9th Bomb Squadron

9th Bomb Squadron

Infobox Military Unit
unit_name= 9th Bomb Squadron


caption= 9th Bomb Squadron Patch
dates= 14 June 1917 - 29 June 1922
1 April 1931 - 6 January 1946
1 October 1946 - 25 June 1968
2 July 1969 - 15 August 1992
1 October 1993 - Present
country= United States
allegiance=
branch=United States Air Force
type= Strategic Bombing
role=
size=
command_structure= Air Combat Command
12th Air Force
7th Bomb Wing
7th Operations Group
current_commander=
garrison= Dyess Air Force Base
ceremonial_chief=
colonel_of_the_regiment=
nickname=
patron=
motto=
colors=
march=
mascot=
battles=
notable_commanders=
anniversaries=
decorations=
battle_honours=

The 9th Bomb Squadron (9 BS) is part of the 7th Bomb Wing at Dyess Air Force Base, Texas. It operates B-1 Lancer aircraft providing strategic bombing capability. It is the 2nd oldest active bomb squadron in the Air Force

Mission

The squadron repairs, services, launches, recovers, and inspects B-1 aircraft capable of sustained intercontinental missions and world-wide deployment/employment from forward operating locations.

History

The 9 BS saw combat with First Army as observation unit specializing in night reconnaissance, 2 September 1918 – 11 November 1918, and subsequently served with Third Army as part of occupation forces until May 1919. It then patrolled the Mexican border from, August 1919-April 1920 and c. January-July 1921.

The squadron flew Antisubmarine patrols off the California coast, 8-c. 12 December 1941. The 9th went on to fly combat missions in Southwest Pacific, c. 13 January-c. 1 March 1942, the China-Burma-India Theater, 2 April 1942 – 4 June 1942, 22 November 1942-10 June 1944, and 19 October 1944-10 May 1945, the Mediterranean Theater of Operations from, c. 4 July 1942 – 1 October 1942, and transportation of gasoline to forward bases in China from, 20 June 1944 – 30 September 1944 and June-September 1945.

The 9th deployed B-52s and aircrews for combat in Southeast Asia, June-November 1965. It trained B-52 aircrews to maintain combat readiness from, 1971-1992. It has provided aircraft and aircrews for nuclear and conventional taskings since 1993. The unit flew more than 300 combat sorties during its four-month deployment in mid-2006 in support of the war on terrorism.

Operations

*World War I
*World War II

Lineage

*9th Aero Squadron (1917 - 1921)
*9th Squadron (1921 - 1923)
*9th Observation Squadron (1923)
*9th Bombardment Squadron (1923 - 1939)
*9th Bombardment Squadron (Heavy) (1939 - 1943)
*9th Bombardment Squadron, Heavy (1943 - 1946)
*9th Bombardment Squadron, Very Heavy (1946 - 1948)
*9th Bombardment Squadron, Heavy (1948 - 1969)
*9th Bombardment Squadron, Medium (1969 - 1971)
*9th Bombardment Squadron, Heavy (1971 - 1991)
*9th Bomb Squadron (1991 - Present)

Unit Emblem

The 9th Bomb Squadron's patch features 3 spotlights aiming skyward, as if searching for the bombers which are commencing their attack. One spotlight shines vertically, while the other two cross each other. This forms an IX, which is the Roman Numeral for 9.

Assignments

*1st Army Observation Group (1918)
*3rd Army Air Service (1918 – 1919)
*Western Department (1919 – 1920)
*9th Corps Area (1920 – 1922)
*7 Bombardment Group (1931 – 1946)
**Attached: United States Army Middle East Air Force (28 June – c. 4 October 1942)
*7th Bombardment Wing (1946 – 1968)
*340th Bombardment Group (1969 – 1971)
*7th Bomb Wing (1971 - 1992, 1993 - Present)

Bases stationed

*Camp Kelly, Texas (1917)
*Selfridge Field, Michigan (1917)
*Garden City, New York (1917)
*Winchester, England (1917)
*Grantham, England (1917 - 1918)
*Colombey-les-Belles, France (1918)
*Amanty, France (1918)
*Vavincourt, France (1918)
*Preutim, France (1918)
*Trier, Germany (1918 - 1919)
*Colombey-les-Belles, France (1919)
*Marseilles, France (1919)
*Park Field, Tennessee (1919)
*March Field, California (1919)
*Rockwell Field, California (1919 - 1920)
*Mather Field, California (1920 - 1922)
*March Field, California (1931 - 1934)
*Hamilton Field, California (1934 - 1940)
*Fort Douglas, Utah (1940 - 1941)
*Salt Lake City, Utah (1941)
*Brisbane, Australia (1941 - 1942)
*Karachi, India (1942)
*Allahabad, India (1942)
*Lydda, Palestine (1942)
*Karachi, India (1942)
*Pandaveswar, India (1942 - 1944)
*Kurmitola, India (1944)
*Pandaveswar, India (1944 - 1945)
*Tezpur, India (1945 - 1946)
*Camp Kilmer, New Jersey (1946)
*Carswell Air Force Base, Texas (1946 - 1968, 1969 - 1992)
*Dyess Air Force Base, Texas (1993 - Present)

Aircraft Operated

*Sopwith Camel (1917)
*Sopwith Scout (1917)
*Breguet 14 (1918 - 1919)
*DH-4 (1918 - 1922)
*Sopwith FE-2 (1918 - 1919)
*LVG C.VI (1919)
*Fokker D.VII (1919)
*Pfalz D.XII (1919)
*DFW C.V (1919)
*Halberstadt CL.IV (1919)
*Halberstadt C.V (1919)
*Rumpler C.I (1919)
*Hannover CL.III (1919)
*O-19 (1931 - 1934)
*O-38 (1931 - 1934)
*B-3 (1931 - 1934)
*B-4 (1931 - 1934)
*B-12 (1934 - 1937)
*B-10 (1935 - 1938)
*OA-4 (1937)
*B-18 Bolo (1937 - 1941)
*B-17 Flying Fortress (1940 – 1942)
*LB-30 (1942)
*B-24 Liberator (1942 – 1945)
*B-29 Superfortress (1946 - 1948)
*B-36 Peacemaker (1948 - 1958)
*B-52 Stratofortress (1958 - 1968, 1971 - 1992)
*FB-111 (1969 - 1971)
*B-1 Lancer (1993 - Present)

References

* [http://afhra.maxwell.af.mil/rso/squadrons_flights_pages/0009bs.asp USAF 9th Bomb Squadron History]
* [http://www.dyess.af.mil/shared/media/document/AFD-070411-040.doc 7th Bomb Wing Fact Sheet]

External links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • 9th Bomb Group — Infobox Military Unit unit name= 9th Bombardment Group (Very Heavy) caption= 9th Bomb Group dates= August 1 1922 country= United States allegiance= branch= United States Army Air Forces type= Very heavy bombardment group role= Strategic… …   Wikipedia

  • 28th Bomb Squadron — Infobox Military Unit unit name= 28th Bomb Squadron caption= 28th Bomb Squadron Patch dates= 22 June 1917 16 June 1919 20 September 1921 28 June 1922 1 September 1922 1 October 1983 1 July 1987 Present country= United States allegiance=… …   Wikipedia

  • 11th Bomb Squadron — Infobox Military Unit unit name= 11th Bomb Squadron caption= 11th Bomb Squadron Patch dates= 26 June 1917 31 July 1927 1 June 1928 2 November 1945 1 September 1954 18 June 1958 1 October 1982 31 May 1991 1 July 1994 Present country= United States …   Wikipedia

  • 9th Reconnaissance Wing — Emblem of the 9th Reconnaissance Wing Active 1949–present Country …   Wikipedia

  • Bomb disposal — Bomb squad redirects here. For the Suburban Legends EP, see Bomb Squad EP. For the hip hop producers, see The Bomb Squad. The long walk :[1] A British Army ATO approaches a suspect device in Northern Ireland …   Wikipedia

  • 7th Bomb Wing — Infobox Military Unit unit name= 7th Bomb Wing caption= Official emblem of the 7th Bomb Wing dates= September 6, 1918 (original activation); October 1, 1946 (reactivated) country= United States allegiance= branch= United States Air Force type=… …   Wikipedia

  • 9 Squadron — or 9th Squadron may refer to: Aviation squadrons  No. 9 Squadron RAAF, a unit of the Australian Royal Air Force No. 9 Squadron (India), a unit of the Union of India Air Force No. 9 Squadron RNZAF, a unit of the New Zealand Royal Air Force No …   Wikipedia

  • 1st Reconnaissance Squadron — Infobox Military Unit unit name= 1st Reconnaissance Squadron caption= Emblem of the 1st Reconnaissance Squadron dates= March 5, 1913 country= United States of America allegiance= United States of America branch= United States Air Force type=… …   Wikipedia

  • 5th Bomb Wing — Infobox Military Unit unit name= 5th Bomb Wing caption= 5th Bomb Wing emblem dates= 15 August 1919 Present country= United States allegiance= branch= United States Air Force type= role= Bomber size= command structure= Air Combat Command Eighth… …   Wikipedia

  • List of USAF Bomb Wings and Wings assigned to Strategic Air Command — Main article Strategic Air Command 2d Wings “Liberty We Defend” See 2d Bomb Wing 5th Wings “Guardians of the Upper Regions” See 5th Bomb Wing 6th Wings “Ready to Defend” see 6th Bomb Wing 7th Wings “Death from Above” see 7th Bomb Wing 9th Wings… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”