To install click the Add extension button. That's it.

The source code for the WIKI 2 extension is being checked by specialists of the Mozilla Foundation, Google, and Apple. You could also do it yourself at any point in time.

4,5
Kelly Slayton
Congratulations on this excellent venture… what a great idea!
Alexander Grigorievskiy
I use WIKI 2 every day and almost forgot how the original Wikipedia looks like.
Live Statistics
English Articles
Improved in 24 Hours
Added in 24 Hours
What we do. Every page goes through several hundred of perfecting techniques; in live mode. Quite the same Wikipedia. Just better.
.
Leo
Newton
Brights
Milds

32nd Air Division

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

32d Air Division
Active1949–1958; 1958-1963; 1966-1969
CountryUnited States
BranchUnited States Air Force
RoleCommand and Control
Part ofAir Defense Command
Insignia
32d Air Division emblem (approved 4 March 1953)[1]

The 32d Air Division (32d AD) is an inactive United States Air Force organization. It was last active with Air Defense Command, assigned to First Air Force at Gunter Air Force Base, Alabama, where it was inactivated on 31 December 1969.

The division was first activated by Continental Air Command in November 1949 at Stewart Air Force Base, New York. It controlled air defense units in the northeastern United States from Stewart, and later from Hancock Field, New York until being inactivated in August 1958.

The division was activated again in November 1958 at Dobbins Air Force Base, Georgia to provide air defense of the southeastern United States, moving to Oklahoma City Air Force Station, Oklahoma in 1961. During the Cuban Missile Crisis, it was the primary air defense command for potential attacks from Cuba, acting through its Montgomery Air Defense Sector and a provisional organization at Key West Naval Air Station. The division was inactivated in September 1963.

In April 1966, the 32d was again activated at Gunter, where it replaced the Montgomery Air Defense Sector. At Gunter, it also reported to North American Air Defense Command (NORAD) as the 32d NORAD Region. It was again responsible for air defense in the Southeast until 1969, when its mission, personnel and equipment were transferred to the 20th Air Division.

YouTube Encyclopedic

  • 1/5
    Views:
    2 328
    444
    418
    3 433
    4 846
  • 32nd Infantry Division
  • Honoring the 32nd red arrow division at Soldiers Walk Memorial Park
  • AMTA 32nd National Championship Division Draw
  • Major General Victor Hugo, Vietnam Veteran (Full Interview)
  • What Gives Men Grit: Pennsylvania's 28th Div

Transcription

History

Air Defense of the Northeast

32d Air Division AOR 1952–1958
27th Fighter-Interceptor Squadron F-94C at Griffiss AFB 1954[2]

Assigned to Air Defense Command (ADC) for most of its existence, the 32d organized, administered, equipped, trained, and prepared for operation, all of its assigned units. The division participated in exercises such as Creek Brave, Top Rung and Natchez Echo. Initially, it assumed responsibility for an area including Maine, Vermont, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and part of New York.

Cuban Missile Crisis

During the Cuban Missile Crisis, as the division responsible for defense of the area nearest Cuba, the division role expanded. In addition to defense of its area of responsibility, the division (acting largely through its Montgomery Air Defense Sector and Task Force 32, which was established for Continental Air Defense Command and included an operating location at Key West Naval Air Station, Florida) was responsible to defend staging bases and routes to possible drop zones in Cuba for troop carrier units.[3]

Radar warning capabilities were increased. Four destroyers in the Straits of Florida, whose primary mission was to provide navigation guidance to potential strike aircraft, began to provide low altitude radar coverage as a secondary mission on 23 October, and the USS <i>Consult</i> was added as a picket ship. The number of Lockheed EC-121 Warning Star airborne early warning and control aircraft at McCoy Air Force Base, Florida was increased from three to six. On 24 October VAW-14 deployed six Grumman WF-2s to Jacksonville Naval Air Station. These planes moved to Key West on 26 October.[4][5]

At the same time additional interceptor aircraft were put under the division's control. Initially, the aircraft of the training wing at Tyndall Air Force Base, Florida were put on alert at Tyndall and other Florida bases, as was a detachment of VF(AW)-3 at Key West.[6] The Tyndall forces included 17 McDonnell F-101 Voodoos, 18 Convair F-106 Delta Darts and 9 Convair F-102 Delta Daggers, and were the main element in increasing the ADC alert force in Florida from 4 to 74 planes in 48 hours.[7] TF-102 trainers were placed on alert at Homestead, Patrick, McCoy, and MacDill.[8] The Navy fighter detachment was also transferred to the division's control.[6]

Twelve McDonnell F-4 Phantom IIs of VF-41 moved to augment air defense forces on Key West, and additional crews were added to the VF(AW)-3 detachment to permit it to maintain aircraft on continuous alert.[4] The 331st Fighter-Interceptor Squadron deployed 18 Delta Daggers to Homestead Air Force Base bringing the number of Deuces there to 32.[8] However, the F-102s of the 331st were soon replaced with F-102s from 325th Fighter-Interceptor Squadron in order to have planes armed with Mighty Mouse rockets[9] to improve low altitude intercept capability[10] Patrick Air Force Base, Florida received a dozen Delta Darts from the 49th Fighter-Interceptor Squadron.[8]

To improve fighter-on-fighter capability draft mobilization orders were issued for the 122d, 151st, 157th and 159th Fighter-Interceptor Squadrons, but were never finalized and the Air National Guard did not take part in the crisis.[11] The alert status of the division's fighters included airborne alert against dawn raids early in crisis.[12] The "Strategic Orbit Points" for airborne fighters were manned by 10 planes (later reduced to 4 planes).[13] Alert planes were also placed in "sling shot" status (engines running). This was later reduced to alert crews in the planes' cockpit near the runway.[12]

Army air defense forces also came under the division's control. A battery of MIM-23 Hawk missiles from the 6th Battalion, 61st Artillery was transferred from Fort Meade to defend Key West.[6][8] Homestead received a 40mm automatic weapons battery from the 1st Battalion, 59th Artillery and on 31 October. a Nike Hercules battery from the 2nd Battalion, 52nd Artillery at Fort Bliss as well as a Hawk batteries on 2 November. Hawks from the 8th Battalion, 15th Artillery at Fort Lewis were also deployed to MacDill Air Force Base and to Patrick.[8][14]

As the crisis eased, most units were released on 29 November, and except for forces retained against possible future threats from Cuba, the remaining forces were returned to their normal status by 3 December.[15]

Air defense of the Southeast

32d Air Division AOR 1966–1969

Later, beginning in 1966, the area expanded to include Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, and parts of South Carolina, Louisiana and Florida when it assumed responsibility for the mission of the inactivated Montgomery Air Defense Sector. Assumed additional designation of 32d NORAD Region after activation of the NORAD Combat Operations Center at the Cheyenne Mountain Complex, Colorado and reporting was transferred to NORAD from ADC at Ent Air Force Base in April 1966.

Inactivated in November 1969 as ADC phased down its interceptor mission as the chances of a Soviet bomber attack on the United States seemed remote, its mission being consolidated into the 23d Air Division.

Lineage

  • Established as 32d Air Division (Defense) on 8 November 1949
Activated on 8 December 1949
Inactivated on 1 February 1952
  • Organized on 1 February 1952[16]
Inactivated on 15 August 1958
  • Redesignated 32d Air Division (SAGE) on 21 October 1958
Activated on 15 November 1958
Discontinued and inactivated, on 4 September 1963
  • Redesignated 32d Air Division and activated on 20 January 1966 (not organized)
Organized on 1 April 1966
Inactivated on 31 December 1969[1]

Assignments

Stations

Components

Sectors

Topsham Air Force Station, Maine
Gunter Air Force Station, Alabama
Oklahoma City Air Force Station, Oklahoma[1]
Syracuse Air Defense Sector
Syracuse Air Force Station, New York

Wings

Groups

Interceptor squadrons

Radar squadrons

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f "Factsheet 32 Air Division". Air Force Historical Research Agency. 5 October 2007. Archived from the original on 22 October 2012. Retrieved 9 April 2014.
  2. ^ Lockheed F-94C-1-LO Starfire 51-13555
  3. ^ NORAD/CONAD Participation in the Cuban Missile Crisis, pp. 2, 15
  4. ^ a b NORAD/CONAD Participation in the Cuban Missile Crisis, p. 9
  5. ^ NORAD/CONAD Participation in the Cuban Missile Crisis, pp. 9–10
  6. ^ a b c NORAD/CONAD Participation in the Cuban Missile Crisis, p. 7
  7. ^ McMullen, pp. 7–8
  8. ^ a b c d e NORAD/CONAD Participation in the Cuban Missile Crisis, p. 10
  9. ^ The planes of the 331st were armed only with AIM-4 Falcons only
  10. ^ NORAD/CONAD Participation in the Cuban Missile Crisis, pp. 8–9
  11. ^ McMullen. pp. 15–16
  12. ^ a b NORAD/CONAD Participation in the Cuban Missile Crisis, pp. 18–19
  13. ^ NORAD/CONAD Participation in the Cuban Missile Crisis, p. 22
  14. ^ NORAD/CONAD Participation in the Cuban Missile Crisis, p. 8
  15. ^ NORAD/CONAD Participation in the Cuban Missile Crisis, p. 29
  16. ^ The February 1952 inactivation and activation represented only a change from a table of organization unit to a table of distribution unit

Bibliography

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

  • McMullen, Richard F. (1964) "The Fighter Interceptor Force 1962-1964" ADC Historical Study No. 27, Air Defense Command, Ent Air Force Base, CO (Confidential, declassified 22 Mar 2000)
  • NORAD/CONAD Participation in the Cuban Missile Crisis, Historical Reference Paper No. 8, Directorate of Command History Continental Air Defense Command, Ent AFB, CO, 1 Feb 63 (Top Secret NOFORN, declassified 9 March 1996), p. 2
Further reading
  • Winkler, David F. (1997), Searching the skies: the legacy of the United States Cold War defense radar program. Prepared for United States Air Force Headquarters Air Combat Command.
  • A Handbook of Aerospace Defense Organization 1946 - 1980, by Lloyd H. Cornett and Mildred W. Johnson, Office of History, Aerospace Defense Center, Peterson Air Force Base, Colorado
  • Aerospace Defense Command publication, The Interceptor, January 1979 (Volume 21, Number 1)
This page was last edited on 10 November 2021, at 02:15
Basis of this page is in Wikipedia. Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 Unported License. Non-text media are available under their specified licenses. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. WIKI 2 is an independent company and has no affiliation with Wikimedia Foundation.