521st Air Defense Group

The 521st Air Defense Group is a disbanded United States Air Force organization. Its last assignment was with the 31st Air Division at Sioux City Municipal Airport, Iowa, where it was inactivated in 1955. The group was originally activated as the 521st Air Service Group, a support unit for the 310th Bombardment Group at the end of World War II in Italy and then redeployed to the United States where it was inactivated in 1945.

521st Air Defense Group
Active1945; 1953–1955
Country United States
Branch United States Air Force
TypeFighter interceptor
RoleAir Defense

The group was activated as the 521st Air Defense Group once again in 1953, when Air Defense Command (ADC0 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 53d Fighter Group in a project that replaced air defense groups commanding fighter squadrons with fighter groups with distinguished records during World War II.

World War II

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The group was first activated as the 521st Air Service Group 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. It was designed to support a single combat group.[1] Its 947th Air Engineering Squadron[2] provided maintenance that was beyond the capability of the combat group, its 771st Air Materiel Squadron[3] handled all supply matters, and its Headquarters & Base Services Squadron provided other support.[1] The group supported 310th Bombardment Group in Italy.[4] The group returned to the US in 1945 and was inactivated. It was disbanded in 1948.[5]

Cold War

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F-51D as flown by the 87th FIS until 1953

The group was reconstituted, redesignated as the 521st Air Defense Group, and activated at Sioux City Municipal Airport in 1953[6] with responsibility for air defense of central Midwestern United States.[citation needed] It was assigned the 87th Fighter-Interceptor Squadron (FIS), which was already stationed at Sioux City Airport, and flying World War II era North American F-51 Mustangs[7] as its operational component.[8][9] The 87th FIS had been assigned directly to the 31st Air Division.[9] The group replaced the 79th Air Base Squadron as the host USAF unit at Sioux City Municipal Airport. It was assigned three squadrons to perform its support responsibilities.[10][11]

In the fall of 1953 the 87th FIS upgraded to radar equipped and Mighty Mouse rocket armed North American F-86D Sabre jet aircraft[7] and the 14th Fighter-Interceptor Squadron, also flying Sabres,[12] was activated as the group's second operational squadron.[13] In November 1954 the 87th FIS moved to England and was reassigned.[9] The 87th FIS was replaced the next month by the 519th Fighter-Interceptor Squadron, another Sabre squadron.[14][15] The group was inactivated[6] and replaced by the 53d Fighter Group (Air Defense)[16][17] in 1955 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.[18] It was disbanded once again in 1984.[19]

Lineage

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  • Constituted as the 521st Air Service Group
Activated on 1 January 1945[20]
Inactivated on or about 7 November 1945
Disbanded on 8 October 1948[5]
  • Reconstituted and redesignated as 521st Air Defense Group on 21 January 1953
Activated on 16 February 1953[6]
Inactivated on 18 August 1955[6]
Disbanded on 27 September 1984[19]

Assignments

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Stations

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Components

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Aircraft

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  • North American F-51D Mustang, 1953[7]
  • North American F-86D Sabre, 1953–1955[7][12]

See also

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Notes

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Explanatory notes
  1. ^ Aircraft is North American F-86D-30-NA Sabre, seria 51-6035. Taken in 1956.
Citations
  1. ^ a b Coleman, p. 208
  2. ^ Abstract, History of 947th Air Engineering Squadron, Jan 1945 (retrieved 9 January 2012)
  3. ^ Abstract, History of 771st Air Materiel Squadron, Jan 1945 (retrieved 9 January 2012)
  4. ^ Abstract, History of 771st Air Materiel Squadron, Mar 1945 (retrieved 9 January 2012)
  5. ^ a b Department of the Air Force Letter, 322 (AFOOR 887e), 8 October 1948, Subject: Disbandment of Certain Inactive Air Force Units
  6. ^ a b c d e f Cornett & Johnson, p. 82
  7. ^ a b c d Cornett & Johnson, p.120
  8. ^ a b Bailey, Carl E. (20 August 2008). "Factsheet 87 Flying Training Squadron (AETC)". Air Force Historical Research Agency. Retrieved 10 April 2023.
  9. ^ a b c Maurer, Combat Squadrons, pp. 299–300
  10. ^ Cornett & Johnson, p.147
  11. ^ a b Abstract, History of 521st USAF Infirmary, Jan–Jun 1955 (retrieved 22 June 2012)
  12. ^ a b Cornett & Johnson, p.114
  13. ^ a b Maurer, Combat Squadrons, p. 78
  14. ^ Cornett & Johnson, p.130
  15. ^ a b Maurer, Combat Squadrons, pp. 623–624
  16. ^ Maurer, Combat Units, p. 115
  17. ^ Robertson, Patsy AFHRA Factsheet, 53rd Wing Archived 4 January 2013 at the Wayback Machine 2/24/2009 (retrieved 3 March 2012)
  18. ^ Buss, Sturm, Volan, & McMullen, p.6
  19. ^ a b Department of the Air Force/MPM Letter 575q, 27 Sep 1984, Subject: Disbandment of Units
  20. ^ a b c Abstract, History of 521st Air Service Group, Jan–Feb 1945 (retrieved 22 June 2012)
  21. ^ Abstract, History of 521st Air Service Group, Apr 1945 (retrieved 22 June 2012)

References

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  This article incorporates public domain material from the Air Force Historical Research Agency

Further reading

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