774th Expeditionary Airlift Squadron explained

Unit Name:774th Expeditionary Airlift Squadron
Dates:1943–1945; 1953–1971; 1972–1993; unknown
Role:Airlift
Command Structure:Air Combat Command
Nickname:Weasel Squadron[1]
Battles:Mediterranean Theater of Operations
Vietnam War
Global War on Terror
Decorations:Distinguished Unit Citation
Air Force Meritorious Unit Award
Air Force Outstanding Unit Award with Combat "V" Device
Air Force Outstanding Unit Award
Vietnamese Gallantry Cross with Palm
Philippine Presidential Unit Citation
Identification Symbol Label:774th Expeditionary Airlift Sq emblem[2]
Identification Symbol 2 Label:Patch with 774th Troop Carrier Squadron emblem (later version)
Identification Symbol 3 Label:774th Troop Carrier Squadron emblem[3]
Identification Symbol 4 Label:774th Bombardment Squadron emblem[4]

The 774th Expeditionary Airlift Squadron is a provisional United States Air Force unit, assigned to the 455th Expeditionary Operations Group at Bagram Air Base, Afghanistan. The squadron provides airlift to forces engaged in the War in Afghanistan.

The squadron was first activated as the 774th Bombardment Squadron during World War II. After training in the United States with Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress heavy bombers, it deployed to the Mediterranean Theater of Operations, where it participated in the strategic bombing campaign against Germany, earning two Distinguished Unit Citations before inactivating in Italy.

The squadron was redesignated the 774th Troop Carrier Squadron and activated in January 1953, when it assumed the mission, personnel and aircraft of a reserve unit that had been called to active duty for the Korean War and was being released from active duty. The squadron provided airlift during a number of contingency operations, and in 1968, moved to the Philippines, from which its crews and planes rotated to Vietnam to provide airlift support during the Vietnam War. The squadron was reactivated the United States, where it continued airlift operations until inactivating in 1986. It was converted to provisional status as the 774th Expeditionary Airlift Squadron in 2001 and assigned to Air Combat Command to activate or inactivate as needed..

History

World War II

Training in the United States

The squadron was first activated as the 774th Bombardment Squadron at Geiger Field, Washington on 1 August 1943 as one of the four original squadrons of the 463d Bombardment Group.[2] [5] The 774th moved to Rapid City Army Air Base, South Dakota, where it received its initial cadre. On 1 September, the key personnel of the squadron and 463d Group moved to Orlando Army Air Base, where they participated in advanced tactical training with the Army Air Forces School of Applied Tactics. A model crew from the squadron moved to Montbrook Army Air Field to participate in simulated missions with a Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress. The cadre returned to Rapid City at the end of the month, where the ground echelon of the squadron was filled out and ground school begun.[6]

The squadron moved to MacDill Field, Florida, in November and began flight training with the Flying Fortress, although its air echelon was not fully manned until early December. on 2 February, the squadron's ground echelon departed Florida for the port of embarkation at Camp Patrick Henry, Virginia, for shipment to the Mediterranean Theater of Operations, while the air echelon ferried their B-17s via the southern ferry route.[2] [6]

Combat in the Mediterranean Theater

The squadron arrived in Italy in March 1944 and flew its first combat mission from Celone Airfield on 30 March against an airfield at Imotski, Yugoslavia.[6] It engaged primarily in the strategic bombing campaign against Germany. It attacked targets like marshalling yards, oil refineries and aircraft factories in Austria, Czechoslovakia, Germany, Greece, Romania and Yugoslavia.. The squadron was awarded a Distinguished Unit Citation (DUC) for a mission against oil refineries in Ploesti, Romania, on 18 May 1944.[5] Clouds that obscured the target resulted in Fifteenth Air Force recalling the mission, but the squadron and the rest of the 463d Group did not receive the recall message and was the only unit to continue on,[6] causing major destruction to the target. Although crippled by intense fighter attacks, they also inflicted severe damage on the opposing air defenses. On 24 May 1945, the 463d Group led the 5th Bombardment Wing in an attack against a Daimler-Benz tank factory at Berlin, Germany. The squadron made a successful attack despite three separate attacks by enemy air defenses, including attacks by German jet fighters.[6] This action earned the squadron its second DUC.[5]

The squadron was occasionally diverted from its strategic mission to perform air support and air interdiction missions. In May and June 1944, it bombed bridges to support the campaign for the liberation of Rome. In August 1944, it struck bridges, gun positions and other targets to support Operation Dragoon, the invasion of southern France. It hit military airbases, bridges and other tactical targets to support partisan forces and the Red Army advance in the Balkans. During the last months of the war the squadron operated primarily to support Operation Grapeshot, the spring 1945 offensive in Northern Italy.[5]

The squadron flew its final combat mission on 26 April 1945.[6] After V-E Day the squadron transported personnel (primarily soldiers of Fifth Army) from Italy to Casablanca for return to the United States. By early September, the unit had been substantially reduced by transfers to other units and returns of personnel to the United States and it was inactivated in Italy with the end of Project Green in September 1945.[2] [6]

Airlift operations

Activation and move to Ardmore

The squadron was redesignated the 774th Troop Carrier Squadron and activated at Memphis Municipal Airport, Tennessee on 16 January 1953. At Memphis, it absorbed the mission, personnel and Fairchild C-119 Flying Boxcars of the 347th Troop Carrier Squadron, a reserve unit that had been mobilized for the Korean War and was being returned to the reserves. In August, the squadron departed the civilian airfield at Memphis for the newly reopened Ardmore Air Force Base, Oklahoma.[2]

The squadron airlifted equipment and supplies and supported Army airborne exercises. The squadron became one of the first to equip with the new Lockheed C-130A Hercules in 1956. The squadron also operated a Tactical Air Command (TAC)-sponsored flight demonstration team during the late 1950s and early 1960s known as "The Four Horsemen," utilizing four C-130A aircraft.[7] In September 1957, Tactical Air Command (TAC) converted the 463d Wing to the dual deputy system. The 463d Group was inactivated, and the squadron was assigned directly to the 463d Troop Carrier Wing.[2]

In July 1958, president Camille Chamoun of Lebanon was facing an insurgency against his government and requested military assistance from the United States, which implemented Operation Blue Bat. The squadron, along with other elements of the 463d Wing, flew command elements of Nineteenth Air Force and other personnel and equipment of the Composite Air Strike Force to locations in the Middle East.[8] The following month, the squadron provided airlift for the 1958 Taiwan Strait Crisis.[2]

Operations from Sewart and Langley

Although Ardmore had only been open for six years, the Air Force decided to close the base again. The inactivation of the 513th Troop Carrier Wing, a Fairchild C-123 Provider unit at Sewart Air Force Base, Tennessee,[9] provided room for the 774th and the other operational units of the 463d Wing to move there. The squadron moved to Sewart in November 1958,[2] and soon began replacing its C-130As with C-130B models. While at Sewart, the squadron provided airlift support during the Berlin Crisis of 1961.[2] The squadron was again called on to provide emergency airlift support during the Cuban Missile Crisis in October and November 1962, transporting TAC support forces and materiel to Florida, Army units to stations in the southeastern United States and Marine reinforcements to Guantánamo Bay.[10]

In July 1962, TAC established a Combat Crew Training School at Sewart. Starting with a single squadron, by the spring of 1963, the school had expanded to a full wing, the 4442d Combat Crew Training Wing. As a result of the expansion of the C-130 training unit, the 463d Wing reduced its operations at Sewart and the squadron became nonoperational on 27 December, remaining a paper unit until 1 April 1963, when it was again assigned personnel and equipment at Langley Air Force Base, Virginia. From Langley, the squadron deployed crews and planes to support the US response during the Gulf of Tonkin Incident in the late summer of 1964.[11] In late April 1965, the squadron participated in Operation Power Pack. Following a military coup in the Dominican Republic, Nineteenth Air Force formed an airlift task force to airlift the 82nd Airborne Division. On 28 and 29 April, the squadron flew C-130s to Pope Air Force Base to join the task force to transport elements of the 82nd Division to San Isidro Air Base. By September, peacekeeping functions had been transferred to Latin American counties' forces and the squadron helped return American forces to the United States.[12]

Vietnam War

While participating in Power Pack, the squadron was also deploying forces to airlift men and material to Southeast Asia. In November 1965, the 463d Wing moved to Mactan Island Airfield, in the Philippines to provide this support full time, and the squadron moved with it.[2] [11] The squadron deployed crews and planes operating combat airlift missions in Vietnam under the operational control of the 315th Air Division. The squadron also flew aeromedical evacuation missions. In August 1967, the squadron became the 774th Tactical Airlift Squadron, and in July 1968, the 463d Wing moved from Mactan to Clark Air Base. The 463d began reducing its operations in June 1971 and was inactivated at the end of the year.[11] The 774th was reassigned to the host at Clark, the 405th Fighter Wing, until inactivating in September 1972.[2]

Operations from Dyess

On 1 August 1973, the squadron was reactivated at Dyess Air Force Base. The squadron deployed as a unit frequently to Europe, where it came under the operational control of the 513th Tactical Airlift Wing or the 313th Tactical Airlift Group in England or the 322d Tactical Airlift Wing or 435th Tactical Airlift Wing in Germany. The squadron flew humanitarian missions and participated in exercises. In October 1986, the squadron was inactivated.[2]

Expeditionary operations

The squadron was redesignated 774th Expeditionary Airlift Squadron, converted to provisional status in 2001, and assigned to Air Combat Command to activate or inactivate as needed. It has been activated twice to provide theater airlift for United States Central Command. The squadron was active in Kuwait from 2002 to 2003. It was activated again in Kyrgyzstan in 2004, and moved to its present station at Bagram Air Base, Afghanistan in January 2006.[2] In Afghanistan, it performs airlift and airdrop missions. More unusually, it transports fuel to advanced bases using the wet wing tanks of the squadron's C-130J aircraft to transport the fuel.[1]

Lineage

Activated on 1 August 1943

Redesignated 774th Bombardment Squadron, Heavy c. 29 September 1944

Inactivated on 25 September 1945

Activated on 16 January 1953

Redesignated: 774th Troop Carrier Squadron, Assault on 18 December 1961

Redesignated: 774th Troop Carrier Squadron, Medium on 15 May 1965

Redesignated: 774th Troop Carrier Squadron on 1 January 1967

Redesignated: 774th Tactical Airlift Squadron on 1 August 1967

Inactivated on 15 September 1972

Inactivated on 1 October 1986

Inactivated on 18 March 2003

Inactivated on unknown date prior to United States withdrawal from Afghanistan

Assignments

320th Expeditionary Operations Group, 20 April 2002 – 18 March 2003

376th Expeditionary Operations Group, 4 October 2004

455th Expeditionary Operations Group, 6 January 2006 – unknown[2]

Stations

Deployed to Rhein Main Air Base, Germany, 6 October–16 December 1973, 4 August–15 October 1975, 3 June–7 August 1977; RAF Mildenhall, England, 3 September–16 November 1974, 3 May–7 July 1976, England, 3 March–5 May 1978, 28 September–5 December 1979, 3 February–7 April 1981, 5 April–15 June 1982, 4 August–7 October 1983, 3 December 1984 – 9 February 1985, 9 April–11 June 1986)

Aircraft

Awards and campaigns

Campaign StreamerCampaignDatesNotes
Air Offensive, Europe11 March 1944 – 5 June 1944774th Bombardment Squadron
Air Combat, EAME Theater11 March 1944 – 11 May 1945774th Bombardment Squadron
Rome-Arno11 March–9 September 1944774th Bombardment Squadron
Central Europe22 March 1944 – 21 May 1945774th Bombardment Squadron
Normandy6 June 1944 – 24 July 1944774th Bombardment Squadron
Northern France25 July 1944 – 14 September 1944774th Bombardment Squadron
Southern France15 August 1944 – 14 September 1944774th Bombardment Squadron
North Apennines10 September 1944 – 4 April 1945774th Bombardment Squadron
Rhineland15 September 1944 – 21 March 1945774th Bombardment Squadron
Po Valley3 April 1945 – 8 May 1945774th Bombardment Squadron
Global War on Terror Expeditionary Medal774th Expeditionary Airlift Squadron

See also

References

Notes

Explanatory notes
Citations

Bibliography

Book: Byrd, Daniel A.. Warnock, A. Timothy. Short of War: Major USAF Contingency Operations 1947-1997. Lebanon Crisis: Operation BLUE BAT.

Book: Russell, Edward T.. Warnock, A. Timothy. Short of War: Major USAF Contingency Operations 1947-1997. Cuban Missile Crisis.

Book: Warnock, A. Timothy. Warnock, A. Timothy. Short of War: Major USAF Contingency Operations 1947-1997. Dominican Crisis: Operation POWER PACK.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 774 EAS continues tactical airlift operations in Afghanistan. Cox. SSG Divine. December 30, 2017. 455th Air Expeditionary Wing Public Affairs. July 1, 2019.
  2. Web site: Factsheet 774 Expeditionary Airlift Squadron (ACC). Haulman. Daniel L.. May 18, 2018. Air Force Historical Research Agency. August 28, 2018.
  3. Maurer, Combat Squadrons, pp. 748-749
  4. Watkins, p. 110
  5. Maurer, Combat Units, pp. 338-339
  6. Web site: 463rd Bombardment Group (H).5th Wing/15th Air Force "The Swoose Group" 1943-1945: Group History. 27 December 1961. 463rd Society. June 24, 2019.
  7. Web site: Lockheed C-130: The Four Horsemen Demonstrated the Power of the New Aircraft. June 12, 2006. HistoryNet. 19 October 2016.
  8. Byrd, p. 16
  9. Ravenstein, pp. 279-281
  10. Russell, p. 40
  11. Ravenstein, pp. 256-258
  12. Warnock, Operation Power Pack, pp. 63-73