546th Bombardment Squadron explained

Unit Name:546th Bombardment Squadron
Dates:1942–1946; 1947–1949; 1955–1964
Role:medium bomber
Battles:European Theater of Operations
Decorations:Distinguished Unit Citation
Air Force Outstanding Unit Award
Identification Symbol Label:Patch with 546th Bombardment Squadron emblem (B-47 era)
Identification Symbol 2 Label:546th Bombardment Squadron emblem (World War II)[1]
Identification Symbol 3:BK
Identification Symbol 3 Label:World War II fuselage code

The 546th Bombardment Squadron is an inactive United States Air Force unit. It was last assigned to the 384th Bombardment Wing at Little Rock Air Force Base, Arkansas, where it was inactivated on 1 September 1964.

The squadron was first activated during World War II as a heavy bomber unit. After training in the United States, it moved to England, where it participated in the strategic bombing campaign against Germany. It earned two Distinguished Unit Citations during combat over Europe. It remained in Europe after V-E Day, and was inactivated in France in 1946. The squadron was again active in the reserve from 1947 to 1949, but does not appear to have been fully manned or equipped.

The squadron was activated by Strategic Air Command at Little Rock in 1955, and served as part of SAC's strategic deterrent force until inactivating as SAC phased out the Boeing B-47 Stratojet.

History

World War II

Activation and training

The squadron was first organized at Gowen Field, Idaho on 1 December 1942 as one of the original four squadrons of the 384th Bombardment Group. It moved the next month to Wendover Field, Utah, where it began training with the Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress. It completed training in May 1943, and began its move to the European Theater of Operations.[2] [3] The ground echelon departed Sioux City Army Air Base, Iowa, for the port of embarkation at Camp Kilmer, New Jersey, on 10 May and sailed on the on 23 May 1943. The air echelon staged through Kearney Army Air Field Nebraska starting on 3 May and ferried their B-17s via the northern ferry route. The first planes arrived at RAF Grafton Underwood on 25 May 1943.[4]

Combat in Europe

The squadron arrived at its combat station, RAF Grafton Underwood on 6 June 1943.[2] It flew its first mission on 23 June, a diversionary strike against the Ford and General Motors plants at Antwerp.[4] The squadron primarily flew missions in the strategic bombing campaign against Germany, striking air bases and industrial targets in France and Germany. Targets included Orleans/Bricy and Nancy/Azelot Airfields, an engine manufacturing factory at Cologne, a coke distillation facility at Gelsenkirchen, an aircraft component plant at Halberstadt, a steel manufacturing plant at Magdeburg and the ball bearing factory at Schweinfurt.[3]

The squadron participated in a raid on aircraft factories in Germany on 11 January 1944 for which it was awarded a Distinguished Unit Citation (DUC). This was a prelude to Big Week, a concentrated series of raids by Eighth Air Force, aimed at destroying Germany's aircraft manufacturing industry in late February. On 24 April 1944, the 384th Group, although crippled by heavy losses, led the 41st Bombardment Wing, in an attack on the Dornier Flugzeugwerke aircraft manufacturing plant at Oberpfaffenhofen, pressing the attack through almost overwhelming opposition. One group commander described the opposition on this mission as the heaviest he had seen during the war.[5] This mission resulted in the award of a second DUC to the squadron. Other strategic targets included communications centers, oil refineries and storage facilities at Leipzig and Berlin, marshalling yards at Duren and Mannheim, and port facilities.[3]

The squadron was occasionally diverted from the strategic bombing campaign to fly air support and interdiction missions. It attacked targets along the coast of Normandy to support Operation Overlord, continuing these attacks through D-Day, when it attacked airfields and communications facilities beyond the beachhead. On 24 and 25 July 1944, it supported Operation Cobra, the breakout at Saint Lo with attacks on strong points just beyond enemy lines. It hit armor and artillery concentrations near Eindhoven to support Operation Market Garden, the attempt to seize a bridgehead across the Rhine in the Netherlands during September 1944. It attacked enemy fortifications and communications during the Battle of the Bulge from December 1944 through January 1945. When the Allies attacked across the Rhine in Germany in March 1945, it attacked rail facilities, including marshalling yards and bridges to cut enemy supply lines.[3]

The squadron flew its last combat mission on 25 April 1945.[4] After V-E Day the squadron remained in Europe as part of United States Air Forces in Europe. It assisted Air Transport Command in the Green Project by flying soldiers to Casablanca, French Morocco for transport back to the United States. From its continental base at Istres Air Base, France, it flew Greek military back to their homeland, and transported displaced persons. The squadron transported American troops to Germany to serve in the military occupation forces there, but was gradually drawn down. It was inactivated in France in February 1946 and its remaining personnel and equipment were absorbed by the 306th Bombardment Group.[2] [3] [4]

Air Force reserve

The squadron was activated in the reserve at Lovell Field, Tennessee in July 1947, and was assigned to the 96th Bombardment Group at Gunter Field, Alabama.[2] [6] The unit's training was initially supervised by Air Defense Command. In 1948 Continental Air Command assumed responsibility for training reserve and Air National Guard units from ADC.[7] Although it does not appear that the unit was fully manned or equipped at this time,[8] President Truman’s reduced 1949 defense budget also required reductions in the number of units in the Air Force,[9] and the 546th was inactivated,[2] as reserve flying operations at Lovell Field ceased

Strategic bomber operations

The squadron was activated at Little Rock Air Force Base, Arkansas in August 1955. However, it was minimally manned and did not begin to receive its Boeing B-47 Stratojets until the following year. The squadron began to train in its intercontinental bombing mission in February 1956. As part of Operation Reflex, the squadron deployed to RAF Brize Norton from 3 January to 5 April 1957.[10] Reflex placed Stratojets and Boeing KC-97s at bases closer to the Soviet Union for 90 day periods, although individuals rotated back to home bases during unit Reflex deployments [11]

From 1958, the Stratojet wings of Strategic Air Command (SAC) began to assume an alert posture at their home bases, reducing the amount of time spent on alert at overseas bases. General Thomas S. Power’s initial goal was to maintain one third of SAC’s planes on fifteen minute ground alert, fully fueled and ready for combat to reduce vulnerability to a Soviet missile strike.[12] The alert commitment was increased to half the squadron's aircraft in 1962.[13]

During the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis, The squadron's B-47s dispersed on 22 October.[14] Most dispersal bases were civilian airfields with reserve or Air National Guard units. The B-47s were configured for execution of the Emergency War Order as soon as possible after dispersal.[15] On 24 October SAC went to DEFCON 2, placing all the squadron's aircraft on alert.[16] As tensions began to ease, on 15 November 1/6 of the dispersed B-47s were recalled to their home bases.[17] On 21 November SAC relaxed its readiness status to DEFCON 3. The squadron's remaining dispersed B-47s were recalled to home base on 24 November. On 27 November SAC returned to normal alert posture.[18]

However, SAC was phasing the B-47 out of its nuclear delivery forces and the squadron was inactivated along with its parent wing on 1 September 1964.[19]

Lineage

Activated on 1 December 1942

Redesignated 546th Bombardment Squadron, Heavy on 20 August 1943

Inactivated on 28 February 1946

Activated in the reserve on 16 July 1947

Inactivated on 27 June 1949

Activated on 1 August 1955[20]

Discontinued and inactivated on 1 September 1964[19]

Assignments

Stations

Aircraft

Awards and campaigns

Campaign StreamerCampaignDatesNotes
Air Offensive, Europe3 June 1943 – 5 June 1944
Air Combat, EAME Theater3 June 1943 – 11 May 1945
Normandy6 June 1944 – 24 July 1944
Northern France25 July 1944 – 14 September 1944
Rhineland15 September 1944 – 21 March 1945
Ardennes-Alsace16 December 1944 – 25 January 1945
Central Europe22 March 1944 – 21 May 1945

See also

References

Notes

Explanatory notes
Citations

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Watkins, pp. 68-69
  2. Maurer, Combat Squadrons, pp. 649-650
  3. Maurer, Combat Units, pp. 270-272
  4. Freeman, pp. 253-254
  5. Freeman, p. 134
  6. Maurer, Combat Units, pp. 165-166
  7. Web site: Abstract, Mission Project Closeup, Continental Air Command. 27 December 1961. Air Force History Index. March 24, 2014.
  8. See Maurer, Combat Squadrons, p. 648 (no aircraft listed as assigned during this period).
  9. Knaack, p. 25
  10. Ravenstein, pp. 207-208
  11. Narducci, p. 2
  12. Schake, p. 220 (note 43)
  13. Web site: Abstract (Unclassified), History of the Strategic Bomber since 1945 (Top Secret, downgraded to Secret). 1 April 1975. Air Force History Index. March 4, 2014.
  14. Kipp, et al., p. 49
  15. Kipp. ‘’et al.’’, p. 50
  16. Kipp, et al., p. 35
  17. Kipp. ‘’et al.’’, p. 53
  18. Kipp, et al., p. 61
  19. See Mueller, p. 324 (dates at Little Rock); Ravenstein, pp. 207-208 (inactivation of 384th Wing).
  20. Lineage, including assignments and aircraft, through March 1963 in Maurer, Combat Squadrons, pp. 649-650.
  21. Station number in Anderson.
  22. Station number in Johnson.
  23. Station information through March 1963 in Maurer, Combat Squadrons, pp. 649-650, except as noted.
  24. Mueller, p. 324