Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Wilbur Wright Field

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
In use
  
1917–1951

Elevation
  
241 m

Wilbur Wright Field httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Type
  
Pilot training airfield

Controlled by
  
Air Service, United States Army   United States Army Air Forces

Condition
  
National Museum of the United States Air Force

Battles/wars
  
World War I World War II

Garrison
  
Training Section, Air Service

Wilbur Wright Field was a military installation and an airfield used as a World War I pilot, mechanic, and armorer training facility and, under different designations, conducted United States Army Air Corps and Air Forces flight testing. Located near Riverside, Ohio, the site is officially "Area B" of Wright-Patterson Air Force Base and includes the National Museum of the United States Air Force built on the airfield.

Contents

World War I

Wilbur Wright Field was established in 1917 for World War I on 2,075 acres (840 ha) of land adjacent to the Mad River which included the 1910 Wright Brothers' Huffman Prairie Flying Field and that was leased to the Army by the Miami Conservancy District. Logistics support to Wilbur Wright Field was by the adjacent Fairfield Aviation General Supply Depot established in January 1918 and which also supplied three other Midwest Signal Corps aviation schools. A Signal Corps Aviation School began in June 1917 for providing combat pilots to the Western Front in France, and the field housed an aviation mechanic's school and an armorer's school. On 19 June 1918, Lt. Frank Stuart Patterson at the airfield was testing machine gun/propeller synchronization when a tie rod failure broke the wings off his Airco DH.4M while diving from 15,000 ft (4,600 m). Also in 1918, McCook Field near Dayton between Keowee Street and the Great Miami River began using space and mechanics at Wilbur Wright Field. Following World War I, the training school at Wilbur Wright Field was discontinued.

Training units assigned to Wilbur Wright Field

  • 42d Aero Squadron, August 1917
  • Re-designated Squadron "I"; October 1918-February 1919
  • 44th Aero Squadron, August 1917
  • Re-designated Squadron "K"; October 1918 Re-designated Squadron "P"; November 1918-April 1919
  • 231st Aero Squadron (II), April 1918
  • Re-designated Squadron "A", July–December 1918; Assigned to Armorers' School
  • 246th Aero Squadron (II), May 1918
  • Re-designated Squadron "L", October 1918-February 1919
  • 342d Aero Squadron, August 1918
  • Re-designated Squadron "M" October 1918 Re-designated Squadron "Q" November 1918-April 1919
  • 507th Aero Squadron, July 1918-April 1919
  • 512th Aero Squadron (Supply), July 1918-April 1919
  • 669th Aero Squadron (Supply), May 1918-April 1919
  • 678th Aero Squadron (Supply), February 1918-April 1919
  • 851st Aero Squadron, March 1918
  • Re-designated Squadron "B" July 1918-April 1919

    Combat units trained at Wilbur Wright Field

  • 12th Aero Squadron, July–November 1917; Deployed to American Expeditionary Forces
  • 13th Aero Squadron, July–November 1917; Deployed to American Expeditionary Forces
  • 20th Aero Squadron, July–November 1917; Deployed to American Expeditionary Forces
  • 43d Aero Squadron, August–December 1917; Transferred to Ellington Field, Texas
  • 47th Aero Squadron, August 1917-February 1918; Deployed to American Expeditionary Forces
  • 149th Aero Squadron, August 1917-February 1918; Deployed to American Expeditionary Forces
  • 159th Aero Squadron, December 1917-February 1918; Deployed to American Expeditionary Forces
  • 162d Aero Squadron, December 1917-February 1918; Deployed to American Expeditionary Forces
  • 163d Aero Squadron, December 1917-February 1918; Deployed to American Expeditionary Forces
  • 166th Aero Squadron, December 1917-February 1918; Deployed to American Expeditionary Forces
  • 172d Aero Squadron, December 1917-February 1918; Deployed to American Expeditionary Forces
  • Service units trained at Wilbur Wright Field

  • 19th Aero Squadron, July–November 1917; Deployed to American Expeditionary Forces
  • 151st Aero Squadron, December 1917-February 1918; Deployed to American Expeditionary Forces
  • 211th Aero Squadron, December 1917-February 1918; Deployed to American Expeditionary Forces
  • 255th Aero Squadron, March–June 1918; Deployed to American Expeditionary Forces
  • 256th Aero Squadron; March–June 1918; Deployed to American Expeditionary Forces
  • 257th Aero Squadron; March–June 1918; Deployed to American Expeditionary Forces
  • 258th Aero Squadron; March–June 1918; Deployed to American Expeditionary Forces
  • 259th Aero Squadron; March–July 1918; Deployed to American Expeditionary Forces
  • 260th Aero Squadron; March–July 1918; Deployed to American Expeditionary Forces
  • 265th Aero Squadron; March–July 1918; Deployed to American Expeditionary Forces
  • 287th Aero Squadron, May–July 1918; Transferred to Chanute Field, Illinois
  • 288th Aero Squadron, May–July 1918; Transferred to Chanute Field, Illinois
  • 827th Aero Squadron (Repair), February–March 1918; Deployed to American Expeditionary Forces
  • Inter-war years

    1923 records for speed, distance, and endurance were set by an April 16 Fokker T-2 flight from Wilbur Wright Field which used a 50 km (31 mi) course around the water tower, the McCook Field water tower, and a pylon placed at New Carlisle. In June 1923, an Air Service TC-1 airship "was wrecked in a storm at Wilbur Wright Field" and by 1924, the field had "an interlock system" radio beacon using Morse code command guidance (dash-dot "N" for port, dot-dash "A" for starboard) illuminating instrument board lights. The Field Service Section at Wilbur Wright Field merged with McCook's Engineering Division to form the Materiel Division on 15 October 1926 ("moved to Wright Field when McCook Field closed in 1927"). The Air Service's "control station for the model airway"—which scheduled military flights of the Airways Section—moved to Wilbur Wright Field from McCook Field in the late 1920s (originally "at Bolling Field until 1925").

    Redesignations

    The Fairfield Air Depot formed when the leased area of Wilbur Wright Field and the Army-owned land of the Fairfield Aviation General Supply Depot merged soon after World War I. For an aerial war game of 1929, "Fairfield" was the headquarters of the Blue air force: a Blue "airdrome north of Dayton at Troy" was strafed on May 16 ("a raid on the airdrome at Fairfield" was later expected), "Dayton" was the May 21 take off site for a round-trip bomber attack on New York, and "target areas at Fairfield" were used for live bombing on May 25. A provisional division was "assembled at Dayton" on May 16, 1931, for maneuvers in which "Maj. Henry H. Arnold, division G-4 (Supply), had stocks at Pittsburgh; Cleveland; Buffalo; Middletown, Pennsylvania; Aberdeen, Maryland; and Bolling Field to service units as they flew eastward." The depot remained active until 1946.

    Wright Field

    In 1924, the city of Dayton purchased 4,500 acres (1,821 ha), the portion of Fairfield Air Depot leased in 1917 for Wilbur Wright Field, along with an additional 750 acres (300 ha) in Montgomery County to the southwest (now part of Riverside). The combined area was named Wright Field to honor both Wright Brothers. A new installation with permanent brick facilities was constructed to replace McCook Field and was dedicated on October 12, 1927. The transfer of 4,500 tons of engineering material, office equipment and other assets at McCook Field to Wright Field began on March 25, 1927, and was 85% complete by June 1 after moving 1,859 truckloads. "The Engineering School shut down for the school year 1927-28 at Wright Field, which had the Army Air Corps Museum in Building 12.

    By November 1930, "the laboratory at Wright Field" had planes fitted as flying laboratories" (e.g., B-19 "flying laboratory" with "8-foot tires"), and the equipment of the 1929 Full Flight Laboratory (closed out by the Daniel Guggenheim Fund for the Promotion of Aeronautics, which had established the principle of safe fog flying) was moved to Wright Field by the end of 1931. Materiel Division’s Fog Flying Unit under 1st Lt. Albert F. Hegenberger used the equipment for blind landings.

    Patterson Field

    Patterson Field named for Lt Patterson was designated on 6 July 1931 as the area of Wright Field east of Huffman Dam (including Fairfield Air Depot, Huffman Prairie, and Wright Field's airfield). Patterson Field became the location of the Materiel Division of the Air Corps and a key logistics center and in 1935, quarters were built at Patterson Field which in 1939 still "was without runways…heavier aircraft met difficulty in landing in inclement weather." Wright Field retained the land west of the Huffman Dam and became the research and development center of the Air Corps.

    Pre-war events

    Engineering and flight activities of the two installations after the designation of Patterson Field included numerous aviation achievements and failures prior to the bombing of Pearl Harbor:

    AAF and USAF base

    The Army Air Forces Technical Base was formed on December 15, 1945, when Wright Field, Patterson Field, Dayton Army Air Field in Vandalia and Clinton County AAF in Wilmington merged. After the USAF was created, the base was renamed Air Force Technical Base in December 1947 and Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in January 1948.. The former Wright Field became Area B of the combined installation, the southern portion of Patterson Field became Area A, and the northern portion of Patterson Field, including the jet runway built in 1946-47, Area C.

    References

    Wilbur Wright Field Wikipedia