50th Education Squadron

50th Education Squadron

Members and De Havilland DH-4 aircraft of the World War I 50th Aero Squadron, photographed at Clermont-en-Argonne Airdrome, France, 1918. The 50th AS is the earliest predecessor unit of the 50th Education Squadron
Active 1917-47; 1983-present
Country  United States
Branch  United States Air Force
Role AFA Education
Size Squadron
Garrison/HQ United States Air Force Academy, Colorado
Engagements

  • World War I

  • World War II - Asia-Pacific Theater
Decorations

  • Distinguished Unit Citation

  • Presidential Unit Citation
Commanders
Current
commander
Lt Col Mark D. Bontrager
Insignia
50th Education Squadron emblem

The 50th Education Squadron is an inactive squadron of the United States Air Force. It was last active at the United States Air Force Academy, Colorado, where it was inactivated in August 2005.

Formed in August 1917, as the 50th Aero Squadron, the unit flew observation missions in the American built De Haviland DH-4 over the battlefields of World War I. On 6 October 1918, 1Lt Harold E. Goettler and 2Lt Erwin R. Bleckley, of the 50th Aero Squadron were posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor.[1]

During World War II as the 431st Bombardment Squadron, the unit earned the Distinguished Unit Citation and the Presidential Unit Citation for its services in the Pacific Theatre. The unit was subsequently inactivated on 20 October 1947.

Overview

The squadron was reactivated at the United States Air Force Academy on 1 October 1983 and designated the 50th Airmanship Training Squadron. Today, the focus of the 50th is in the classroom, supporting the instruction of US Air Force Academy Cadets in Military Strategic Studies.

History

World War I

50th Aero Squadron
Operations


World War I
I Corps Observation Group
Western Front, France: 14 August-11 November 1918[2]

  • Sorties: 373
  • Combat missions: 192
  • Aircraft lost: 25 [3]
Victories
  • Enemy Aircraft shot down: 1[4]
  • Enemy Balloons shot down: 0[4]
  • Total Enemy Aircraft Destroyed: 1[4]

The unit was first organized as the 50th Aero Squadron with 149 men at Kelly Field #1, Texas, on 6 August 1917. Moved to Kelly Field #2 on 12 September and designated as a school squadron, personnel entering training for engine mechanics and performed field garrison duties. Was moved back to Field #1 on 17 November and was designated a service squadron, being equipped with Curtiss JN-4 aircraft and pilots, and entered training for combat service in France.[3]

On 20 December 1917, the 50th transferred from Kelly Field and ordered for overseas duty. It moved to the Aviation Concentration Center, Camp Mills, Garden City, New York and arrived on 3 January 1918. Departed from the United States on transport #508 (RMS Carmania on 9 January, arriving Liverpool, England on 24 January. Once in England, the 50th was moved to RFC Harlaxton, Lincolnshire and began advance training prior to being sent to France. Instruction was received in aircraft rigging and engine repair, along with gunnery, radio, photography and aerial bombing.[3]

Combat in France

See: Erwin R. Bleckley; Harold E. Goettler; Lost Battalion (World War I)

Departure orders for France were received on 3 July 1918, the squadron departing from the port of Southampton, arriving in Le Havre, France on 14 July. Entered service with the Air Service, AEF at St. Maixent Aerodrome on 17 July. After receiving additional personnel, supplies and equipment, was moved to the combat flying school at Amanty Airdrome for aireal observers on 27 July. At Amanty, the squadron received American-built De Havilland DH-4 and after training was received on the DH-4s, the squadron was designated as a Corps Observation squadron and assigned to the I Corps Observation Group. It moved to Bicqueley Airdrome on 8 September for combat duty on the front.[3] The squadron adopted the Dutch Girl insignia, trademark of Old Dutch Cleanser. To the fliers of the 50th Aero Squadron, the Dutch Girl meant one thing: "Clean up on Germany." The insignia was painted on the aircraft, and squadron members wore matching pins above the right breast pocket on their uniforms.

In combat, the mission of the 50th Aero Squadron was general surveillance of the enemy rear areas by means of both visual and photographic reconnaissance. These missions were carried out for the purpose of intelligence-gathering and informing First Army headquarters informed of enemy movements and preparations for attacks or retreats of its infantry forces. The 50th identified enemy activity along roads and railroads, ground stations, various storage dumps and airfields; the numbers of fires and activities of enemy aircraft, and the amount of anti-aircraft artillery was also monitored and reported. Due to the nature of the missions and the depths of enemy area which was penetrated, the missions were carried out at high altitudes, usually between 4,500 and 5,500 meters.[3]

The 50th's first combat mission was flown on 12 September, being assigned for observation duties in support of the 82d and 90th Infantry Divisions as part of the St. Mihiel Offensive. It flew two artillery surveillance flights to help adjust the artillery barrage on enemy forces for the 90th Division, and also six reconnaissance missions, observing and photographing enemy forces in the rear areas and reporting that information to the 82d Division Commander. The weather during the offensive, however, was extremely poor. Fortunately, the enemy air activity was very slight at the beginning of the offensive, but a day or two afterwards, there was a marked increase in enemy activity. One observer was killed in action, and one plane, with its observer and pilot failed to return during the Offensive.[3]

After St. Mihiel, the squadron moved to the Remicourt Aerodrome in preparation for the next American offensive, in the Argonne Forest. There it joined the 1st and 12th Aero Squadrons. Movement to Remicourt was delayed until 24 September due to weather. On the 26th combat operations began supporting the 77th Division, the 50th Aero Squadron flew its first missions of the Meuse-Argonne Offensive with a complement of 15 pilots, 15 observers, and 16 aircraft. Initially the aircraft flew observation or dropped messages[5]

At the beginning of October, units of the 308th Infantry Regiment were cut off and surrounded by German troops. Able to communicate with division headquarters only by carrier pigeon, the battalion-sized force inadvertently supplied division headquarters with incorrect coordinates of its location. On 2 October the 50th Aero Squadron searched for signs of the cut-off battalion, and on 5 October the division commander, Maj. Gen. Robert Alexander, requested that the 50th Aero Squadron locate and resupply the "Lost Battalion" by air with ammunition, rations, and medical supplies.[5]

On 28 October, the squadron was moved from Remicourt to the new airdrome at Clermont-en-Argonne, where it continued combat operations until the 11 November Armistice with Germany.

Post World War I duty in France

After the end of hostilities, the air service in France was slow to bring their units back to the United States. Transportation was poor, and many had to wait months to board a ship. The 50th AS was no exception, as it was split into flights and assigned to various locations in France, performing postwar service duties.

With the inactivation of the First Army Air Service, the 50th Aero Squadron was ordered demobilized. It was ordered to report to the 1st Air Depot at Colombey-les-Belles Airdrome on 1 April 1919, to turn in all of its supplies and equipment and was relieved from duty with the AEF. The squadron's DH-4 aircraft were delivered to the Air Service Production Center No. 2. at Romorantin Aerodrome. There practically all of the pilots and observers were detached from the Squadron. Personnel at Colombey were subsequently assigned to the Commanding General, Services of Supply and ordered to report to the staging camp at Clamecy, France on 9 April. There, personnel awaited scheduling to report to one of the Base Ports in France for transport to the United States. It moved to the port of Marseille, France, 22 April when it boarded the SS Caserta.[6]

Upon its arrival in New York, the squadron proceeded to Scott Field, Illinois, arriving on 27 May where its personnel were discharged and returned to civilian life.

World War I honors

Combat sectors and campaigns
Streamer Sector/Campaign Dates Notes
St. Mihiel Offensive Campaign 12–16 September 1918 [7]
Toul-Verdun Sector 17–23 September 1918 [7]
Meuse-Argonne Offensive Campaign 26 September-11 November 1918 [7]
Notable personnel

  • Lt. Robert M. Anderson, SSC
  • Lt. David C. Beebe, SSC
  • Lt. Franklin B. Bellows, DSC (KIA)

  • Lt. Mitchell H. Brown, DSC, 1 aerial victory
  • Lt. William D. Frayne, SSC
  • Lt. George R. Phillips, DSC, 1 aerial victory

DSC: Distinguished Service Cross; SSC: Silver Star Citation; KIA: Killed in Action[8]

Inter-War era

A small cadre of the squadron remained at Scott Field until August 1919 when it was moved to Langley Field, Virginia. At Langley, it received De Havilland DH-4s and was assigned to the 2d Observation Wing Headquarters. It was assigned to coastal and submarine patrol duties along the Atlantic coast. On 1 October it was attached to the 1st Army Observation Group.[9]

It remained active with the 2d Wing and performed demonstrations of effectiveness of aerial bombardment on naval warships, June–September 1921. Reassigned to Mexican Border in 1927 as an aerial observation squadron at Brooks Field, San Antonio, Texas before inactivation on 1 August 1927.[9]

The designation was then transferred to the Office of Chief of the Air Corps (OCAC). Organized in December 1927 with Organized Reserve personnel as a Regular Army Inactive (RAI) unit at Dodd Field, Texas. Relieved from assignment to OCAC 1 September 1928. Organized Reserve officers assigned to the unit participated in summer training at Kelly Field in 1928. Designated mobilization training station was Dodd Field, 1927-29. Withdrawn from the Eighth Corps Area on 27 October 1928 and allotted to the Second Corps Area. Assigned on 13 February 1929 to the 9th Observation Group. Relieved from assignment to the 9th Observation Group on 8 May 1929 and assigned to the 5th Composite Group. Organized on 27 May 1929 with Organized Reserve personnel as a RAI unit at Mitchel Field, New York.[9]

The 50th Observation Squadron was reactivated into active service as an aerial observation and defensive patrol squadron off the coast of Oahu, Hawaii Territory, 1930. Remained in Hawaii as part of the Army Hawaiian Department throughout the 1930s as part of the air defenses of the islands. In 1938 it was re-designated as a Medium Range reconnaissance squadron, being attached to the 5th Bombardment Group and equipped with B-18 Bolo twin-engine bombers. Was attached to the 11th Bombardment Group in February 1940. Beginning in early 1941, the squadron transitioned into the Boeing B-17D Flying Fortress, having the capability to fly longer reconnaissance missions from Hickam Field.[9]

World War II

B-17E Fortress 41-2426, 431st Bomb Squadron in August 1943 at the Thirteenth Air Depot, Tontouna Airfield, New Caledonia in for depot-level maintenance along with a P-38, P-39 and B-26. This B-17 was returned to the United States in Feb 1944 as War Weary.

Following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on 7 December 1941, the 50th was re-designated the 431st Bombardment Squadron. In June 1942, shortly after the Battle of Midway, the 11th Group was authorized as a mobile force by the Army Air Forces in order to respond to a Navy request by Admiral Nimitz for long-range armed search planes support for locating Japanese fleets and with firepower to withstand defending Japanese fighter attacks while tracking the fleet. As a mobile group, the 11th Group received authorization to leave Hickam Field to support Navy operations in the South Pacific Theater during the Guadalcanal and Northern Solomon Islands Campaigns.[10]

As part of the 11th Bomb Group, the squadron moved to the New Hebrides on 22 July 1942 and temporarily becoming part of Thirteenth Air Force the end of 1942. They bombed airfields, supply dumps, ships, docks, troop positions, and other objectives in the South Pacific from July to November 1942, and received a Distinguished Unit Citation (DUC) for those operations. Continued operations attacking Japanese airfields, installations, and shipping until late March 1943.[10]

"Bolivar Jr" B-24M-20-CO Liberator s/n 44-42151 431st BS, 11th BG, 7th AF Agana Airfield, Guam, Marianas Islands on June 6, 1945.

The squadron returned to Hickam Field on 8 April 1943 and was reassigned to Seventh Air Force. Following this, the 11th Bomb Group received the Consolidated B-24 Liberator bombers, which it flew until the end of the war. While in Hawaii, the group refitted and trained with the B-24, flying combat training missions against Wake Island and other central Pacific bases held by the Japanese. It deployed to Ellice Island on 9 November 1943 and resumed combat participating in the Allied offensive through the Gilbert, Marshall and Marianas Islands, while operating from Funafuti, Tarawa, and Kwajalein. Moved to Guam on 25 October 1944 and attacked shipping and airfields in the Volcano and Bonin Islands. Moved to Okinawa on 2 July 1945 to participate in the final phases of the air offensive against Japan, bombing railways, airfields, and harbor facilities on Kyushu and striking Japanese airfields in Eastern China.[10]

After the war ceased the group flew reconnaissance and surveillance missions to China and ferried liberated prisoners of war from Okinawa to Luzon, Philippines. The unit earned the Distinguished Unit Citation and the Presidential Unit Citation for its services in the Pacific.[10]

Postwar era

After V-J Day, most squadron members returned to the United States and demobilized. On 29 April 1946 the squadron was re-designated as the 5th Reconnaissance Squadron (Very Long Range, Photographic), and assigned to Headquarters, US Army Forces, Pacific at Fort William McKinley, Luzon, Philippines.[11]

Transferred to the 313th Bombardment Wing at Clark Field, the 5th was equipped with F-13 Superfortress (B-29)s, F-7A Liberators (B-24J and L)s and a few F-9B Flying Fortresses (B-17F)s equipped for long range photography and mapping which had operated from Australia during the war. The squadron's mission was to perform aerial photography and mapping over the Southwest Pacific, Southeast Asia, Korea, Japan, Philippines, Formosa, and the Pescadores, 1946–1947, some missions being clandestine over northern China, Northern Korea and the Soviet Union.[11]

The squadron began phasing down for inactivation in 1947, with it being inactivated on 20 October 1947.[12]

Modern era

The squadron was reactivated at the United States Air Force Academy on 1 October 1983 and designated the 50th Airmanship Training Squadron. In November 1994 the squadron was re-designated as the 50th Training Squadron.[13]

In 1994, the unit earned its fourth Air Force Outstanding Unit Award, three of them consecutively in its time at the Academy. The summer of 1997 saw the last flight of the Boeing T-43A for the squadron with a change in direction for the squadron mission and a loss of funding for the Buckley ANG Base unit which supported T-43 operations. In January 2001 the squadron was re-designated the 50th Education Squadron, reflecting the squadron's change in mission.[13]

Lineage

50th Aero Squadron Emblem
The 50th Aero Squadron adopted the Dutch Girl logo of Old Dutch Cleanser to show they meant to "Clean up on Germany"
Emblem of the 431st Bombardment Squadron/5th Reconnaissance Squadron
Redesignated 50th Aero Squadron (Corps Observation) on 8 September 1918
Redesignated 50th Aero Squadron on 1 June 1919[3]
Redesignated 50th Squadron, Observation on 14 March 1921
Redesignated 50th Observation Squadron on 25 January 1923
Inactivated on 1 August 1927
Inactivated in the Reserve, 31 October 1930
Redesignated 50th Reconnaissance Squadron on 25 January 1938
Redesignated 50th Reconnaissance Squadron (Medium Range) on 6 December 1939
Redesignated 50th Reconnaissance Squadron (Heavy) on 20 November 1940
Redesignated 431st Bombardment Squadron (Heavy) on 22 April 1942
Redesignated 431st Bombardment Squadron, Heavy c. 3 August 1944
Redesignated 5th Reconnaissance Squadron, Very Long Range, Photographic on 29 April 1946
Inactivated on 20 October 1947[12]
Redesignated 50th Training Squadron on 1 November 1994
Redesignated 50th Education Squadron on 1 January 2001
Inactivated on 1 August 2005

Assignments

Attached to Royal Flying Corps for training, 24 January-3 July 1918
Attached to: First Army Observation Group, 1 October 1919
Attached to: 1st Provisional Air Brigade, 6 May-3 October 1921
Attached to Air Service Field Officers’ [later Air Service Tactical; Air Corps Tactical] School, 8 August 1922
Attached to: Office of the Chief of the Air Corps (OCAC), 1 December 1927
Attached to: 9th Observation Group. 13 February 1929
Attached to: 5th Composite Group. 8 May 1929
Attached to: 5th Bombardment Group, 12 October 1938
Attached to: 11th Bombardment Group, 1 February 1940

Stations

Overseas transport, RMS Carmania, 9–24 January 1918
B Flight operated from Clermont-en-Argonne Airdrome to 18 December 1918 and from Clamecy thereafter
C Flight operated from Clermont-en-Argonne Airdrome to 12 December 1918 and from Camp de La Valbonne (Ain department) thereafter

Air echelon operated from Luganville Airfield, Espiritu Santo, New Hebrides, August 1942
Forward echelon operated from Henderson Field, Guadalcanal, Solomon Islands, December 1942

Aircraft

See also

References

 This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the Air Force Historical Research Agency.
 This article incorporates public domain material from the United States Air Force document "50th Education Squadron History".

  1. (1988 Reprint), Order of Battle of the United States Land Forces in the First World War, Volume 3, Part 3, Center of Military History, United States Army
  2. Series "H", Section "O", Volume 29, Weekly Statistical Reports of Air Service Activities, October 1918-May 1919. Gorrell's History of the American Expeditionary Forces Air Service, 1917–1919, National Archives, Washington, D.C.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Series "E", Volume 3, History of the 47th-50th Aero Squadrons. Gorrell's History of the American Expeditionary Forces Air Service, 1917–1919, National Archives, Washington, D.C.
  4. 1 2 3 Gorrell's History of the American Expeditionary Forces Air Service, Series M, Volume 38, Compilation of Confirmed Victories and Losses of the AEF Air Service as of May 26, 1919
  5. 1 2 Fricano, Lt. Col. Michael (1996). The Evolution of Airlift Doctrine and Organization, Air University, maxwell AFB, Alabama, p. 7.
  6. Series "D", Weekly Statistical Reports of Air Service Activities, October 1918-May 1919. Gorrell's History of the American Expeditionary Forces Air Service, 1917–1919, National Archives, Washington, D.C.
  7. 1 2 3 United States War Department (1920), Battle Participation of Organizations of the American Expeditionary Forces in France, Belgium and Italy, 1917–1919, Washington, Government Printing Office, 1920
  8. Military Times Hall of Valor Search, 50th Aero Squadron
  9. 1 2 3 4 Army Air Service Order of Battle 1919-1941
  10. 1 2 3 4 Turner Publishing Staff (1996), 11th Bomb Group (H): The Gray Goose ISBN 1563112396
  11. 1 2 The story of The Impact of U.S. Aerial Reconnaissance during the Early Cold War (1947–1962):Service & Sacrifice of the Cold Warriors
  12. 1 2 3 4 5 Maurer, Maurer. Combat Squadrons of the Air Force, World War II. Maxwell AFB, Alabama: Air Force Historical Studies Office, 1969. ISBN 0-89201-097-5.
  13. 1 2 50th Education Squadron History

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