Redesignated 93d Air Ground Operations Wing on 11 December 2007
Activated on 25 January 2008

Assignments edit

Components edit

Groups

Squadrons

  • 90th Air Refueling Squadron: 18 January 1954 – 5 August 1955 (detached c. 3 April – 18 May 1954 and 1 April – 16 July 1955).
  • 93d Air Refueling Squadron: attached 15 July 1950 – 30 January 1951; attached 10 February 1951 – 15 June 1952, assigned 16 June 1952 – 1 September 1991 (detached c. 1 April – 15 May 1954; 29 June – 14 August 1954; 19 January – c. 15 March 1955; 18 June – c. 3 July 1955; 2 November 1955 – 5 January 1956; and 27 September – c. 24 December 1956).
  • 328th Bombardment Squadron attached 10 February 1951 – 15 June 1952, assigned 16 June 1952 – 1 September 1991.
  • 329th Bombardment Squadron (later, 329th Strategic Bombardment Training Squadron; 329th Combat Crew Training Squadron): attached 10 February 1951 – 15 June 1952, assigned 16 June 1952 – 30 September 1971; 1 July 1986 – 1 September 1991.
  • 330th Bombardment Squadron (later, 330th Combat Flight Instructor Squadron): attached 10 February 1951 – 15 June 1952, assigned 16 June 1952 – 15 September 1963; 24 August 1988 – 1 September 1991.
  • 340th Air Refueling Squadron: attached 20 October 1952 – 18 January 1954.
  • 341st Air Refueling Squadron: attached 11 June 1954 – 15 August 1955.
  • 924th Air Refueling Squadron: 1 July 1959 – 1 September 1991.
  • 4017th Combat Crew Training Squadron: 8 January 1955 – c. 1 July 1986

Bases edit

  • Merced Army Air Field (Later Castle Air Force Base), California, 15 August 1947 – 30 September 1995
  • Robins Air Force Base, Georgia, 29 January 1996 – 1 October 2002
  • Moody Air Force Base, Georgia, 29 January 2008 – present

Aircraft edit

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

Explanatory Notes

  1. ^ This aircraft, serial 52-8711 was retired in 1965 and put on display at the Aerospace Museum at Offutt Air Force Base, Nebraska. Knaack, p. 243
  2. ^ SAC was quick to point out that five to six hours could have been shaved off the flight time, if it had jet KC-135 Stratotankers instead of propeller driven KC-97s to refuel the bombers. Knaack, p. 244.

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b Robertson, Patsy (15 August 2012). "Factsheet 93 Air Ground Operations Wing (ACC)". Air Force Historical Research Agency. Retrieved 9 March 2017.
  2. ^ a b c Knaack, p. 237
  3. ^ a b Knaack, p. 244
  4. ^ Knaack, p. 266
  5. ^ Knaack, p. 256

Bibliography edit

  This article incorporates public domain material from the Air Force Historical Research Agency

  • Endicott, Judy G. (1999) Active Air Force wings as of 1 October 1995; USAF active flying, space, and missile squadrons as of 1 October 1995. Maxwell AFB, Alabama: Office of Air Force History. CD-ROM.
  • Fletcher, Harry R. (1989) Air Force Bases Volume II, Active Air Force Bases outside the United States of America on 17 September 1982. Maxwell AFB, Alabama: Office of Air Force History. ISBN 0-912799-53-6
  • Knaack, Marcelle Size (1988). Encyclopedia of US Air Force Aircraft and Missile Systems. Vol. 2, Post-World War II Bombers 1945–1973. Washington, DC: Office of Air Force History. ISBN 0-912799-59-5.
  • Ravenstein, Charles A. (1984). Air Force Combat Wings Lineage and Honors Histories 1947–1977. Maxwell AFB, Alabama: Office of Air Force History. ISBN 0-912799-12-9.
  • Mueller, Robert (1989). Volume 1: Active Air Force Bases Within the United States of America on 17 September 1982. USAF Reference Series, Office of Air Force History, United States Air Force, Washington, D.C. ISBN 0-912799-53-6, ISBN 0-16-002261-4
  • Rogers, Brian (2005). United States Air Force Unit Designations Since 1978. Hinkley, England: Midland Publications. ISBN 1-85780-197-0.
  • Air Force Historical Research Agency

External links edit

  • Air Force Historical Research Agency
  • The 93rd Bombardment Group Museum, Station 104, Hardwick. A small museum on the actual airfield site in Nissen (Quonset) and brick built huts.


93rd, ground, operations, wing, bombardment, wing, redirects, here, combat, bombardment, wing, world, combat, bombardment, wing, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, thi. 93d Bombardment Wing redirects here For the 93d Combat Bombardment Wing of World War II see 93d Combat Bombardment Wing This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations January 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message The 93d Air Ground Operations Wing 93d AGOW is a United States Air Force unit assigned to Air Combat Command Ninth Air Force It is stationed as a tenant unit at Moody Air Force Base Georgia 93d Air Ground Operations Wing93 AGOWActive1947 1948 1948 1995 1996 2002 2008 presentCountry United StatesBranch United States Air ForcePart ofAir Combat CommandGarrison HQMoody Air Force Base GeorgiaMotto s Defend Attack Defeat DecorationsDistinguished Unit Citation Air Force Outstanding UnitMeritorious Unit CitationBattle honoursWorld War II Antisubmarine American TheaterEgypt LibyaTunisiaSicilyNaples FoggiaAir Offensive EuropeNormandyNorthern FranceRhinelandArdennes AlsaceCentral EuropeAir CombatEAME TheaterCommandersCurrentcommanderColonel Timothy N HoodNotablecommandersBrig Gen Michael A LongoriaInsignia93d Air Ground Operations Wing emblem approved 4 September 1953 1 The wing directs the 3d Air Support Operations Group 3d ASOG at Fort Cavazos Texas supporting III Corps 18th Air Support Operations Group 18th ASOG at Pope Field North Carolina supporting XVIII Airborne Corps of Fort Liberty all Forward Air Control groups which arrange air support to ground forces It also directs the 820th Base Defense Group 820th BDG a Force Protection with an airborne capability at Moody AFB Georgia Its 93d Operations Group is a successor organization to the World War II 93d Bombardment Group It was the first VIII Bomber Command B 24 Liberator heavy bombardment group to carry out strategic bombardment operations against targets in Occupied Europe and Nazi Germany from RAF Alconbury England on 9 October 1942 Active for over 60 years the 93d Bombardment Wing was a component organization of Strategic Air Command s deterrent force during the Cold War as a strategic bombardment wing Contents 1 History 1 1 Strategic Air Command B 29s B 50s and B 47s 1 2 Strategic Air Command B 52s 1 3 Strategic Air Command B 52 crew training 1 4 Joint STARS from 1996 1 5 93d Air Ground Operations Wing 2 Lineage 2 1 Assignments 2 2 Components 2 3 Bases 2 4 Aircraft 3 See also 4 References 4 1 Notes 4 2 Bibliography 5 External linksHistory editFor additional history and lineage see 93d Operations GroupStrategic Air Command B 29s B 50s and B 47s edit nbsp Emblem of the 93d Bombardment WingOn 28 July 1947 the 93d Bombardment Wing Very Heavy was established and maintained combat readiness for global strategic bombardment flying the Boeing B 29 Superfortress The wing was later redesignated as the 93d Bombardment Wing Medium as it was not chosen to be reequipped with the Convair B 36 Peacemaker but remained with the B 29 In 1949 the wing received its first B 50 Superfortress aircraft an improved version of the B 29 It began operations overseas with the deployment of its tactical force to RAF Mildenhall England July 1950 January 1951 in response to communist aggression on the Korean peninsula Meanwhile the 93d Air Refueling Squadron was activated on 1 March 1949 equipped with the KB 29P a B 29 bomber modified with a refueling boom The wing continued to move forward throughout the 1950s replacing the propeller driven B 50s with new B 47E Stratojet swept wing medium bombers in 1954 capable of flying at high subsonic speeds and primarily designed for penetrating the airspace of the Soviet Union It flew numerous training missions and participated in various SAC exercises and deployments with the Stratojet Strategic Air Command B 52s edit nbsp Three B 52Bs of the 93d Bomb Wing prepare to depart Castle Air Force Base Calif for their record setting round the world flight in 1957 nbsp A B 52D drops 500 pound bombsSAC assigned its first Boeing B 52 Stratofortress to the wing in June 1955 2 a 1 The wing was redesignated the 93d Bombardment Wing Heavy on 1 February 1955 in anticipation of the arrival of the B 52 1 Its B 52Bs were initially used for crew training The wing was declared combat ready with the B 52 on 12 March 1956 but became nonoperational two months later when a second squadron began to equip with Stratofortresses It became operational again on 26 June 1957 when its mission became primarily crew training 2 The wing retained some of its B 47s until 1956 for crew training purposes It was one of the few wings to have operated both jet bombers simultaneously In 1956 the wing s three bombardment squadrons 328th 329th and 330th began receiving the new B 52D The following year they began receiving the B 52E model while some B 52Bs remained with the 93 BW until well into the 1960s On 24 and 25 November 1956 in an operation known as Quick Kick four B 52Bs of the 93d joined four B 52Cs of the 42d Bombardment Wing for a nonstop flight around the perimeter of North America Four in flight refuelings by Boeing KC 97 Stratofreighters were required for the 13 500 nautical mile 25 000 km journey a 2 Less than two months later in Operation Power Flight three 93d B 52Bs flew the first non stop jet around the world flight Taking off on 16 January 1957 3 they flew via Newfoundland Casablanca Dhahran Ceylon the Malay Peninsula Manila and Guam Upon landing at March Air Force Base California on 18 January General Curtis LeMay SAC Commander greeted the crews and presented them with the Distinguished Flying Cross Operation Power Flight was recognized by the National Aeronautical Association as the outstanding flight of 1957 and it awarded the wing the Mackay Trophy 3 It was assigned the Boeing KC 135A Stratotanker in January 1957 making it the first SAC bomb wing to receive the new aircraft In June 1958 the wing received six B 52Fs making it the first to fly this series of the Stratofortress 4 Throughout the height of the Vietnam War 1968 1974 the wing operated a special B 52 aircrew replacement training unit to support SAC s B 52 operations in Southeast Asia The wing recorded another first on 10 June 1982 when the first all female KC 135 crew Fair Force One flew a five hour training sortie Finally in August 1990 the wing found itself back at war At home its support units operated an aerial port of embarkation for personnel and equipment deploying to Saudi Arabia for Operation Desert Shield Overseas its KC 135s refueled planes and ferried personnel and equipment to the region while its B 52s bombed the Iraqi Republican Guard and targeted Iraqi infrastructure throughout January and February 1991 The Air Force underwent major restructuring after the Cold War ended On 1 September 1991 the 93d lost its air refueling commitment 924th ARS and its KC 135 aircrew training missions 329th CCTS It also implemented the objective wing organization and was redesignated as the 93d Wing On 1 June 1992 the 93d was relieved from assignment to SAC and was reassigned to the newly formed Air Combat Command ACC It was then redesignated as the 93d Bomb Wing Shortly afterwards it was announced that Castle AFB would close under the Base Realignment and Closure Commission BRAC process The 322d Bomb Squadron was inactivated 3 May 1994 and the wing became non operational The wing however continued to supervise the closure of Castle AFB and was inactivated on 30 September 1995 with the closure of the base Strategic Air Command B 52 crew training edit When the first B 52s began to be assigned to SAC in 1955 Air Training Command had no school for the aircraft Because of the need to get the bomber operational as soon as possible SAC established the 4017th Combat Crew Training Squadron to conduct training on the Stratofortress As the B 52 force expanded the mission became too great for a single squadron and the wing s three bombardment squadrons took over the flight training program while the 4017th conducted ground training and overall administration of the training program 2 As SAC s involvement in the Vietnam War increased on 15 April 1968 SAC established a replacement training unit within the 4017th This unit was established to qualify aircrews flying B 52E B 52F B 52G and B 52H bombers to fly the B 52D which with its Big Belly modification was SAC s conventional bomber in Southeast Asia After two weeks of training the crews augmented the cadre unit in the Pacific This training enabled SAC to meet its commitments while at the same time spreading the burden of deployment more equitably among its entire force of B 52 crews 5 Joint STARS from 1996 edit nbsp 93d Air Surveillance and Air Control Wing emblem nbsp An E 8C Joint Surveillance Target Attack Radar System from the 93d Air Control Wing flies a refueling mission over the skies of Georgia While The 93d Wing had been inactivated in September 1995 the wing s history was too valuable and Air Force leadership decided that it would rise in another guise Just four months later it was redesignated as the 93d Air Control Wing 93 ACW and was reactivated at Robins AFB Georgia on 29 January 1996 It was to be equipped with the Northrop Grumman E 8 Joint STARS Joint Surveillance Target Attack Radar System and it accepted its first production aircraft on 11 June 1996 From late October through December 1996 the wing deployed to Rhein Main Air Base Germany for Operation Joint Endeavor and Operation Joint Guard both in Bosnia and Herzegovina It provided top cover for United Nations UN peacekeeping forces and monitored the warring factions for violations of UN resolutions This deployment actually occurred before the wing had been declared as Initial Operational Capable by Air Combat Command which took place on 18 December 1997 As U S pressure on Iraq heightened in 1998 the 93d deployed an element to the Middle East to monitor Iraqi military movements In February 1999 it deployed an aircraft to Europe to support NATO s monitoring of tensions between Serbia and Kosovo The new wing saw its first combat during Operation Allied Force over Kosovo and Serbia playing a major role in the destruction of enemy targets and compiling over 1 000 combat hours From November 2001 to April 2002 the wing deployed as part of Operation Enduring Freedom after the 11 September terrorist attacks on the United States The wing inactivated at Robins AFB on 30 September 2002 Its mission and resources became a part of Air Force history on that day as the Georgia Air National Guard s 116th Bomb Wing now redesignated the 116th Air Control Wing 116th ACW assumed command responsibility for the Joint STARS mission and the first ever blended wing combining active duty and Air National Guard personnel aircraft and facilities under one commander under the newly activated 116th ACW 93d Air Ground Operations Wing edit The 93d Air Ground Operations Wing 93 AGOW is a non flying active support wing activated on 25 January 2008 The 93d s mission is to manage and providing combat ready tactical air control party personnel battlefield weather and force protection assets for joint forces commanders The wing is based at Moody AFB Georgia Lineage editConstituted as the 93d Bombardment Wing Very Heavy on 28 July 1947Organized on 15 August 1947 Redesignated 93d Bombardment Wing Medium on 12 July 1948 Redesignated 93d Bombardment Wing Heavy on 1 February 1955 Redesignated 93d Wing on 1 September 1991 Redesignated 93d Bomb Wing on 1 June 1992 Inactivated on 30 September 1995Redesignated 93d Air Control Wing on 15 January 1996Activated on 29 January 1996 Inactivated on 1 October 2002Redesignated 93d Air Ground Operations Wing on 11 December 2007Activated on 25 January 2008Assignments edit Fifteenth Air Force 15 August 1947Attached to 7th Air Division 6 December 1951 6 March 195247th Air Division later 47 Strategic Aerospace Division 47 Air Division 1 July 1959 Second Air Force 30 June 1971 Fifteenth Air Force 15 February 1973 14th Air Division 1 October 1976 12th Air Division 1 October 1985 Fifteenth Air Force 15 July 1988 Twelfth Air Force 1 June 1992 30 September 1995 Ninth Air Force 29 January 1996 1 October 2002 Ninth Air Force 25 January 2008 present Components edit Groups 3d Air Support Operations Group Fort Cavazos Texas January 2008 present 5th Combat Weather Group Fort Liberty North Carolina May 2022 present 18th Air Support Operations Group Pope Field North Carolina January 2008 present 93d Bombardment Group later 93d Operations Group 15 August 1947 16 June 1952 1 September 1991 31 October 1994 29 January 1996 1 October 2002 820th Base Defense Group Moody AFB Georgia January 2008 presentSquadrons 90th Air Refueling Squadron 18 January 1954 5 August 1955 detached c 3 April 18 May 1954 and 1 April 16 July 1955 93d Air Refueling Squadron attached 15 July 1950 30 January 1951 attached 10 February 1951 15 June 1952 assigned 16 June 1952 1 September 1991 detached c 1 April 15 May 1954 29 June 14 August 1954 19 January c 15 March 1955 18 June c 3 July 1955 2 November 1955 5 January 1956 and 27 September c 24 December 1956 328th Bombardment Squadron attached 10 February 1951 15 June 1952 assigned 16 June 1952 1 September 1991 329th Bombardment Squadron later 329th Strategic Bombardment Training Squadron 329th Combat Crew Training Squadron attached 10 February 1951 15 June 1952 assigned 16 June 1952 30 September 1971 1 July 1986 1 September 1991 330th Bombardment Squadron later 330th Combat Flight Instructor Squadron attached 10 February 1951 15 June 1952 assigned 16 June 1952 15 September 1963 24 August 1988 1 September 1991 340th Air Refueling Squadron attached 20 October 1952 18 January 1954 341st Air Refueling Squadron attached 11 June 1954 15 August 1955 924th Air Refueling Squadron 1 July 1959 1 September 1991 4017th Combat Crew Training Squadron 8 January 1955 c 1 July 1986Bases edit Merced Army Air Field Later Castle Air Force Base California 15 August 1947 30 September 1995 Robins Air Force Base Georgia 29 January 1996 1 October 2002 Moody Air Force Base Georgia 29 January 2008 presentAircraft edit B 50 1947 1954 KC 97G 1953 1957 B 47E 1954 1956 KC 135A 1957 1992 KC 135R 1986 1992 B 52B 1955 1965 B 52D 1956 1974 B 52E 1957 1970 B 52F 1958 1974 B 52G 1966 1994 B 52H 1974 1993 E 8C Joint STARS 1996 2002 See also editList of B 50 units of the United States Air Force List of B 47 units of the United States Air Force List of B 52 Units of the United States Air Force David Wade deputy commander of the 93rd from 1950 to 1951References editNotes edit Explanatory Notes This aircraft serial 52 8711 was retired in 1965 and put on display at the Aerospace Museum at Offutt Air Force Base Nebraska Knaack p 243 SAC was quick to point out that five to six hours could have been shaved off the flight time if it had jet KC 135 Stratotankers instead of propeller driven KC 97s to refuel the bombers Knaack p 244 Footnotes a b Robertson Patsy 15 August 2012 Factsheet 93 Air Ground Operations Wing ACC Air Force Historical Research Agency Retrieved 9 March 2017 a b c Knaack p 237 a b Knaack p 244 Knaack p 266 Knaack p 256 Bibliography edit nbsp This article incorporates public domain material from the Air Force Historical Research Agency Endicott Judy G 1999 Active Air Force wings as of 1 October 1995 USAF active flying space and missile squadrons as of 1 October 1995 Maxwell AFB Alabama Office of Air Force History CD ROM Fletcher Harry R 1989 Air Force Bases Volume II Active Air Force Bases outside the United States of America on 17 September 1982 Maxwell AFB Alabama Office of Air Force History ISBN 0 912799 53 6 Knaack Marcelle Size 1988 Encyclopedia of US Air Force Aircraft and Missile Systems Vol 2 Post World War II Bombers 1945 1973 Washington DC Office of Air Force History ISBN 0 912799 59 5 Ravenstein Charles A 1984 Air Force Combat Wings Lineage and Honors Histories 1947 1977 Maxwell AFB Alabama Office of Air Force History ISBN 0 912799 12 9 Mueller Robert 1989 Volume 1 Active Air Force Bases Within the United States of America on 17 September 1982 USAF Reference Series Office of Air Force History United States Air Force Washington D C ISBN 0 912799 53 6 ISBN 0 16 002261 4 Rogers Brian 2005 United States Air Force Unit Designations Since 1978 Hinkley England Midland Publications ISBN 1 85780 197 0 Air Force Historical Research AgencyExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to 93d Air Ground Operations Wing United States Air Force Air Force Historical Research Agency The 93rd Bombardment Group Museum Station 104 Hardwick A small museum on the actual airfield site in Nissen Quonset and brick built huts Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 93rd Air Ground Operations Wing amp oldid 1206659300, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.