525th Air Defense Group explained

Unit Name:525th Air Defense Group
Dates:1945, 1953–1955
Type:Fighter interceptor
Role:Air defense
Identification Symbol Label:Patch showing the 525th Air Defense Group emvblem

The 525th Air Defense Group is a disbanded United States Air Force organization. Its last assignment was with the 4710th Air Defense Wing at New Castle County Airport, Delaware, where it was inactivated on 18 August 1955. The group was originally activated as the 525th Air Service Group, a support unit for a combat group at the end of World War II in Italy and then redeployed to Maine, where it supported redeploying units until it was inactivated in 1945.

The group was activated once again in 1953, when Air Defense Command (ADC) established it as the headquarters for a dispersed fighter-interceptor squadron and the medical, aircraft maintenance, and administrative squadrons supporting it. It was replaced in 1955 when ADC transferred its mission, equipment, and personnel to the 82d Fighter Group in a project that replaced air defense groups commanding fighter squadrons with fighter groups with distinguished records during World War II.

History

World War II

The group was first activated in Italy as the 525th Air Service Group shortly before the end of World War II in a reorganization of Army Air Forces (AAF) support groups in which the AAF replaced service groups that included personnel from other branches of the Army and supported two combat groups with air service groups including only Air Corps units, designed to support a single combat group.[1] Its 951st Air Engineering Squadron provided maintenance that was beyond the capability of the combat group, its 775th Air Materiel Squadron handled all supply matters, and its Headquarters & Base Services Squadron provided other support.[1] It provided support to a combat group in Italy in 1945. The group redeployed to the United States and provided support to flying groups redeploying from Europe until it was inactivated. It was disbanded in 1948.[2]

Cold War

The group was reconstituted, redesignated as the 525th Air Defense Group, and activated during the Cold War at New Castle County Airport in 1953[3] with responsibility for air defense of Mid-Atlantic region of the United States. The group was assigned the 96th Fighter-Interceptor Squadron (FIS), which was already stationed at New Castle, and flying Lockheed F-94 Starfires[4] as its operational component.[5] The 96th FIS had been assigned directly to the 4710th Defense Wing.[5] The group also replaced the 82nd Air Base Squadron as USAF host organization at New Castle County Airport. It was assigned three squadrons to perform its support responsibilities.[6] [7]

One month after the group was activated, the 332d Fighter-Interceptor Squadron, flying later model Starfires armed with Mighty Mouse Rockets rather than cannons,[8] was activated as the group's second operational squadron.[9] In July 1953 the 96th FIS upgraded to the newer model "Starfires" as well.[4] The 525th was inactivated[3] and replaced by the 82d Fighter Group (Air Defense)[10] as part of Air Defense Command's Project Arrow, which was designed to bring back on the active list the fighter units which had compiled memorable records in the two world wars.[11] The group was disbanded once again in 1984.[12]

Lineage

Activated on 12 May 1945

Inactivated on 15 October 1945

Disbanded on 8 October 1948[2]

Activated on 16 February 1953[3]

Inactivated on 18 August 1955[3]

Disbanded on 27 September 1984[12]

Assignments

Components

Operational Squadrons

Support Units

Stations

Aircraft

See also

References

Notes

Explanatory notes
Citations

Bibliography

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Coleman, p. 208
  2. Department of the Air Force Letter, 322 (AFOOR 887e), 8 October 1948, Subject: Disbandment of Certain Inactive Air Force Units
  3. Cornett & Johnson, p. 83
  4. Cornett & Johnson, p.121
  5. Maurer, Combat Squadrons, p. 321
  6. Cornett & Johnson, p.147
  7. See Web site: Abstract, History 525 Infirmary, Jan–Jun 1955. Air Force History Index. 22 June 2012.
  8. Cornett & Johnson, p.127
  9. Maurer, Combat Squadrons, p.410
  10. Maurer, Combat Units, p. 148
  11. Buss, Sturm, Volan, & McMullen, p.6
  12. Department of the Air Force/MPM Letter 575q, 27 September 1984, Subject: Disbandment of Units
  13. Web site: Factsheet 96 Flying Training Squadron (AFRC). Haulman. Daniel L.. 26 December 2007. Air Force Historical Research Agency. dead. 3 March 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20160303202000/http://www.afhra.af.mil/factsheets/factsheet.asp?id=10558. 3 March 2016.
  14. Maurer, Combat Squadrons, p. 410