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Air Force ROTC emblem. The Air Force Reserve Officers' Training Corps (AFROTC) is one of the three primary commissioning sources for officers in the United States Air Force and United States Space Force, the other two being the United States Air Force Academy (USAFA) and Air Force Officer Training School (OTS). [1]
This category is for all current and historic military facilities located in the State of Indiana. Subcategories This category has the following 5 subcategories, out of 5 total.
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Map of the Army ROTC Brigades. The 7th Reserve Officers' Training Corps Brigade is an Army Reserve Officers' Training Corps brigade based in Fort Knox, Kentucky.It provides training support and oversight to all Army ROTC and Junior ROTC units in the states of Ohio, Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan, and Tennessee.
The United States Army Air Corps leased Stout Field from Indiana for $1 per year during World War II [2] to use as a training base, and to conduct air transport operations. [3] Elements of the Central (later Eastern) Technical Training Command were located there.
Indiana: Branch: Type: state militia, military reserve force: Role "To meet state and federal mission responsibilities." Part of: Indiana National Guard: Garrison/HQ: Indiana Air National Guard, Stout Field, 2002 S. Holt Road, Indianapolis, IN 46241: Commanders; Civilian leadership: President Donald Trump (Commander-in-Chief) Frank Kendall III
Training conducted by an AETC-gained airlift wing of the Air Force Reserve Command; this unit trains Air Force and Air Force Reserve personnel for the C-5 and previously trained Air National Guard personnel for the C-5 until retirement of the C-5 from the ANG; C-17 Globemaster III – Altus AFB, Oklahoma; C-21 Learjet – Keesler AFB, Mississippi
David Axe (2007) Army 101: Inside ROTC in a Time of War. Charles Johnson (2002) African Americans and ROTC: Military, Naval, and Aeroscience Programs at Historically Black Colleges 1916 — 1973. Betty J. Morden (1990) Women's Army Corps, p 287. Jennifer M. Silva, "ROTC", chapter 35 of Gender and Higher Education by Barbara J. Bank.