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Wikipedia

McCoy Air Force Base

McCoy AFB (1940–1947, 1951–1975) is a former U.S. Air Force installation located 10 miles (16 km) southeast of Orlando, Florida. It was a training base during World War II. From 1951 to 1975, it was a front line Strategic Air Command (SAC) base during the Cold War and Vietnam War. It was Orlando's biggest employer and economic backbone prior to the opening of Walt Disney World in 1971.

McCoy Air Force Base
Part of Strategic Air Command
Orlando, Florida
Boeing B-52D-40-BW Stratofortress, AF Serial No. 56-0687, on display at B-52 Memorial Park, Orlando International Airport, Florida (Ex-McCoy AFB). Photo taken 4 April 2003.
McCoy AFB
Coordinates28°25′46″N 081°18′32″W / 28.42944°N 81.30889°W / 28.42944; -81.30889
TypeAir Force Base
Site history
Built1940
In use1940–1975

With McCoy's closure as an active USAF facility in 1975, the site was redeveloped and is known today as Orlando International Airport, which continues to carry the base's original FAA LID airport code of MCO (i.e., McCoy) and ICAO airport code of KMCO.

Over the course of its existence the installation had several names, including Orlando Army Air Field #2, Pinecastle Army Airfield, and Pinecastle Air Force Base.

History

McCoy Air Force Base was named for Colonel Michael Norman Wright McCoy (born 1905) on 7 May 1958. Col McCoy was killed on 9 October 1957 in the crash of a B-47 Stratojet (DB-47B-35-BW), AF Ser. No. 51-2177, of the 447th Bomb Squadron, 321st Bombardment Wing, which suffered wing failure northwest of downtown Orlando, Florida while taking part in a practice demonstration during the annual Strategic Air Command Bombing Navigation and Reconnaissance Competition at Pinecastle AFB, Florida. McCoy was the aircraft commander during the flight and the mishap aircraft was one of two at Pinecastle that had been modified to carry the GAM-63 RASCAL air-to-surface missile.

At the time of his death, McCoy was serving as the commander of the 321st Bombardment Wing, the host wing of Pinecastle AFB. A hugely popular figure in Central Florida, Colonel McCoy was buried at Arlington National Cemetery in a funeral that included a flyover of multiple B-47s.

World War II

 
1947 aerial photo of Pinecastle Army Airfield

The facility originally was built in 1940 as a replacement civilian airport after the takeover and conversion of the Orlando Municipal Airport (present day Orlando Executive Airport) to Orlando Army Air Base by the U.S. Army Air Corps. However, with the expansion of Orlando AAB following establishment of the Army Air Forces School of Applied Tactics (AAFSAT) in 1942, the new civilian airport was also leased by the now-renamed U.S. Army Air Forces, initially being designated as Orlando Army Air Field #2 and becoming a sub-base of Orlando AAB. On 1 January 1943, it was renamed as Pinecastle Army Airfield.

Pinecastle AAF was intended to support the training mission of Orlando AAB. Two bomb squadrons of the 9th Bombardment Group at Orlando AAB, the 5th, equipped with B-24 Liberators and the 99th, with B-25 Mitchells, B-26 Marauders and B-17 Flying Fortresses, operated from Pinecastle during the war. The squadrons had the mission of training future combat aircrews for a wide variety of bombing missions in advanced combat techniques.

In addition to the training mission, beginning in 1943, Pinecastle AAF was used as the AAFSAT Technical Center, operating an Air Force General Maintenance and Supply Depot facility. On 1 June 1944, the 901st Army Air Forces Base Unit (Heavy Bombardment), took over the bomber training mission with two squadrons, "G" and "H".

Records indicate that aircraft from Pinecastle AAF performed test bombing of chemical munitions at one of Pinecastle's numerous bombing and gunnery ranges. It is uncertain whether the chemical warfare materials used in these tests were stored at Pinecastle Army Airfield or transported from the Orlando Toxic Gas and Decontamination Yard at Orlando AAB a few hours before a practice bombing run.

With the drawdown and closure of wartime airfields after the German capitulation in May 1945, units from other bases in Florida were consolidated at Pinecastle AAF. On 1 July 1945, jurisdiction of the field was transferred to Air Proving Ground Command at Eglin Field, Florida. The 901st AAFBU was inactivated and replaced by the 621st Base Unit.

Postwar years

In August 1945, under the Proving Ground Command (PGC), the base was used for testing of the B-32 Dominator bomber, although operations in 1945 at the field were severely curtailed due to personnel shortages caused by post-war demobilization. Weapons tests of the VB-6 Felix infrared heat seeking and VB-3 Razon radio-controlled gliding bombs were also carried out.

Beginning in January 1946, Bell Aircraft Corporation's chief test pilot Jack Woolams tested the X-1 supersonic aircraft, originally designated the XS-1, at the airfield because of the area's then-remote location and 10,000-foot runway.

In March 1946, the X-1 program was relocated to Muroc AAF, California. The move was a logistics issue as much as anything, as Pinecastle was deemed not suitable for the X-1 project. A move to the remote California desert ensured the X-1 project team could maintain secrecy, an important issue considering the project was highly classified at the time. In addition, Muroc had an expansive landing area, thanks to the surrounding dry lakebeds, and better visibility. The X-1's high sink rate and the problems of keeping the plane in sight amid Florida's frequent clouds also added two more votes in favor of the Army Air Force's decision to go to Muroc.

This aircraft, later flown by then-Captain (Brigadier General, USAF, Retired) Chuck Yeager, would be the first aircraft in history to successfully exceed the speed of sound in level flight. With the X-1 project transferred, Pinecastle AAF was closed and the entire site was transferred to the City of Orlando in 1947 with a reversal clause for future military use if deemed to be necessary for national defense purposes.

Cold War

Air Training Command

As a result of the outbreak of the Korean War, the United States Air Force's Air Training Command (ATC) reacquired and reactivated the facility, renaming it Pinecastle Air Force Base on 1 September 1951. ATC immediately began a $100 million military construction (MILCON) program at the World War II facility, to include lengthening the existing north–south runway and constructing a parallel north–south runway, both over 12,000 feet in length. Actual flight training operations, however, did not begin until early 1952.

The 3540th Flying Training Wing (later redesignated the 4240th Flying Training Wing) was activated at the base for the purpose of training personnel in Strategic Air Command's (SAC) new Boeing B-47 Stratojet medium jet bomber. Eighty-four B-47s were allocated for the training, and SAC transferred thirty experienced aircraft commanders to Pinecastle to serve as instructors. According to the basic plan, ATC would train forty-nine crews by the end of 1952. But from the beginning, mechanical problems with the B-47 and a lack of equipment prevented training. In addition, the base was inadequate at the time with regards to training facilities. The first B-47 class arrived at the base on 6 November 1952 and the first B-47 crew training program started a few weeks later when Class 53-6A entered combat crew training on 22 December 1952. The first trained B-47 crews graduated from training during the first half of 1953.

On 1 January 1954, Air Training Command transferred both the B-47 crew training mission at Pinecastle AFB and jurisdiction of the base to the Strategic Air Command.

321st Bombardment Wing and 19th Bombardment Wing

 
Postcard from Pinecastle AFB in the mid-1950s, showing the Pinecastle AFB control tower and a Boeing
B-47E-90-BW Stratojet, AF Ser. No. 52-0477, of the 321st Bomb Wing on the ramp. This B-47 was sent to AMARC in November 1964.
The control tower would continue to be used by McCoy AFB and as the first control tower for Orlando International Airport.

On 15 December 1953, the 321st Bombardment Wing (Medium) was activated at Pinecastle AFB, absorbing all B-47 bombers and KC-97 tankers at the base. The B-47 combat crew training mission was also transferred from ATC to SAC. Colonel Michael N.W. McCoy, previously commander of the 306th Bombardment Wing at MacDill Air Force Base, Florida, was appointed commander of the 321st Bombardment Wing on 24 May 1954, having earned the unofficial distinction of being the "dean" of the Strategic Air Command's B-47 "Stratojet" aircraft commanders.

In July 1954, the 19th Bombardment Wing joined the 321st at Pinecastle AFB and the two units came under the control of the 813th Strategic Aerospace Division.[1] The 813th was subsequently inactivated in the summer of 1956 when the 19th Bomb Wing moved to Homestead Air Force Base, Florida.

In November 1957, the base was host to the medium and heavy bombers participating in the annual Strategic Air Command Bombing Navigation and Reconnaissance Competition. During the competition, a B-47 aircraft mishap north of downtown Orlando took the lives of Colonel McCoy, Group Captain John Woodroffe of the Royal Air Force, Lieutenant Colonel Charles Joyce, and Major Vernon Stuff during preparations for the event. Despite this tragedy, the 321st Bomb Wing, under the direction of its new commander, Colonel Robert W. Strong, Jr., won the top honors of the meet, including the coveted Fairchild and McKay trophies, distinguishing the 321st as the top B-47 Wing in SAC.

76th Fighter Interceptor Squadron

Another distinguished unit assigned to Pinecastle AFB in November 1957 was the Air Defense Command's 76th Fighter Interceptor Squadron (76 FIS).[2] A descendant of the famous World War II "Flying Tigers," the 76 FIS was commanded by Major Morris F. Wilson and flew the F-89H "Scorpion" all-weather fighter-interceptor. One of the last squadrons to fly the Scorpion, the 76 FIS was transferred from McCoy to Westover AFB, Massachusetts on 1 February 1961.

McCoy AFB

On 7 May 1958, Pinecastle AFB was renamed McCoy Air Force Base in memory of the late Colonel Michael N. W. McCoy. Formal dedication ceremonies were held on 21 May 1958 in conjunction with a mammoth base open house, during which an estimated 30,000 Floridians attended.

In the summer of 1961, a complete reorganization of the base began in order to convert the base from the B-47 Stratojet medium jet bomber to the Boeing B-52 Stratofortress heavy bomber. As part of this program, the 321st Bomb Wing began phasing out its operations in June 1961 and was inactivated in October 1961.

4047th Strategic Wing

 
Postcard from McCoy AFB in the early 1960s, showing the McCoy AFB control tower and base operations building, Boeing B-52D-5-BW Stratofortress, AF Ser. No. 55-5054, and Boeing KC-135A-BN Stratotanker, AF Ser. No. 57-1506, of the 4047th Strategic Wing.

On 1 July 1961, the 321st was replaced by the 4047th Strategic Wing (Heavy), which was designated and organized under its first commander, Col Francis S. Holmes, Jr. The 4047th was part of SAC's "Strategic Wing" concept, which was to disperse its medium and heavy bombers and tanker aircraft over a larger number of bases, thus making it more difficult for the Soviet Union to knock out the entire fleet with a surprise first strike. All of the Strategic Wings had one squadron of B-52s, containing 15 aircraft, and most also had a squadron of fifteen KC-135 tanker aircraft. Half of the bombers and tankers were maintained on fifteen-minute alert, fully fueled, armed, and ready for combat, while the remainder were used for training in bombardment missions and air refueling operations.

In August 1961, the first B-52D Stratofortresses were assigned to the new wing, and on 1 September 1961 the 347th Bombardment Squadron was reassigned from Westover AFB, Massachusetts to McCoy AFB as the wing's operational flying squadron for the heavy bombers. On 15 September, the 321st Combat Support Group was also organized and on that same date Colonel William G. Walker, Jr., assumed command of the 4047th Strategic Wing.

966th Airborne Early Warning and Control Squadron

 
USAF EC-121D Warning Star, AF Ser. No. 53-0536, of the 551st AEW&CW at Otis AFB

The 966th Airborne Early Warning & Control Squadron was activated on 18 December 1961 and was organized two months later at McCoy AFB as a geographically separated unit (GSU) of the 551st Airborne Early Warning and Control Wing at Otis AFB, Massachusetts. While at McCoy, the squadron flew the propeller-driven EC-121 Warning Star radar surveillance aircraft in its EC-121D and EC-121Q variants. The squadron changed its parent wing on 1 May 1963, coming under the 552nd Airborne Early Warning and Control Wing, headquartered at McClellan AFB, California. The mission of the 966th Airborne Early Warning and Control Squadron covered a broad spectrum of responsibilities. As an Air Defense Command,(later Aerospace Defense Command) (ADC) unit, the 966th also supported Strategic Air Command and Tactical Air Command (TAC) operations, assisted U.S. Navy P-2 Neptune and P-3 Orion aircraft in anti-submarine and maritime surveillance patrols, and developed weather information. It also furnished airborne radar surveillance and technical control in support of global air defense and Joint Chiefs of Staff contingency operations. 966th aircrews also frequently deployed to distant operational locations including Southeast Asia. The squadron was inactivated on 31 December 1969, although detachments from other EC-121 squadrons would continue to operate at McCoy AFB throughout the early 1970s.

Joint Civil-Military Use: McCoy AFB and the Orlando-McCoy Jetport

In the early 1960s, the then-Orlando Herndon Airport began to start providing commercial jet service. However, its World War II era 6,000-foot runways were dangerously short to handle the new Boeing 707, Convair 880 and Douglas DC-8 commercial passenger jets. In addition, the air terminal built in 1951 was inadequate to accommodate the increasing number of passengers. McCoy Air Force Base, with its two 12,000-foot runways, was more than capable of safely accommodating the passenger jets.

In 1962 an agreement was worked out between the Air Force and the City of Orlando for the joint-use of one of the runways (18L/36R) for airline operations, and the purchase of two former AGM-28 Hound Dog missile storage hangars in the northeast corner of the installation by the city for conversion into a passenger air terminal for use by Delta, Eastern, and National Airlines. The Orlando-McCoy Jetport opened in 1964, with Delta Air Lines being the first airline to offer jet passenger service to the new Orlando-McCoy Jetport with Delta's DC-8 Fanjet aircraft. By 1968, all airline operations had moved from Herndon Airport to the new Orlando-McCoy Jetport.

With the opening of Walt Disney World in 1971, the amount of air traffic increased substantially, especially with Boeing 727, Boeing 737 and Douglas DC-9 aircraft. As a result, the agreement with the Air Force was amended to allow for an expansion of the civil airport facilities. Additional acreage was provided to Orlando east of the airfield in 1972 and two modern airport terminals were constructed between 1978 and 1981, along with improved parking and other infrastructure. With the improved civil airport at McCoy, the new wide-body Boeing 747, Douglas DC-10, and Lockheed L-1011 TriStar airliners began scheduled service.[3]

Cuban Missile Crisis

On 14 October 1962, a Lockheed U-2 from the 4080th Strategic Reconnaissance Wing at Laughlin Air Force Base, Texas piloted by Major Richard S. Heyser, USAF, launched from Edwards AFB, California for a high altitude reconnaissance flight over Cuba. Arriving over the island an hour after sunrise, Heyser photographed the Soviet military installing nuclear armed SS-4 medium range and SS-5 intermediate range ballistic missiles in Cuba, thereby precipitating the Cuban Missile Crisis.

 
U-2A, similar to U-2Fs operating at McCoy AFB in 1962, in the collection of the National Museum of the U.S. Air Force

Heyser concluded this flight at McCoy AFB and the 4080th subsequently established a U-2 operating location at McCoy AFB, launching and recovering numerous flights over Cuba for the duration of the crisis. On 21 October, Attorney General of the United States Robert F. Kennedy; United States Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara; Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Maxwell Taylor, USA; and General Walter C. Sweeney, Jr., USAF met with President John F. Kennedy concerning a military contingency plan regarding this development. The 4080th's operating location at McCoy AFB, designated OL-X, operated two U-2 aircraft and flew at least 82 missions over Cuba from McCoy AFB from 22 October – 6 December 1962.

General Sweeney, as Commander of Tactical Air Command (TAC), proposed an operational plan which first called for an air attack on the surface-to-air missile (SAM) sites in the vicinity of known medium range (MRBM) and intermediate range ballistic missile (IRBM) launchers by eight fighter-bombers per SAM site. Concurrently, each of the Cuban MiG airfields thought to be protecting MRBM/IRBM sites were to be struck by at least twelve fighters. Following the air strikes on SAM sites and MiG fighter airfields, each MRBM and IRBM launch site was to be attacked by at least twelve aircraft. General Sweeney's plan was accepted and, additionally, Cuban Ilyushin Il-28 "Beagle" medium bomber airfields were added to the target list.

To support this plan, the USAF deployed the following TAC units to McCoy AFB while simultaneously dispersing the 4047th Strategic Wing's B-52 and KC-135 aircraft:

 
F-100, AF Ser. No. 56-3869, of the 354 TFW at McCoy AFB, October 1962

On the morning of 27 October, a U-2 piloted by Major Rudolf Anderson, Jr., USAF, departed McCoy AFB on yet another Cuban overflight mission. A few hours into his mission, Anderson's aircraft was engaged by a Soviet-manned SA-2 Guideline surface-to-air missile site in the vicinity of Banes, Cuba. Hit by two of three SA-2 missiles fired, the aircraft was shot down over Cuba, killing Major Anderson.

A week following the shoot down, Major Anderson's remains were turned over to a United Nations representative and returned to the United States. Major Anderson became the first recipient of the Air Force Cross, the U.S. Air Force's second highest decoration for valor after the Medal of Honor, which was awarded to him posthumously.

The Cuban missile confrontation was ultimately resolved and the air strikes, which would have been followed by an invasion of Cuba, were never launched. However, all of the aforementioned squadrons and detachments except one remained at McCoy until the end of November 1962. The 4080th at Laughlin AFB and its successor unit, the 100th Strategic Reconnaissance Wing at Davis-Monthan AFB, Arizona, would continue to maintain a permanent operating location at McCoy AFB for U-2 detachment operations monitoring Cuba through 1973, when it relocated to nearby Patrick AFB. In later years, these operations would occasionally be augmented by SR-71 detachments from the 9th Strategic Reconnaissance Wing at Beale AFB, California.

306th Bombardment Wing

SAC's Strategic Wing concept was phased out in early 1963. In most cases, the aircraft and crews remained at the same base, but the wing (and its bomb squadron) were given new designations. On 1 April 1963, the 306th Bombardment Wing (306 BW), a B-47 Stratojet unit originally scheduled for inactivation, moved on paper from MacDill AFB, Florida to McCoy AFB, converting to a B-52D Stratofortress and KC-135A Stratotanker wing by absorbing the assets and personnel of the 4047th Strategic Wing. With this standup of the 306 BW, the 4074th Strategic Wing was inactivated.

 
KC-135A AF Ser. No. 60-0347 refuels B-52D AF Ser. No. 55-0057 of the 306 BW. This B-52D is now preserved on display at Maxwell AFB, Alabama

.

In addition to its "host wing" responsibilities for operating and maintaining the installation, the 306th's primary operational mission at McCoy AFB was deterring nuclear attack on the United States by maintaining constant ground alert and flying frequent cycles of airborne alert.

During the 1960s and 1970s, the 306th and McCoy AFB was a frequent host for the annual Strategic Air Command Bombing and Navigation Competition between SAC wings operating B-52, FB-111 and KC-135 aircraft from throughout the Strategic Air Command, competing for the prestigious Fairchild Trophy. Vulcan B.2 bombers and Victor K.2 tankers from the Royal Air Force (RAF) Strike Command would also travel to McCoy AFB from their home bases in the United Kingdom to participate in this multi-week competition.

Vietnam War

In 1966, the 306 BW began preparing and training for deployment to the Western Pacific in support of Projects Arc Light & Young Tiger. In September 1966, the wing deployed to Andersen AFB, Guam and Kadena Air Base, Okinawa. Its mission while in the Western Pacific was to "...Conduct bombing raids in support of US and allied ground forces fighting in the Vietnamese War." Later, the wing also operated from U-Tapao Royal Thai Navy Airfield, Thailand as U.S. forces built up in the Vietnam theater. In 1967, the 919th Air Refueling Squadron (919 ARS) was also reassigned to the 306th Bomb Wing.

 
B-52D, AF Ser. No. 55-0100, of McCoy AFB's 306th Bomb Wing while deployed to Southeast Asia. In 1972, it was one of the three final aircraft to bomb North Vietnam during Operation Linebacker II.

When not forward deployed for operations over Vietnam, the 306th continued to operate out of McCoy AFB for both training evolutions and in its stateside strategic nuclear alert role. In January 1968, the 306 BW received another Air Force Outstanding Unit Award for this "double-duty" for combat operations in Southeast Asia while maintaining an alert status for SAC.

In 1971, the 919 ARS was inactivated and its personnel and aircraft merged into the 306th Air Refueling Squadron (306 ARS). In 1972, the 306 BW would be part of the heavy bombing raids Linebacker I and Linebacker II over North Vietnam. The 306 BW returned to McCoy AFB from its final Southeast Asia deployment in early 1973 after the Paris Peace Accords ended American involvement in the conflict.

From 1971 through 1973 other training activities at McCoy AFB included KC-135Q instruction by the 306 ARS and KC-135A instruction by the 32d Air Refueling Squadron (32 ARS). Whereas KC-135A aircraft typically carried JP-4 jet fuel, KC-135Q aircraft were specifically modified and equipped to offload JP-7 fuel and supported worldwide in-flight refueling requirements for USAF SR-71 reconnaissance aircraft.

55th Aerospace Rescue and Recovery Squadron

In February 1970, following the transfer of Kindley AFB, Bermuda to the United States Navy and its redesignation as NAS Bermuda, McCoy AFB briefly became home to the 55th Aerospace Rescue and Recovery Squadron (55 ARRS) and its HC-130 Hercules aircraft. Assigned to Military Airlift Command (MAC) and its subordinate sub-command, the Aerospace Rescue and Recovery Service, the squadron relocated from McCoy AFB to Eglin AFB, Florida in June 1971.[4]

42nd Air Division

In 1971, the 42d Air Division,[5] was transferred from Blytheville Air Force Base, Arkansas and headquartered at McCoy AFB. In September 1973, with the force reduction-directed closure of McCoy AFB in progress, the air division headquarters was transferred back to Blytheville (later renamed Eaker AFB).

B-52 crash at McCoy AFB

On 31 March 1972, a 306th Bombardment Wing B-52D, AF Serial Number 56-0625, sustained multiple engine failures and an engine pod fire shortly after takeoff from McCoy AFB on a routine training mission. The aircraft was not carrying any weapons. The aircraft immediately attempted to return to the base, but crashed 3,220 feet (980 m) short of Runway 18R in a civilian residential area immediately north of the airfield, destroying or damaging eight homes. The crew of 7 airmen and a 10-year-old boy on the ground were killed.[6][7][8] An Orange County, Florida historical marker honoring the flight crew was placed adjacent to the crash site in 2012.[9]

Major commands to which assigned

Air Defense Command / Aerospace Defense Command (Tenant activity; attached 1 March 1957 – 1 February 1961; 1 February 1962 – 31 December 1973)

World War II units assigned

Major USAF units assigned

Realignment and closure

In April 1973, following the cease fire agreement with North Vietnam, the return of all American prisoners of war, and anticipated reduced defense budgets, the Secretary of Defense (SECDEF) announced the closure of more than forty (40) bases as part of a post-Vietnam reduction in force (RIF).

Included were the major SAC installations of Ramey AFB, Puerto Rico; Westover AFB, Massachusetts; Kincheloe AFB, Michigan; and McCoy AFB, Florida. In making this announcement, SECDEF Elliot Richardson noted that Ramey was on the Caribbean island of Puerto Rico and Westover and McCoy near the east coast of the United States and therefore, as a rationale for their closure, were "...subject to short warning time attacks by (Soviet) submarine-launched ballistic missiles." Richardson's decision was consistent with earlier SAC guidance, issued in 1954, to avoid basing strategic bomber forces within 250 miles of the Atlantic or Gulf Coasts, although this guidance had never been implemented.[10]

However, the 250 mile rationale had been partially employed (in addition to other factors, ranging from the retirement of SAC B-47s in the early 1960s to the costs of maintaining SAC B-52 units in Southeast Asia in support of the Vietnam War in the late 1960s) in the earlier transitioning of MacDill AFB and Homestead AFB in Florida from SAC bomber/tanker bases to TAC fighter bases, the removal of a tenant SAC bomb wing at Eglin AFB, Florida to also be replaced by a TAC fighter wing, the turnover of Turner AFB, Georgia to the United States Navy and its redesignation as Naval Air Station Albany, and the turnover of Hunter AFB, Georgia to the U.S. Army and its redesignation as Hunter Army Airfield.[11]

Westover AFB would transition to Westover Air Reserve Base, an airlift installation under Air Force Reserve control, initially for C-123 Provider and C-130 Hercules aircraft, and eventually for C-5 Galaxy aircraft. Ramey AFB, Kincheloe AFB, and McCoy AFB were destined for civilian airport status, although Ramey would become home to Coast Guard Air Station Borinquen with HH-3F Pelican and continuing today with HH-65C Dolphin helicopters and as a periodic operating location for USAF KC-135 Stratotanker aircraft.[12]

With the announcement of McCoy AFB's closure, it was also announced that the 306th Bombardment Wing would also be inactivated. The 306th Bombardment Wing (Heavy) inactivated in July 1974 as activities at the base were phased down prior to the closure, while its personnel, along with its B-52D and KC-135A aircraft assets, were redistributed to other SAC bomb wings. However, this inactivation was short-lived, when the 306th was reactivated in 1975 as the 306th Strategic Wing at RAF Mildenhall, United Kingdom, coordinating SAC KC-135 assets in support of U.S. Air Forces in Europe (USAFE) until it was replaced by the 100th Air Refueling Wing in 1992. Today, it operates as the 306th Flying Training Group, an Air Education and Training Command (AETC) unit at the U.S. Air Force Academy and Pueblo Memorial Airport as a geographically separated unit (GSU) of the 12th Flying Training Wing (12 FTW) at Randolph AFB, Texas.

EC-121 and U-2 detachment operations at McCoy AFB were also relocated in 1973 and 1974, with ADC's EC-121 aircraft moving 210 miles south to Homestead AFB and the 100th Strategic Reconnaissance Wing's U-2 detachment and associated aircraft Operating Location (OL) moving 45 miles east-southeast to Patrick AFB.

Final closure of McCoy AFB was concluded in early 1975. Those portions of McCoy AFB which were not slated for transfer to other U.S. Government activities (primarily the United States Navy and U.S. Army) were transferred to the General Services Administration (GSA). The GSA subsequently transferred title of the remaining McCoy AFB property, to include the airfield, to the City of Orlando for the sum of $1.00, a standard amount at the time for the transfer of former military air bases to state and local governments.[13] This transfer also contained a reversal clause, another standard practice at the time, enabling the Air Force to return to McCoy in the future if national security requirements ever dictated same.

The Greater Orlando Aviation Authority (GOAA) was established the following year as a successor to the City of Orlando Aviation Department via an act of the Florida State Legislature. GOAA was charged to operate and maintain both the former McCoy AFB and Herndon Airport, the latter subsequently renamed Orlando Executive Airport. The large hangars and myriad of aircraft maintenance support buildings at McCoy were eventually transferred to other U.S. Government agencies or leased by GOAA to private interests, and today many of them remain supporting the civilian aviation community. The combined former McCoy AFB and extant Orlando-McCoy Jetport was renamed the Orlando International Airport, and was greatly expanded to support the growing tourist industry in Orlando as well as the expanding business and commercial expansion of the area. Today Orlando International Airport is among the busiest commercial airports in the world as measured by annual passenger throughput. Over thirty airlines serve the airport with hundreds of daily flights to destinations across the United States and overseas. Orlando International Airport still retains the ICAO code of KMCO and the FAA and IATA code MCO, a legacy of both the Orlando-McCoy Jetport and McCoy AFB.

Current uses

Today a majority of the McCoy AFB site is operated and maintained by the Greater Orlando Aviation Authority (GOAA) as Orlando International Airport. As a governmental entity chartered by the Florida Legislature and as an enterprise fund of the City of Orlando, GOAA is tasked with the operation, administration, maintenance, and oversight of expansions and enhancements to both Orlando International Airport and the Orlando Executive Airport. GOAA also leases buildings and property to private individuals and companies, primarily for aviation-related activities in support of the respective airports. Redeveloped areas on the former McCoy AFB / current Orlando International Airport include:

  • The current 1,000-acre (4.0 km2) site for the Orlando International Airport landside and airside terminal complexes and associated support areas.
  • Two International Arrivals Concourses with customs, immigration, and agricultural inspection facilities administered by the U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP). Of the total 114 airport gates, the Greater Orlando Aviation Authority manages eleven gates with seven additional gates available for international operations. Expansive fixed-base operator, domestic, and charter flight operations facilities are also located on airport property.
  • The Orlando Tradeport, a 1,400-acre (5.7 km2) master planned integrated cargo center with direct airside access, 140 acres (0.57 km2) of cargo ramp, a 205-acre (0.83 km2) Foreign Trade Zone, and an ultramodern Plant Inspection Station with several perishable handling facilities. Originally a United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) facility, the station was transferred to the U.S. Customs and Border Protection in 2003.[14] Concurrently, many of the former USAF hangars and maintenance facilities have been taken over by civilian airlines and other aeronautical and aviation firms.

Tributes to Colonel McCoy and McCoy AFB at and near the airport include:

  • The airport's ICAO, FAA, and IATA airfield identifiers, as well as all airline tickets and baggage tags, continue to read "MCO" which stands for McCoy. The FAA also has an established standard instrument departure (SID) for aircraft departing MCO known as the MCCOY ONE Departure.[15]
  • A portrait of Colonel McCoy hangs in the airport's main landside terminal near the airport chapel.
  • One of the restaurants in the airport's Hyatt Hotel is named McCoy's.
  • The Orange County Public School System operates the Colonel Michael McCoy Elementary School, which is located just north of the airport, while a nearby thoroughfare is called McCoy Road.
  • McCoy AFB's original military credit union continues to operate throughout Central Florida as the McCoy Federal Credit Union.

Over the past 30 years, the majority of the former McCoy AFB has been subjected to extensive modification due to the addition of new structures, taxiways, or runways. In addition, the remaining lands have been subjected to extensive excavation, landfill, and improvement activities. Although several former military structures remain and a new joint military reserve facility added, a significant portion of the former air force base is barely recognizable.

A continuing impact of both the former Pinecastle AAF, Pinecastle AFB, McCoy Air Force Base, and the former Orlando AAB is the continued excavation of unspent ammunition, including small practice bombs, aerial rockets, and machine gun rounds from the World War II era in the areas northeast of the current Orlando International Airport and east and southeast of the current Orlando Executive Airport. These formerly remote and uninhabited areas were leased from local landowners at the time and used as bombing and gunnery ranges for Orlando AAB and Pinecastle AAF when both were Army Air Forces facilities during World War II. At the conclusion of the war, they were returned to the original owners and their previous primarily agricultural purposes. With Central Florida's increasing population in the 1980s, 1990s, and early 21st century, these landowners and/or their descendants sold these properties for private redevelopment, predominantly residential housing and associated support infrastructure such as schools, parks, and retail, often with limited or no knowledge of these properties previous wartime utilization. In recent years, new discoveries of unspent conventional munitions have caused repeated closures of Odyssey Middle School, northeast of Orlando International Airport.[16]

Post-closure military presence

Up until 1980, Strategic Air Command considered retaining the former SAC Alert Facility on the south end of the airfield as either an Operating Location (OL) or as a smaller installation to be called McCoy Air Force Station under control of an air base squadron for occasional dispersal basing of two B-52D/G/H and two KC-135A/E/Q aircraft from other SAC installations. This concept never came to fruition, but the Alert Facility, a nose dock hangar and several buildings on the north end of the McCoy ramp were turned over to the United States Army Reserve (USAR) for use as the 49th Army Aviation Support Facility for USAR units, specifically the 138th Aviation Company (EW), which operated RU-8D, JU-21A, RU-21A, RU-21B and RU-21C aircraft until replaced by C-12 Huron and RC-12G electronic reconnaissance aircraft, plus the 348th Medical Detachment with UH-1 medical evacuation helicopters. This arrangement permitted USAF access to the remaining military facilities at MCO if and when it became necessary. The United States Army Reserve aviation units were inactivated in 1999 pursuant to an earlier Base Realignment and Closure Commission (BRAC) decision, but most of the Alert Facility still remains under United States Army Reserve control as a non-flying military facility.

A significant portion of the McCoy AFB base facilities were transferred to the United States Navy between 1974 and 1975, primarily base housing, base exchange, commissary, medical clinic, base chapel, and morale, welfare and recreation (MWR) facilities, becoming the Naval Training Center Orlando McCoy Annex. From 1975 to 1999, the Annex supported various tenant command activities at the Annex that included the Army Reserve aviation units, other units of the U.S. Navy and the U.S. Naval Reserve, U.S. Army Reserve, Florida Army National Guard, and the U.S. Air Force Liaison Office of the Florida Wing of the Civil Air Patrol. Administrative support and housing area for both McCoy Annex activities and primary command and tenant command activities at the nearby Naval Training Center Orlando were also maintained.

In 1984, a B-52D Stratofortress, AF Serial No. 56-0687, on loan from the National Museum of the United States Air Force, was flown to Orlando International Airport from the 7th Bomb Wing at the then-Carswell AFB, Texas for permanent static display at the airport's McCoy AFB / B-52 Memorial Park. It is located north-northwest of the current civilian commercial terminal and just east of and adjacent to the former location of the since dismantled Orlando-McCoy Jetport civilian terminal.

McCoy Annex operated until Naval Training Center Orlando's closure in late 1999 pursuant to a 1993 Base Realignment and Closure Commission (BRAC) decision. The former military family housing area originally constructed by the Air Force and later utilized by the Navy and other military service branches was fully turned over to the City of Orlando in late 1999 and was redeveloped into The Villages at Southport. Housing sales began in 1996 and the complex was awarded a US Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) award for outstanding development.

With the closure of NTC Orlando in late 1999, The only military activities remaining at the former McCoy AFB today are units of the Reserve components of the United States Armed Forces.

The 1LT David R. Wilson Armed Forces Reserve Center hosts the United States Army Reserve 143rd Sustainment Command (Expeditionary), 912th Human Resources Company, 196th Transportation Company, 146th Transportation Detachment, 520th Transportation Detachment/3rd Team, 174th Judge Advocate General Detachment/10th Team, 174th Judge Advocate General Detachment/11th Team, 174th Judge Advocate General Detachment, the United States Navy Reserve Navy Operational Support Center Orlando (NOSC Orlando) and the United States Marine Corps Reserve Motor Transportation Company, Combat Logistics Battalion 451.

The Taft United States Army Reserve Center is located at 9500 Armed Forces Reserve Drive and includes the 689th Engineer Company and 418th Military Police Detachment.

The McCoy United States Army Reserve Center is home for the 377th Military Intelligence Battalion, which utilizes McCoy AFB's former SAC bomber and tanker flight crew Alert Facility (e.g., "mole hole").

The Florida Army National Guard Orlando Armory is located within the grounds of the former McCoy AFB, having converted the former McCoy AFB Officers Club into the 164th Air Defense Artillery Brigade (FL ARNG) Headquarters.

The Navy Exchange (to include an NEX MaxiMart grocery facility in lieu of a Defense Commissary Agency commissary) continued operations at the former McCoy Air Force Base. The Navy Exchange facility has a Barber Shop, Optical Shop, Tailor Shop, Subway restaurant and a Morale, Welfare and Recreation (MWR) Information, Tours and Tickets office. This is due to the continued presence of Naval Air Warfare Center and Naval Support Activity Orlando, a large National Guard & Reserve Component presence, and the military retiree population in the Orlando/Central Florida area that makes the facility financially self-sustaining.

See also

References

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

  1. ^ 813th Strategic Aerospace Division[permanent dead link]
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on 19 December 2010.
  3. ^ Orlando International Airport History
  4. ^ 55th Rescue Squadron
  5. ^ http://afhra.maxwell.af.mil/rso/airdivision_pages/0042ad.asp[permanent dead link]
  6. ^ McCoy AFB SAC 306 BOMB WINGFIRE DEPT
  7. ^ Orlando Plane Crash NBC News broadcast from the Vanderbilt Television News Archive 2 December 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ "Death Awaited Struggling B-52 Crew Central Florida's Worst Plane Crash Occurred 15 Years Ago". Orlando Sentinel. 30 March 1987. Retrieved 29 May 2011.
  9. ^ "Historic plaque dedication to honor crew". 31 March 2012.
  10. ^ "Air Force Historical Support Division > Home" (PDF).
  11. ^ "Air Force Historical Support Division > Home" (PDF).
  12. ^ "USA – Air Force Boeing KC-135T Stratotanker photo by Angel Duran".
  13. ^ "Chapter 3. Federal Obligations from Property Conveyances" (PDF). 30 September 2009.
  14. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 June 2012. Retrieved 8 July 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  15. ^ "AirNav: KMCO – Orlando International Airport".
  16. ^ . Archived from the original on 12 February 2008. Retrieved 4 August 2008.
  • Lloyd, Alwyn T. (2000), A Cold War Legacy, A Tribute to Strategic Air Command, 1946–1992, Pictorial Histories Publications ISBN 1-57510-052-5
  • Maurer, Maurer (1983). Air Force Combat Units of World War II. Maxwell AFB, Alabama: Office of Air Force History. ISBN 0-89201-092-4.
  • Mueller, Robert (1989). Active Air Force Bases Within the United States of America on 17 September 1982. USAF Reference Series, Maxwell AFB, Alabama: Office of Air Force History. ISBN 0-912799-53-6
  • 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.
  • Rogers, Brian (2005). United States Air Force Unit Designations Since 1978. Hinkley, England: Midland Publications. ISBN 1-85780-197-0.
  • Turner Publishing Company (1997), Strategic Air Command: The Story of the Strategic Air Command and Its People. Turner Publishing Company ISBN 1-56311-265-5
  • Shaw, Frederick J. (2004), Locating Air Force Base Sites History's Legacy, Air Force History and Museums Program, United States Air Force, Washington DC, 2004.
  • Strategic-Air-Command.com

External links

    mccoy, force, base, civil, this, facility, airport, information, orlando, international, airport, world, fighter, bomber, training, base, orlando, orlando, army, base, cold, tactical, command, missile, training, base, orlando, orlando, force, base, mccoy, 1940. For the civil use of this facility and airport information see Orlando International Airport For the World War II fighter and bomber training base in Orlando see Orlando Army Air Base For the Cold War Tactical Air Command TAC missile training base in Orlando see Orlando Air Force Base McCoy AFB 1940 1947 1951 1975 is a former U S Air Force installation located 10 miles 16 km southeast of Orlando Florida It was a training base during World War II From 1951 to 1975 it was a front line Strategic Air Command SAC base during the Cold War and Vietnam War It was Orlando s biggest employer and economic backbone prior to the opening of Walt Disney World in 1971 McCoy Air Force BasePart of Strategic Air CommandOrlando FloridaBoeing B 52D 40 BW Stratofortress AF Serial No 56 0687 on display at B 52 Memorial Park Orlando International Airport Florida Ex McCoy AFB Photo taken 4 April 2003 McCoy AFBCoordinates28 25 46 N 081 18 32 W 28 42944 N 81 30889 W 28 42944 81 30889TypeAir Force BaseSite historyBuilt1940In use1940 1975With McCoy s closure as an active USAF facility in 1975 the site was redeveloped and is known today as Orlando International Airport which continues to carry the base s original FAA LID airport code of MCO i e McCoy and ICAO airport code of KMCO Over the course of its existence the installation had several names including Orlando Army Air Field 2 Pinecastle Army Airfield and Pinecastle Air Force Base Contents 1 History 1 1 World War II 1 2 Postwar years 1 3 Cold War 1 3 1 Air Training Command 1 3 2 321st Bombardment Wing and 19th Bombardment Wing 1 3 3 76th Fighter Interceptor Squadron 1 3 4 McCoy AFB 1 3 5 4047th Strategic Wing 1 3 6 966th Airborne Early Warning and Control Squadron 1 3 7 Joint Civil Military Use McCoy AFB and the Orlando McCoy Jetport 1 3 8 Cuban Missile Crisis 1 3 9 306th Bombardment Wing 1 3 9 1 Vietnam War 1 3 10 55th Aerospace Rescue and Recovery Squadron 1 3 11 42nd Air Division 1 3 12 B 52 crash at McCoy AFB 1 4 Major commands to which assigned 1 5 World War II units assigned 1 6 Major USAF units assigned 1 7 Realignment and closure 2 Current uses 2 1 Post closure military presence 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksHistory EditMcCoy Air Force Base was named for Colonel Michael Norman Wright McCoy born 1905 on 7 May 1958 Col McCoy was killed on 9 October 1957 in the crash of a B 47 Stratojet DB 47B 35 BW AF Ser No 51 2177 of the 447th Bomb Squadron 321st Bombardment Wing which suffered wing failure northwest of downtown Orlando Florida while taking part in a practice demonstration during the annual Strategic Air Command Bombing Navigation and Reconnaissance Competition at Pinecastle AFB Florida McCoy was the aircraft commander during the flight and the mishap aircraft was one of two at Pinecastle that had been modified to carry the GAM 63 RASCAL air to surface missile At the time of his death McCoy was serving as the commander of the 321st Bombardment Wing the host wing of Pinecastle AFB A hugely popular figure in Central Florida Colonel McCoy was buried at Arlington National Cemetery in a funeral that included a flyover of multiple B 47s World War II Edit 1947 aerial photo of Pinecastle Army AirfieldThe facility originally was built in 1940 as a replacement civilian airport after the takeover and conversion of the Orlando Municipal Airport present day Orlando Executive Airport to Orlando Army Air Base by the U S Army Air Corps However with the expansion of Orlando AAB following establishment of the Army Air Forces School of Applied Tactics AAFSAT in 1942 the new civilian airport was also leased by the now renamed U S Army Air Forces initially being designated as Orlando Army Air Field 2 and becoming a sub base of Orlando AAB On 1 January 1943 it was renamed as Pinecastle Army Airfield Pinecastle AAF was intended to support the training mission of Orlando AAB Two bomb squadrons of the 9th Bombardment Group at Orlando AAB the 5th equipped with B 24 Liberators and the 99th with B 25 Mitchells B 26 Marauders and B 17 Flying Fortresses operated from Pinecastle during the war The squadrons had the mission of training future combat aircrews for a wide variety of bombing missions in advanced combat techniques In addition to the training mission beginning in 1943 Pinecastle AAF was used as the AAFSAT Technical Center operating an Air Force General Maintenance and Supply Depot facility On 1 June 1944 the 901st Army Air Forces Base Unit Heavy Bombardment took over the bomber training mission with two squadrons G and H Records indicate that aircraft from Pinecastle AAF performed test bombing of chemical munitions at one of Pinecastle s numerous bombing and gunnery ranges It is uncertain whether the chemical warfare materials used in these tests were stored at Pinecastle Army Airfield or transported from the Orlando Toxic Gas and Decontamination Yard at Orlando AAB a few hours before a practice bombing run With the drawdown and closure of wartime airfields after the German capitulation in May 1945 units from other bases in Florida were consolidated at Pinecastle AAF On 1 July 1945 jurisdiction of the field was transferred to Air Proving Ground Command at Eglin Field Florida The 901st AAFBU was inactivated and replaced by the 621st Base Unit Postwar years Edit In August 1945 under the Proving Ground Command PGC the base was used for testing of the B 32 Dominator bomber although operations in 1945 at the field were severely curtailed due to personnel shortages caused by post war demobilization Weapons tests of the VB 6 Felix infrared heat seeking and VB 3 Razon radio controlled gliding bombs were also carried out Beginning in January 1946 Bell Aircraft Corporation s chief test pilot Jack Woolams tested the X 1 supersonic aircraft originally designated the XS 1 at the airfield because of the area s then remote location and 10 000 foot runway In March 1946 the X 1 program was relocated to Muroc AAF California The move was a logistics issue as much as anything as Pinecastle was deemed not suitable for the X 1 project A move to the remote California desert ensured the X 1 project team could maintain secrecy an important issue considering the project was highly classified at the time In addition Muroc had an expansive landing area thanks to the surrounding dry lakebeds and better visibility The X 1 s high sink rate and the problems of keeping the plane in sight amid Florida s frequent clouds also added two more votes in favor of the Army Air Force s decision to go to Muroc This aircraft later flown by then Captain Brigadier General USAF Retired Chuck Yeager would be the first aircraft in history to successfully exceed the speed of sound in level flight With the X 1 project transferred Pinecastle AAF was closed and the entire site was transferred to the City of Orlando in 1947 with a reversal clause for future military use if deemed to be necessary for national defense purposes Cold War Edit Air Training Command Edit As a result of the outbreak of the Korean War the United States Air Force s Air Training Command ATC reacquired and reactivated the facility renaming it Pinecastle Air Force Base on 1 September 1951 ATC immediately began a 100 million military construction MILCON program at the World War II facility to include lengthening the existing north south runway and constructing a parallel north south runway both over 12 000 feet in length Actual flight training operations however did not begin until early 1952 The 3540th Flying Training Wing later redesignated the 4240th Flying Training Wing was activated at the base for the purpose of training personnel in Strategic Air Command s SAC new Boeing B 47 Stratojet medium jet bomber Eighty four B 47s were allocated for the training and SAC transferred thirty experienced aircraft commanders to Pinecastle to serve as instructors According to the basic plan ATC would train forty nine crews by the end of 1952 But from the beginning mechanical problems with the B 47 and a lack of equipment prevented training In addition the base was inadequate at the time with regards to training facilities The first B 47 class arrived at the base on 6 November 1952 and the first B 47 crew training program started a few weeks later when Class 53 6A entered combat crew training on 22 December 1952 The first trained B 47 crews graduated from training during the first half of 1953 On 1 January 1954 Air Training Command transferred both the B 47 crew training mission at Pinecastle AFB and jurisdiction of the base to the Strategic Air Command 321st Bombardment Wing and 19th Bombardment Wing Edit Postcard from Pinecastle AFB in the mid 1950s showing the Pinecastle AFB control tower and a Boeing B 47E 90 BW Stratojet AF Ser No 52 0477 of the 321st Bomb Wing on the ramp This B 47 was sent to AMARC in November 1964 The control tower would continue to be used by McCoy AFB and as the first control tower for Orlando International Airport On 15 December 1953 the 321st Bombardment Wing Medium was activated at Pinecastle AFB absorbing all B 47 bombers and KC 97 tankers at the base The B 47 combat crew training mission was also transferred from ATC to SAC Colonel Michael N W McCoy previously commander of the 306th Bombardment Wing at MacDill Air Force Base Florida was appointed commander of the 321st Bombardment Wing on 24 May 1954 having earned the unofficial distinction of being the dean of the Strategic Air Command s B 47 Stratojet aircraft commanders In July 1954 the 19th Bombardment Wing joined the 321st at Pinecastle AFB and the two units came under the control of the 813th Strategic Aerospace Division 1 The 813th was subsequently inactivated in the summer of 1956 when the 19th Bomb Wing moved to Homestead Air Force Base Florida In November 1957 the base was host to the medium and heavy bombers participating in the annual Strategic Air Command Bombing Navigation and Reconnaissance Competition During the competition a B 47 aircraft mishap north of downtown Orlando took the lives of Colonel McCoy Group Captain John Woodroffe of the Royal Air Force Lieutenant Colonel Charles Joyce and Major Vernon Stuff during preparations for the event Despite this tragedy the 321st Bomb Wing under the direction of its new commander Colonel Robert W Strong Jr won the top honors of the meet including the coveted Fairchild and McKay trophies distinguishing the 321st as the top B 47 Wing in SAC 76th Fighter Interceptor Squadron Edit Another distinguished unit assigned to Pinecastle AFB in November 1957 was the Air Defense Command s 76th Fighter Interceptor Squadron 76 FIS 2 A descendant of the famous World War II Flying Tigers the 76 FIS was commanded by Major Morris F Wilson and flew the F 89H Scorpion all weather fighter interceptor One of the last squadrons to fly the Scorpion the 76 FIS was transferred from McCoy to Westover AFB Massachusetts on 1 February 1961 McCoy AFB Edit On 7 May 1958 Pinecastle AFB was renamed McCoy Air Force Base in memory of the late Colonel Michael N W McCoy Formal dedication ceremonies were held on 21 May 1958 in conjunction with a mammoth base open house during which an estimated 30 000 Floridians attended In the summer of 1961 a complete reorganization of the base began in order to convert the base from the B 47 Stratojet medium jet bomber to the Boeing B 52 Stratofortress heavy bomber As part of this program the 321st Bomb Wing began phasing out its operations in June 1961 and was inactivated in October 1961 4047th Strategic Wing Edit Postcard from McCoy AFB in the early 1960s showing the McCoy AFB control tower and base operations building Boeing B 52D 5 BW Stratofortress AF Ser No 55 5054 and Boeing KC 135A BN Stratotanker AF Ser No 57 1506 of the 4047th Strategic Wing On 1 July 1961 the 321st was replaced by the 4047th Strategic Wing Heavy which was designated and organized under its first commander Col Francis S Holmes Jr The 4047th was part of SAC s Strategic Wing concept which was to disperse its medium and heavy bombers and tanker aircraft over a larger number of bases thus making it more difficult for the Soviet Union to knock out the entire fleet with a surprise first strike All of the Strategic Wings had one squadron of B 52s containing 15 aircraft and most also had a squadron of fifteen KC 135 tanker aircraft Half of the bombers and tankers were maintained on fifteen minute alert fully fueled armed and ready for combat while the remainder were used for training in bombardment missions and air refueling operations In August 1961 the first B 52D Stratofortresses were assigned to the new wing and on 1 September 1961 the 347th Bombardment Squadron was reassigned from Westover AFB Massachusetts to McCoy AFB as the wing s operational flying squadron for the heavy bombers On 15 September the 321st Combat Support Group was also organized and on that same date Colonel William G Walker Jr assumed command of the 4047th Strategic Wing 966th Airborne Early Warning and Control Squadron Edit USAF EC 121D Warning Star AF Ser No 53 0536 of the 551st AEW amp CW at Otis AFBThe 966th Airborne Early Warning amp Control Squadron was activated on 18 December 1961 and was organized two months later at McCoy AFB as a geographically separated unit GSU of the 551st Airborne Early Warning and Control Wing at Otis AFB Massachusetts While at McCoy the squadron flew the propeller driven EC 121 Warning Star radar surveillance aircraft in its EC 121D and EC 121Q variants The squadron changed its parent wing on 1 May 1963 coming under the 552nd Airborne Early Warning and Control Wing headquartered at McClellan AFB California The mission of the 966th Airborne Early Warning and Control Squadron covered a broad spectrum of responsibilities As an Air Defense Command later Aerospace Defense Command ADC unit the 966th also supported Strategic Air Command and Tactical Air Command TAC operations assisted U S Navy P 2 Neptune and P 3 Orion aircraft in anti submarine and maritime surveillance patrols and developed weather information It also furnished airborne radar surveillance and technical control in support of global air defense and Joint Chiefs of Staff contingency operations 966th aircrews also frequently deployed to distant operational locations including Southeast Asia The squadron was inactivated on 31 December 1969 although detachments from other EC 121 squadrons would continue to operate at McCoy AFB throughout the early 1970s Joint Civil Military Use McCoy AFB and the Orlando McCoy Jetport Edit In the early 1960s the then Orlando Herndon Airport began to start providing commercial jet service However its World War II era 6 000 foot runways were dangerously short to handle the new Boeing 707 Convair 880 and Douglas DC 8 commercial passenger jets In addition the air terminal built in 1951 was inadequate to accommodate the increasing number of passengers McCoy Air Force Base with its two 12 000 foot runways was more than capable of safely accommodating the passenger jets In 1962 an agreement was worked out between the Air Force and the City of Orlando for the joint use of one of the runways 18L 36R for airline operations and the purchase of two former AGM 28 Hound Dog missile storage hangars in the northeast corner of the installation by the city for conversion into a passenger air terminal for use by Delta Eastern and National Airlines The Orlando McCoy Jetport opened in 1964 with Delta Air Lines being the first airline to offer jet passenger service to the new Orlando McCoy Jetport with Delta s DC 8 Fanjet aircraft By 1968 all airline operations had moved from Herndon Airport to the new Orlando McCoy Jetport With the opening of Walt Disney World in 1971 the amount of air traffic increased substantially especially with Boeing 727 Boeing 737 and Douglas DC 9 aircraft As a result the agreement with the Air Force was amended to allow for an expansion of the civil airport facilities Additional acreage was provided to Orlando east of the airfield in 1972 and two modern airport terminals were constructed between 1978 and 1981 along with improved parking and other infrastructure With the improved civil airport at McCoy the new wide body Boeing 747 Douglas DC 10 and Lockheed L 1011 TriStar airliners began scheduled service 3 Cuban Missile Crisis Edit On 14 October 1962 a Lockheed U 2 from the 4080th Strategic Reconnaissance Wing at Laughlin Air Force Base Texas piloted by Major Richard S Heyser USAF launched from Edwards AFB California for a high altitude reconnaissance flight over Cuba Arriving over the island an hour after sunrise Heyser photographed the Soviet military installing nuclear armed SS 4 medium range and SS 5 intermediate range ballistic missiles in Cuba thereby precipitating the Cuban Missile Crisis U 2A similar to U 2Fs operating at McCoy AFB in 1962 in the collection of the National Museum of the U S Air ForceHeyser concluded this flight at McCoy AFB and the 4080th subsequently established a U 2 operating location at McCoy AFB launching and recovering numerous flights over Cuba for the duration of the crisis On 21 October Attorney General of the United States Robert F Kennedy United States Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Maxwell Taylor USA and General Walter C Sweeney Jr USAF met with President John F Kennedy concerning a military contingency plan regarding this development The 4080th s operating location at McCoy AFB designated OL X operated two U 2 aircraft and flew at least 82 missions over Cuba from McCoy AFB from 22 October 6 December 1962 General Sweeney as Commander of Tactical Air Command TAC proposed an operational plan which first called for an air attack on the surface to air missile SAM sites in the vicinity of known medium range MRBM and intermediate range ballistic missile IRBM launchers by eight fighter bombers per SAM site Concurrently each of the Cuban MiG airfields thought to be protecting MRBM IRBM sites were to be struck by at least twelve fighters Following the air strikes on SAM sites and MiG fighter airfields each MRBM and IRBM launch site was to be attacked by at least twelve aircraft General Sweeney s plan was accepted and additionally Cuban Ilyushin Il 28 Beagle medium bomber airfields were added to the target list To support this plan the USAF deployed the following TAC units to McCoy AFB while simultaneously dispersing the 4047th Strategic Wing s B 52 and KC 135 aircraft 4th Tactical Fighter Wing 67 F 105Bs Deployed from Seymour Johnson AFB North Carolina 354th Tactical Fighter Wing 63 F 100D Fs Deployed from Myrtle Beach AFB South Carolina 427th Air Refueling Squadron 20 KB 50Js Deployed from Langley AFB Virginia F 100 AF Ser No 56 3869 of the 354 TFW at McCoy AFB October 1962On the morning of 27 October a U 2 piloted by Major Rudolf Anderson Jr USAF departed McCoy AFB on yet another Cuban overflight mission A few hours into his mission Anderson s aircraft was engaged by a Soviet manned SA 2 Guideline surface to air missile site in the vicinity of Banes Cuba Hit by two of three SA 2 missiles fired the aircraft was shot down over Cuba killing Major Anderson A week following the shoot down Major Anderson s remains were turned over to a United Nations representative and returned to the United States Major Anderson became the first recipient of the Air Force Cross the U S Air Force s second highest decoration for valor after the Medal of Honor which was awarded to him posthumously The Cuban missile confrontation was ultimately resolved and the air strikes which would have been followed by an invasion of Cuba were never launched However all of the aforementioned squadrons and detachments except one remained at McCoy until the end of November 1962 The 4080th at Laughlin AFB and its successor unit the 100th Strategic Reconnaissance Wing at Davis Monthan AFB Arizona would continue to maintain a permanent operating location at McCoy AFB for U 2 detachment operations monitoring Cuba through 1973 when it relocated to nearby Patrick AFB In later years these operations would occasionally be augmented by SR 71 detachments from the 9th Strategic Reconnaissance Wing at Beale AFB California 306th Bombardment Wing Edit SAC s Strategic Wing concept was phased out in early 1963 In most cases the aircraft and crews remained at the same base but the wing and its bomb squadron were given new designations On 1 April 1963 the 306th Bombardment Wing 306 BW a B 47 Stratojet unit originally scheduled for inactivation moved on paper from MacDill AFB Florida to McCoy AFB converting to a B 52D Stratofortress and KC 135A Stratotanker wing by absorbing the assets and personnel of the 4047th Strategic Wing With this standup of the 306 BW the 4074th Strategic Wing was inactivated KC 135A AF Ser No 60 0347 refuels B 52D AF Ser No 55 0057 of the 306 BW This B 52D is now preserved on display at Maxwell AFB Alabama In addition to its host wing responsibilities for operating and maintaining the installation the 306th s primary operational mission at McCoy AFB was deterring nuclear attack on the United States by maintaining constant ground alert and flying frequent cycles of airborne alert During the 1960s and 1970s the 306th and McCoy AFB was a frequent host for the annual Strategic Air Command Bombing and Navigation Competition between SAC wings operating B 52 FB 111 and KC 135 aircraft from throughout the Strategic Air Command competing for the prestigious Fairchild Trophy Vulcan B 2 bombers and Victor K 2 tankers from the Royal Air Force RAF Strike Command would also travel to McCoy AFB from their home bases in the United Kingdom to participate in this multi week competition Vietnam War Edit In 1966 the 306 BW began preparing and training for deployment to the Western Pacific in support of Projects Arc Light amp Young Tiger In September 1966 the wing deployed to Andersen AFB Guam and Kadena Air Base Okinawa Its mission while in the Western Pacific was to Conduct bombing raids in support of US and allied ground forces fighting in the Vietnamese War Later the wing also operated from U Tapao Royal Thai Navy Airfield Thailand as U S forces built up in the Vietnam theater In 1967 the 919th Air Refueling Squadron 919 ARS was also reassigned to the 306th Bomb Wing B 52D AF Ser No 55 0100 of McCoy AFB s 306th Bomb Wing while deployed to Southeast Asia In 1972 it was one of the three final aircraft to bomb North Vietnam during Operation Linebacker II When not forward deployed for operations over Vietnam the 306th continued to operate out of McCoy AFB for both training evolutions and in its stateside strategic nuclear alert role In January 1968 the 306 BW received another Air Force Outstanding Unit Award for this double duty for combat operations in Southeast Asia while maintaining an alert status for SAC In 1971 the 919 ARS was inactivated and its personnel and aircraft merged into the 306th Air Refueling Squadron 306 ARS In 1972 the 306 BW would be part of the heavy bombing raids Linebacker I and Linebacker II over North Vietnam The 306 BW returned to McCoy AFB from its final Southeast Asia deployment in early 1973 after the Paris Peace Accords ended American involvement in the conflict From 1971 through 1973 other training activities at McCoy AFB included KC 135Q instruction by the 306 ARS and KC 135A instruction by the 32d Air Refueling Squadron 32 ARS Whereas KC 135A aircraft typically carried JP 4 jet fuel KC 135Q aircraft were specifically modified and equipped to offload JP 7 fuel and supported worldwide in flight refueling requirements for USAF SR 71 reconnaissance aircraft 55th Aerospace Rescue and Recovery Squadron Edit In February 1970 following the transfer of Kindley AFB Bermuda to the United States Navy and its redesignation as NAS Bermuda McCoy AFB briefly became home to the 55th Aerospace Rescue and Recovery Squadron 55 ARRS and its HC 130 Hercules aircraft Assigned to Military Airlift Command MAC and its subordinate sub command the Aerospace Rescue and Recovery Service the squadron relocated from McCoy AFB to Eglin AFB Florida in June 1971 4 42nd Air Division Edit In 1971 the 42d Air Division 5 was transferred from Blytheville Air Force Base Arkansas and headquartered at McCoy AFB In September 1973 with the force reduction directed closure of McCoy AFB in progress the air division headquarters was transferred back to Blytheville later renamed Eaker AFB B 52 crash at McCoy AFB Edit On 31 March 1972 a 306th Bombardment Wing B 52D AF Serial Number 56 0625 sustained multiple engine failures and an engine pod fire shortly after takeoff from McCoy AFB on a routine training mission The aircraft was not carrying any weapons The aircraft immediately attempted to return to the base but crashed 3 220 feet 980 m short of Runway 18R in a civilian residential area immediately north of the airfield destroying or damaging eight homes The crew of 7 airmen and a 10 year old boy on the ground were killed 6 7 8 An Orange County Florida historical marker honoring the flight crew was placed adjacent to the crash site in 2012 9 Major commands to which assigned Edit Army Air Forces Air Training Command 1 August 1940 Army Air Force School of Applied Tactics 1 October 1943 1 July 1945 Army Air Forces Proving Ground Command 1 July 1945 1947 Air Training Command 1 September 1951 1 January 1954 Strategic Air Command 1 January 1954 1975Air Defense Command Aerospace Defense Command Tenant activity attached 1 March 1957 1 February 1961 1 February 1962 31 December 1973 World War II units assigned Edit 5th Bombardment Squadron 15 April 1943 7 June 1943 13 February 9 March 1944 99th Bombardment Squadron 31 October 1942 5 February 1943 25 February 9 March 1944Major USAF units assigned Edit 3540th Flying Training Wing 1 September 1951Redesignated 4240th Flying Training Wing 1 April 1952 1 June 1954321st Bombardment Wing 4 December 1953 25 October 1961 321st Air Refueling Squadron 1 April 1952 1 August 1956 19th Bombardment Wing 11 June 1954 1 June 1956 813th Strategic Aerospace Division 15 July 1954 1 June 1956 76th Fighter Interceptor Squadron ADC 8 November 1957 1 February 1961 4047th Strategic Wing 1 September 1961 1 April 1963Replaced by 306th Bombardment Wing 1 April 1963 1 July 1974306th Air Refueling Squadron 1 April 1963 30 September 1973 Not operational 1 30 September 1973 919th Air Refueling Squadron 25 March 1967 30 June 1971 Not operational 15 30 June 1971 966th Airborne Air Control Squadron 18 December 1961 31 December 1973Deployed from 551st Airborne Early Warning and Control Wing Otis AFB Massachusetts42d Air Division 30 June 1971 1 September 1973 Units Deployed to McCoy during Cuban Missile Crisis From 4th Tactical Fighter Wing Seymour Johnson AFB North Carolina TAC 21 October 29 November 1962334th Tactical Fighter Squadron 335th Tactical Fighter Squadron 336th Tactical Fighter Squadron dd From 354th Tactical Fighter Wing Myrtle Beach AFB South Carolina TAC 21 October 1 December 1962355th Tactical Fighter Squadron 356th Tactical Fighter Squadron dd From 4505th Air Refueling Wing Langley AFB Virginia TAC 21 October 1 December 1962427th Air Refueling Squadron Deployed From Robins AFB Georgia dd Detachment 4080th Strategic Reconnaissance WingOperating Location XX OL XX October 1962 February 1966 dd Detachment 100th Strategic Reconnaissance WingOperating Location LF OL LF February 1966 o a June 1974 dd Realignment and closure Edit In April 1973 following the cease fire agreement with North Vietnam the return of all American prisoners of war and anticipated reduced defense budgets the Secretary of Defense SECDEF announced the closure of more than forty 40 bases as part of a post Vietnam reduction in force RIF Included were the major SAC installations of Ramey AFB Puerto Rico Westover AFB Massachusetts Kincheloe AFB Michigan and McCoy AFB Florida In making this announcement SECDEF Elliot Richardson noted that Ramey was on the Caribbean island of Puerto Rico and Westover and McCoy near the east coast of the United States and therefore as a rationale for their closure were subject to short warning time attacks by Soviet submarine launched ballistic missiles Richardson s decision was consistent with earlier SAC guidance issued in 1954 to avoid basing strategic bomber forces within 250 miles of the Atlantic or Gulf Coasts although this guidance had never been implemented 10 However the 250 mile rationale had been partially employed in addition to other factors ranging from the retirement of SAC B 47s in the early 1960s to the costs of maintaining SAC B 52 units in Southeast Asia in support of the Vietnam War in the late 1960s in the earlier transitioning of MacDill AFB and Homestead AFB in Florida from SAC bomber tanker bases to TAC fighter bases the removal of a tenant SAC bomb wing at Eglin AFB Florida to also be replaced by a TAC fighter wing the turnover of Turner AFB Georgia to the United States Navy and its redesignation as Naval Air Station Albany and the turnover of Hunter AFB Georgia to the U S Army and its redesignation as Hunter Army Airfield 11 Westover AFB would transition to Westover Air Reserve Base an airlift installation under Air Force Reserve control initially for C 123 Provider and C 130 Hercules aircraft and eventually for C 5 Galaxy aircraft Ramey AFB Kincheloe AFB and McCoy AFB were destined for civilian airport status although Ramey would become home to Coast Guard Air Station Borinquen with HH 3F Pelican and continuing today with HH 65C Dolphin helicopters and as a periodic operating location for USAF KC 135 Stratotanker aircraft 12 With the announcement of McCoy AFB s closure it was also announced that the 306th Bombardment Wing would also be inactivated The 306th Bombardment Wing Heavy inactivated in July 1974 as activities at the base were phased down prior to the closure while its personnel along with its B 52D and KC 135A aircraft assets were redistributed to other SAC bomb wings However this inactivation was short lived when the 306th was reactivated in 1975 as the 306th Strategic Wing at RAF Mildenhall United Kingdom coordinating SAC KC 135 assets in support of U S Air Forces in Europe USAFE until it was replaced by the 100th Air Refueling Wing in 1992 Today it operates as the 306th Flying Training Group an Air Education and Training Command AETC unit at the U S Air Force Academy and Pueblo Memorial Airport as a geographically separated unit GSU of the 12th Flying Training Wing 12 FTW at Randolph AFB Texas EC 121 and U 2 detachment operations at McCoy AFB were also relocated in 1973 and 1974 with ADC s EC 121 aircraft moving 210 miles south to Homestead AFB and the 100th Strategic Reconnaissance Wing s U 2 detachment and associated aircraft Operating Location OL moving 45 miles east southeast to Patrick AFB Final closure of McCoy AFB was concluded in early 1975 Those portions of McCoy AFB which were not slated for transfer to other U S Government activities primarily the United States Navy and U S Army were transferred to the General Services Administration GSA The GSA subsequently transferred title of the remaining McCoy AFB property to include the airfield to the City of Orlando for the sum of 1 00 a standard amount at the time for the transfer of former military air bases to state and local governments 13 This transfer also contained a reversal clause another standard practice at the time enabling the Air Force to return to McCoy in the future if national security requirements ever dictated same The Greater Orlando Aviation Authority GOAA was established the following year as a successor to the City of Orlando Aviation Department via an act of the Florida State Legislature GOAA was charged to operate and maintain both the former McCoy AFB and Herndon Airport the latter subsequently renamed Orlando Executive Airport The large hangars and myriad of aircraft maintenance support buildings at McCoy were eventually transferred to other U S Government agencies or leased by GOAA to private interests and today many of them remain supporting the civilian aviation community The combined former McCoy AFB and extant Orlando McCoy Jetport was renamed the Orlando International Airport and was greatly expanded to support the growing tourist industry in Orlando as well as the expanding business and commercial expansion of the area Today Orlando International Airport is among the busiest commercial airports in the world as measured by annual passenger throughput Over thirty airlines serve the airport with hundreds of daily flights to destinations across the United States and overseas Orlando International Airport still retains the ICAO code of KMCO and the FAA and IATA code MCO a legacy of both the Orlando McCoy Jetport and McCoy AFB Current uses EditToday a majority of the McCoy AFB site is operated and maintained by the Greater Orlando Aviation Authority GOAA as Orlando International Airport As a governmental entity chartered by the Florida Legislature and as an enterprise fund of the City of Orlando GOAA is tasked with the operation administration maintenance and oversight of expansions and enhancements to both Orlando International Airport and the Orlando Executive Airport GOAA also leases buildings and property to private individuals and companies primarily for aviation related activities in support of the respective airports Redeveloped areas on the former McCoy AFB current Orlando International Airport include The current 1 000 acre 4 0 km2 site for the Orlando International Airport landside and airside terminal complexes and associated support areas Two International Arrivals Concourses with customs immigration and agricultural inspection facilities administered by the U S Customs and Border Protection CBP Of the total 114 airport gates the Greater Orlando Aviation Authority manages eleven gates with seven additional gates available for international operations Expansive fixed base operator domestic and charter flight operations facilities are also located on airport property The Orlando Tradeport a 1 400 acre 5 7 km2 master planned integrated cargo center with direct airside access 140 acres 0 57 km2 of cargo ramp a 205 acre 0 83 km2 Foreign Trade Zone and an ultramodern Plant Inspection Station with several perishable handling facilities Originally a United States Department of Agriculture USDA facility the station was transferred to the U S Customs and Border Protection in 2003 14 Concurrently many of the former USAF hangars and maintenance facilities have been taken over by civilian airlines and other aeronautical and aviation firms Tributes to Colonel McCoy and McCoy AFB at and near the airport include The airport s ICAO FAA and IATA airfield identifiers as well as all airline tickets and baggage tags continue to read MCO which stands for McCoy The FAA also has an established standard instrument departure SID for aircraft departing MCO known as the MCCOY ONE Departure 15 A portrait of Colonel McCoy hangs in the airport s main landside terminal near the airport chapel One of the restaurants in the airport s Hyatt Hotel is named McCoy s The Orange County Public School System operates the Colonel Michael McCoy Elementary School which is located just north of the airport while a nearby thoroughfare is called McCoy Road McCoy AFB s original military credit union continues to operate throughout Central Florida as the McCoy Federal Credit Union Over the past 30 years the majority of the former McCoy AFB has been subjected to extensive modification due to the addition of new structures taxiways or runways In addition the remaining lands have been subjected to extensive excavation landfill and improvement activities Although several former military structures remain and a new joint military reserve facility added a significant portion of the former air force base is barely recognizable A continuing impact of both the former Pinecastle AAF Pinecastle AFB McCoy Air Force Base and the former Orlando AAB is the continued excavation of unspent ammunition including small practice bombs aerial rockets and machine gun rounds from the World War II era in the areas northeast of the current Orlando International Airport and east and southeast of the current Orlando Executive Airport These formerly remote and uninhabited areas were leased from local landowners at the time and used as bombing and gunnery ranges for Orlando AAB and Pinecastle AAF when both were Army Air Forces facilities during World War II At the conclusion of the war they were returned to the original owners and their previous primarily agricultural purposes With Central Florida s increasing population in the 1980s 1990s and early 21st century these landowners and or their descendants sold these properties for private redevelopment predominantly residential housing and associated support infrastructure such as schools parks and retail often with limited or no knowledge of these properties previous wartime utilization In recent years new discoveries of unspent conventional munitions have caused repeated closures of Odyssey Middle School northeast of Orlando International Airport 16 Post closure military presence Edit Up until 1980 Strategic Air Command considered retaining the former SAC Alert Facility on the south end of the airfield as either an Operating Location OL or as a smaller installation to be called McCoy Air Force Station under control of an air base squadron for occasional dispersal basing of two B 52D G H and two KC 135A E Q aircraft from other SAC installations This concept never came to fruition but the Alert Facility a nose dock hangar and several buildings on the north end of the McCoy ramp were turned over to the United States Army Reserve USAR for use as the 49th Army Aviation Support Facility for USAR units specifically the 138th Aviation Company EW which operated RU 8D JU 21A RU 21A RU 21B and RU 21C aircraft until replaced by C 12 Huron and RC 12G electronic reconnaissance aircraft plus the 348th Medical Detachment with UH 1 medical evacuation helicopters This arrangement permitted USAF access to the remaining military facilities at MCO if and when it became necessary The United States Army Reserve aviation units were inactivated in 1999 pursuant to an earlier Base Realignment and Closure Commission BRAC decision but most of the Alert Facility still remains under United States Army Reserve control as a non flying military facility A significant portion of the McCoy AFB base facilities were transferred to the United States Navy between 1974 and 1975 primarily base housing base exchange commissary medical clinic base chapel and morale welfare and recreation MWR facilities becoming the Naval Training Center Orlando McCoy Annex From 1975 to 1999 the Annex supported various tenant command activities at the Annex that included the Army Reserve aviation units other units of the U S Navy and the U S Naval Reserve U S Army Reserve Florida Army National Guard and the U S Air Force Liaison Office of the Florida Wing of the Civil Air Patrol Administrative support and housing area for both McCoy Annex activities and primary command and tenant command activities at the nearby Naval Training Center Orlando were also maintained In 1984 a B 52D Stratofortress AF Serial No 56 0687 on loan from the National Museum of the United States Air Force was flown to Orlando International Airport from the 7th Bomb Wing at the then Carswell AFB Texas for permanent static display at the airport s McCoy AFB B 52 Memorial Park It is located north northwest of the current civilian commercial terminal and just east of and adjacent to the former location of the since dismantled Orlando McCoy Jetport civilian terminal McCoy Annex operated until Naval Training Center Orlando s closure in late 1999 pursuant to a 1993 Base Realignment and Closure Commission BRAC decision The former military family housing area originally constructed by the Air Force and later utilized by the Navy and other military service branches was fully turned over to the City of Orlando in late 1999 and was redeveloped into The Villages at Southport Housing sales began in 1996 and the complex was awarded a US Department of Housing and Urban Development HUD award for outstanding development With the closure of NTC Orlando in late 1999 The only military activities remaining at the former McCoy AFB today are units of the Reserve components of the United States Armed Forces The 1LT David R Wilson Armed Forces Reserve Center hosts the United States Army Reserve 143rd Sustainment Command Expeditionary 912th Human Resources Company 196th Transportation Company 146th Transportation Detachment 520th Transportation Detachment 3rd Team 174th Judge Advocate General Detachment 10th Team 174th Judge Advocate General Detachment 11th Team 174th Judge Advocate General Detachment the United States Navy Reserve Navy Operational Support Center Orlando NOSC Orlando and the United States Marine Corps Reserve Motor Transportation Company Combat Logistics Battalion 451 The Taft United States Army Reserve Center is located at 9500 Armed Forces Reserve Drive and includes the 689th Engineer Company and 418th Military Police Detachment The McCoy United States Army Reserve Center is home for the 377th Military Intelligence Battalion which utilizes McCoy AFB s former SAC bomber and tanker flight crew Alert Facility e g mole hole The Florida Army National Guard Orlando Armory is located within the grounds of the former McCoy AFB having converted the former McCoy AFB Officers Club into the 164th Air Defense Artillery Brigade FL ARNG Headquarters The Navy Exchange to include an NEX MaxiMart grocery facility in lieu of a Defense Commissary Agency commissary continued operations at the former McCoy Air Force Base The Navy Exchange facility has a Barber Shop Optical Shop Tailor Shop Subway restaurant and a Morale Welfare and Recreation MWR Information Tours and Tickets office This is due to the continued presence of Naval Air Warfare Center and Naval Support Activity Orlando a large National Guard amp Reserve Component presence and the military retiree population in the Orlando Central Florida area that makes the facility financially self sustaining See also Edit World War II portalB 52 Memorial Park Florida World War II Army Airfields Army Air Force School of Applied Tactics Orlando International AirportReferences Edit This article incorporates public domain material from the Air Force Historical Research Agency 813th Strategic Aerospace Division permanent dead link Peterson Schriever Garrison USSF Peterson Space Force Base Archived from the original on 19 December 2010 Orlando International Airport History 55th Rescue Squadron http afhra maxwell af mil rso airdivision pages 0042ad asp permanent dead link McCoy AFB SAC 306 BOMB WINGFIRE DEPT Orlando Plane Crash NBC News broadcast from the Vanderbilt Television News Archive Archived 2 December 2011 at the Wayback Machine Death Awaited Struggling B 52 Crew Central Florida s Worst Plane Crash Occurred 15 Years Ago Orlando Sentinel 30 March 1987 Retrieved 29 May 2011 Historic plaque dedication to honor crew 31 March 2012 Air Force Historical Support Division gt Home PDF Air Force Historical Support Division gt Home PDF USA Air Force Boeing KC 135T Stratotanker photo by Angel Duran Chapter 3 Federal Obligations from Property Conveyances PDF 30 September 2009 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 11 June 2012 Retrieved 8 July 2012 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link AirNav KMCO Orlando International Airport More Bombs Found Near Odyssey Middle School Central Florida News 13 Archived from the original on 12 February 2008 Retrieved 4 August 2008 Lloyd Alwyn T 2000 A Cold War Legacy A Tribute to Strategic Air Command 1946 1992 Pictorial Histories Publications ISBN 1 57510 052 5 Maurer Maurer 1983 Air Force Combat Units of World War II Maxwell AFB Alabama Office of Air Force History ISBN 0 89201 092 4 Mueller Robert 1989 Active Air Force Bases Within the United States of America on 17 September 1982 USAF Reference Series Maxwell AFB Alabama Office of Air Force History ISBN 0 912799 53 6 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 Rogers Brian 2005 United States Air Force Unit Designations Since 1978 Hinkley England Midland Publications ISBN 1 85780 197 0 Turner Publishing Company 1997 Strategic Air Command The Story of the Strategic Air Command and Its People Turner Publishing Company ISBN 1 56311 265 5 Shaw Frederick J 2004 Locating Air Force Base Sites History s Legacy Air Force History and Museums Program United States Air Force Washington DC 2004 USAAS USAAC USAAF USAF Aircraft Serial Numbers 1908 to present ArmyAirForces com Strategic Air Command comExternal links EditBehind The Legend Of Colonel Mike McCoy Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title McCoy Air Force Base amp oldid 1157274705, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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