Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Originally known as Dobbins Air Force Base, it was named in honor of Captain Charles M. Dobbins, a World War II C-47 pilot who died near Sicily. The installation is the home station of the host wing, the 94th Airlift Wing (94 AW) of the Air Force Reserve Command (AFRC) and its fleet of C-130 Hercules aircraft, and is also the location of the ...
Then, in 2005, a parcel of 15.5 acres (0.063 km 2) was leased from the United States Air Force to the government of Cobb County for the creation of a 45,000 sq ft (4,200 m 2) museum. [ 3 ] [ b ] The museum, since renamed the Aviation Museum and Discovery Center , requested an $8 million grant from the state to establish an aviation middle ...
In April 1955, Congress appropriated more than $4 million to start building a new Naval Air Station at a more suitable location to allow longer runways. The site selected was a large military reservation jointly occupied by Dobbins Air Force Base and the Lockheed Company, between Marietta and Smyrna. The new air station was completed in April 1959.
Dobbins Air Force Base: Marietta: Georgia: 1968 Redesignated as Dobbins Air Reserve Base: Donaldson Air Force Base: Greenville: South Carolina: 1963 Closed Dow Air Force Base: Bangor: Maine: 1968 Redesignated as Bangor Air National Guard Base: Eaker Air Force Base: Blytheville: Arkansas: 1992 Closed Edward Gary Air Force Base: San Marcos: Texas ...
The USAF's primary test and evaluation base and home of the Air Force Test Center. A wide range of aircraft are operated by the 412th Test Wing, Air Force Test Pilot School, 31st Test and Evaluation Squadron and Air Force Operational Test and Evaluation Center. Edwards also hosts NASA's Armstrong Flight Research Center. [17] Eglin Air Force Base
Ravenstein, Charles A. Air Force Combat Wings Lineage and Honors Histories 1947–1977. Maxwell Air Force Base, Alabama: Office of Air Force History 1984. ISBN 0-912799-12-9. Mueller, Robert, Air Force Bases Volume I, Active Air Force Bases Within the United States of America on 17 September 1982, Office of Air Force History, 1989
374th Army Air Force Base Unit Was: Lockbourne Air Force Base (1948-1974) Was: Rickenbacker Air Force Base (1974-1980) Now: Rickenbacker Air National Guard Base (1980-Present) Also: Rickenbacker International Airport (1994-Pres) (IATA: LCK, ICAO: KLCK, FAA LID: LCK) Eastern Flight Training Center Kenton County Airport, Covington, Kentucky
Marietta Air Force Base (later Dobbins Air Force Base), Georgia, 26 June 1949 – 1 April 1951; Dobbins Air Force Base, Georgia, 14 June 1952; Scott Air Force Base, Illinois, 18 May 1955; Laurence G. Hanscom Field, Massachusetts, 16 November 1957; Dobbins Air Force Base (later Dobbins Air Reserve Base), Georgia, 1 July 1972 – present [2]