Youngstown-Warren Air Reserve
Station is a military facility located in Vienna,
Ohio
, 11 miles north of Youngstown
and 10 miles east of Warren
, in Trumbull
County
, Ohio
, in the
United
States
. The installation is located at Youngstown-Warren Regional
Airport
. The host wing for the installation is the
910th Airlift Wing (910 AW), an
Air Force Reserve Command
(
AFRC) unit operationally gained by the
Air Mobility Command (
AMC).
History
Youngstown
ARS is located at the Youngstown-Warren Regional
Airport
. Its primary mission is to serve as home of
the
910th Airlift Wing, and its
sixteen (16)
C-130H Hercules aircraft
operated by two (2) airlift squadrons. The 910 AW is a unique
organization in the Air Force in that a portion of the wing AW is
devoted to the aerial spray mission.
The 910 AW has nearly 1,300 personnel — approximately full-time
Active Guard and Reserve (AGR) and Air Reserve Technician (ART)
personnel, augmented by approximately 1,000 "traditional" part-time
Air Force Reservists. The installation also hosts a Navy
Operational Support Center and a collocated Marine Corps Reserve
Center that are home to nearly 400 Navy and Marine Corps
Reservists.
The history of Youngstown ARS dates to the early 1950s when it was
originally opened as
Youngstown Air Force Base.
Beginning in 1951, the
Air Defense
Command (ADC) began negotiations with the local community to
construct a Air Force Base to defend the north-central United
States. Negotiations were finalized and the new base was dedicated
on 11 August 1952. The housekeeping unit of the $10 million air
defense base was the 88th Air Base Squadron with the ADC 86th
Fighter-Interceptor Squadron being the operational unit flying
F-84C Thunderjets. Assigned to ADC's
Central Air Defense Force, the
86th would remain at Youngstown until 1960, eventually upgrading to
the
F-102 Delta Dagger. On 18
August 1955, the
30th Air
Division,
79th Fighter Group
was assigned.
On 26 May 1952, the
Air Force
Reserve's 26th Fighter-Bomber Squadron was assigned to
Youngstown. Formerly a Troop Carrier Squadron, the unit had been
activated during the
Korean War and after
being inactivated, was assigned to Youngstown as a reserve
T-33 Shooting Star squadron. The 26th FBS
received
F-86H Sabres in 1958, but shortly
afterward was inactivated and redesignated as the 757th Troop
Carrier Squadron. The F-86s that had been received, but never flown
while they were going through acceptance checks, and the T-33s,
which were flying, were taken out and replaced by
C-119 Flying Boxcars
In 1959, the need for active duty Air Defense Command bases and
regular Air Force fighter-interceptor operations were diminishing
and the intent to scale back operations at Youngstown AFB was
announced on October 28, 1959. The Air Force transferred command of
Youngstown AFB to
Continental
Air Command (ConAC) (now the
Air Force Reserve Command) on 1
March 1960 and the 79th Fighter Group was inactivated that
date.
As Youngstown-Warren ARS, the installation has 59 operational
buildings, primarily aviation maintenance, training and
administrative facilities. While there are dormitories for
temporary lodging, there is no permanent housing on the
installation.
The current host wing, the 910th Airlift Wing (910 AW) traces its
lineage at Youngstown to 1963 when it was established as the 910th
Troop Carrier Group flying the
C-119
Flying Boxcar. 1969. The group later trained as a forward air
control/tactical air support group from 1970-1971, as a air support
special operations group from 1971-1973, and as a fighter group
from 1973-1981, during which time it operated the
A-37 Dragonfly and
U-3 Blue Canoe and was operationally gained
by the
Tactical Air Command
(
TAC). It converted to an airlift mission in
1981 and received its first C-130 aircraft 27 March 1981, at which
point it became the 910th Tactical Airlift Group and operationally
gained by the
Military Airlift
Command (
MAC).
In January 1992, the 910 TAG became the only full-time, fixed-wing
aerial spray unit in the Department of Defense. In June of that
year, as part of an Air Force-wide reorganization, MAC was
disestablished and the unit was renamed the 910th Airlift Group,
operationally-gained by the newly established
Air Mobility Command (
AMC).
In 1994, the Air Force Reserve became a separate Major Command
(MAJCOM) in the Air Force organizational structure as
Air Force Reserve Command
(
AFRC). Per AFRC direction, the unit was
renamed the 910th Airlift Wing (910 AW) while still retaining its
operational relationship with AMC.
References
- Youngstown ARB Fact Sheet
- USAFHRA Document 01106114
- USAF Aerospace Defense Command publication, The Interceptor,
January 1979 (Volume 21, Number 1).
- USAFHRA Organizational Records
- 79th Fighter Group in Maurer, Maurer (1983). Air Force Combat
Units Of World War II. Maxwell AFB, Alabama: Office of Air Force
History. ISBN 0892010924.
- Airborne Troop Carriers, Turner Publishing Company, 1991. ISBN
1563110407
- Reserve History in Youngstown Ohio
- USAFHRA Document 00435777
- Youngstown AFRC Factsheet
- Global Security.org
External links