1600th Air Transport Group explained

Unit Name:1600th Air Transport Group
Dates:1948–1955
Country: United States
Type:Airlift
Command Structure:Military Air Transport Service

The 1600th Air Transport Group is a discontinued United States Air Force unit. It was last assigned to the Atlantic Division, Military Air Transport Service at Westover Air Force Base, Massachusetts. It provided strategic airlift between the United States and Europe until it was discontinued on 19 June 1955.

History

The group was formed from the personnel and equipment of the 1st Air Transport Group (Provisional), a C-54 Skymaster unit of Air Transport Command (ATC) at Westover when Military Air Transport Service (MATS) replaced ATC in 1948. The 1st had been organized as the operational element of the 2d Air Transport Wing (Provisional) Under the experimental wing base (Hobson Plan) organization system. When the 1600th was organized it became the operational element of the 520th Air Transport Wing (later the 1600th Air Transport Wing).

The group became Atlantic Division, Military Air Transport Service's primary strategic transport airlift provider between the United States and Europe in the late 1940s and early 1950s. In 1953, the group was transferred to the direct control of the Atlantic Division took as the wing was reduced to control of support elements in 1953 in anticipation of transfer of Westover from MATS to Strategic Air Command (SAC). The unit operated large numbers of Douglas C-124 Globemaster II heavy transports, as well as Boeing C-97 Stratofreighters. It provided passenger service on Navy Douglas R6D-1 Liftmasters and supported VIP transportation for Atlantic Division Headquarters at Westover. In the summer of 1948, the group's 16th Air Transport Squadron was reassigned directly to the Atlantic Division and in the fall it became part of Continental Division, MATS and moved to Gravelly Point, Virginia where it became a forerunner of the 89th Airlift Wing.

In July 1952, MATS replaced its table of distribution (four digit) air transport squadrons, which were controlled by the command with table of organization units whose organization was controlled by Headquarters, United States Air Force (USAF). The USAF controlled units were ferrying and transport squadrons that had been assigned to ATC during World War II. Unlike the MATS controlled squadrons that had been formed in peacetime, these units had histories that included wartime actions and could be continued even after inactivation.[1] Each of the new squadrons assumed the mission, personnel, and equipment of the squadron it replaced.

The group was inactivated in 1955 when MATS moved its Atlantic Division headquarters and airlift operations to McGuire AFB, New Jersey and SAC assumed control of Westover AFB.

Lineage

Organized on 1 June 1948

Redesignated 1600th Air Transport Group on 1 October 1948

Discontinued on 25 June 1955

Assignments

Components

[2] 20 Jul 1952 – 20 Apr 1955 (C-124)

Stations

Aircraft

References

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Book: Ravenstein, Charles A.. A Guide to Air Force Lineage and Honors. 2d, Revised. 1984. USAF Historical Research Center. Maxwell AFB, AL. 12.
  2. Assumed assets of the second 1251st ATS. This squadron is not related to the 15th Air Transport Squadron that became the 1253d Air Transport Squadron
  3. Assumied assets of 1255th ATS
  4. Assumed assets of 1257th ATS
  5. Book: Mueller, Robert. Air Force Bases, Vol. I, Active Air Force Bases Within the United States of America on 17 September 1982. 1989. Office of Air Force History. Washington, DC. 0-912799-53-6. 577–582.