302nd Air Division explained

Unit Name:302d Air Division
Dates:1943–1945; 1946–1949
Role:Command of airlift units
Battles:European Theater of Operations

The 302d Air Division is an inactive United States Air Force Division. Its last assignment was with Fourteenth Air Force at Marietta Air Force Base, Georgia, where it was inactivated on 27 June 1949.'During World War II, as the 302d Transport Wing the unit provided logistical airlift support for United States Strategic Air Forces. It was reactivated as a reserve headquarters in 1946, and was inactivated in 1949 when reserve units converted to the wing base organization and budget restrictions reduced the size of the Air Force.

History

World War II

The division was first activated as the 302d Transport Wing in December 1943, but remained a paper unit until 6 July 1944 when organization of the wing headquarters began.[1] It was not until September that the wing's flying groups were assigned, although the wing assumed operational control of the 31st Transport Group upon organization of wing headquarters.[2] The 27th Air Transport Group was transferred from Eighth Air Force and the 31st Transport Group joined the wing from Ninth Air Force. Shortly after these groups were assigned, the wing and the groups moved from England to France,[2]

The subordinate groups of the 302d carried cargo and passengers, first within Great Britain and later, to and from continental Europe. The cargo transported included medical supplies and whole blood, and materiel such as gasoline, helmets, bayonets, belly tanks, ammunition, clothing, Signal Corps equipment, and even telephone poles. "Passengers included war correspondents, entertainers, general officers, enlisted personnel, pilots, German prisoners, former Allied prisoners of war, and both Allied and enemy wounded personnel."[3] The wing also operated a courier service between Great Britain and the continent, although its 27th group moved all its operations to the continent.[4] [5]

During the rapid advance of Third Army, the ruined highway and rail system of France prevented the shipment of fuel to maintain its advance. A "Petrol for Patton" system was organized to airlift gasoline to his advanced elements, using not only transports of the wing and IX Troop Carrier Command, but Boeing B-17 Flying Fortresses and Consolidated B-24 Liberators of Eighth Air Force and aircraft and crews temporarily transferred from Air Transport Command. The wing was augmented by over 400 personnel to manage this effort.[6]

Although most of the wing squadrons flew the Douglas C-47 Skytrain, the 320th Transport Squadron of its 27th group was equipped with Noorduyn UC-64 Norseman aircraft for medical evacuation missions.[7] In February 1945, the wing began to ferry aircraft as well. Ferrying aircraft had been part of the mission of the wing's groups prior to their assignment to the wing, but when the wing assumed command of the two groups, Base Air Depot Area took over management of aircraft ferrying, although using crews from the 302d. Aircraft ferried included Boeing B-17 Flying Fortressess, Consolidated B-24 Liberators, Martin B-26 Marauders, Douglas A-20 Havocs, North American P-51 Mustangs, Consolidated C-109 Liberator Expresses, and numerous other models within the European theater of operations.[3] In total, over 85 types of aircraft were flown by the wing's 310th Ferrying Squadron.[8]

During the Central Europe Campaign, the wing established a detachment of its 311th Ferrying Squadron, which had been transferred from the 27th group to the direct control of the wing, at Toussus-le-Noble Airport to maintain a communications flight for the Air Staff of Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Forces, located at Reims.[8]

Reserve operations

The wing was activated in the reserves under Air Defense Command (ADC) at Marietta Army Air Field in December 1946 and was shortly redesignated the 302d Troop Carrier Wing. In 1947 it was assigned two troop carrier groups, located at Marietta and at Morrison Field, Florida.[9] [10] Continental Air Command assumed responsibility for managing reserve and Air National Guard units from ADC in July 1948.[11] At the same time, the adoption of the wing base organization system by the regular Air Force called for wings to be single base organizations, and the unit became the 302d Air Division.[3]

The 302d participated in routine reserve training with its assigned trainer aircraft and supervised the training of its assigned groups until it was inactivated in June 1949 when President Truman's reduced 1949 defense budget also required reductions in the number of units in the Air Force.[12] Most of the division's equipment and personnel were used to form the 94th Bombardment Wing, which was simultaneously activated at Marietta.[13] [14]

Lineage

Activated on 5 December 1943

Inactivated on 15 December 1945

Redesignated 302 Troop Carrier Wing on 31 December 1946

Redesignated 302 Air Division, Troop Carrier on 16 April 1948

Inactivated on 27 June 1949

Redesignated 302 Air Division on 1 September 1959[15]

Assignments

Stations

Components

Groups
Squadrons

Aircraft

Commanders

Campaigns

See also

References

Notes

Explanatory notes
Citations

Bibliography

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Maguire, p. 13
  2. Maguire, p. 15
  3. Web site: Factsheet 302 Air Division . 5 October 2007. Air Force Historical Research Agency . https://web.archive.org/web/20121030115722/http://www.afhra.af.mil/factsheets/factsheet.asp?id=10122 . 30 October 2012. 28 March 2014.
  4. Maguire, p. 16
  5. Maguire, p. 17
  6. Maguire, pp. 17–18
  7. Maguire, p. 19
  8. Maguire, p. 27
  9. Maurer, Combat Units, pp. 306–307
  10. Mueller, p. 108
  11. Web site: Abstract, Mission Project Closeup, Continental Air Command. 27 December 1961. Air Force History Index. 24 March 2014.
  12. Knaack, p. 25
  13. See Ravenstein, pp. 132–133 (organization of 94th Bombardment Wing at Marietta AAF.)
  14. See Mueller, p. 109
  15. Lineage, including assignments, components, stations and aircraft in Air Force Historical Agency Fact Sheet 302 Air Division except as noted.
  16. Station number in Anderson, p. 32.
  17. Station number in Anderson, p. 35.
  18. Station number in Anderson, p. 27.
  19. See Maguire, p. 19
  20. Maguire, p. 23