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Stuttgart Army Airfield is the name of two US Army installations: for the World War II base see Stuttgart Army Airfield (Arkansas) for the current base see Stuttgart Army Airfield (Germany)
The U.S. Army still maintains a small helicopter base - Stuttgart Army Airfield - on the southern side of the airport, which it shares with the Baden-Württemberg Police helicopter wing. The police helicopter wing falls under the control of Stuttgart Police Department and has six modern helicopters based at Stuttgart and two in Söllingen.
Stuttgart: Baden-Württemberg: EDDS STR Stuttgart Airport (formerly Stuttgart Army Airfield, Stuttgart Echterdingen Airport) Trier / Föhren: Rhineland-Palatinate: EDRT Trier-Föhren Airfield: Wangerland: Lower Saxony: EDXP Harle Airfield: Wangerooge: Lower Saxony: EDWG AGE Wangerooge Airfield: Weeze: North Rhine-Westphalia: EDLV NRN Weeze ...
Butts Army Airfield: Fort Carson: Colorado: KFCS Cairns Army Airfield: Fort Novosel: Alabama: KOZR Camp Blanding Army Airfield: Camp Blanding: Florida: 2CB Camp Peary Landing Strip: Camp Peary: Virginia: W94 [4] Campbell Army Airfield: Fort Campbell: Kentucky: KHOP Davison Army Airfield: Fort Belvoir: Virginia: KDAA Dawson Army Airfield: Camp ...
Initially designated as Army Air Forces Advanced Flying School, it was redesignated as Stuttgart Army Air Field on 2 January 1943. [2] Stuttgart AAF primarily trained medium bomber and transport pilots using the Beechcraft AT-10 Wichita and Cessna AT-17 Bobcat , [ 5 ] the host unit being the 34th Two Engine Flying Training Group and the 891st ...
Giebelstadt Army Air Field Giebelstadt: closed 2006 Giessen Depot Giessen: closed 2008 Graves Kaserne Aschaffenburg: closed 1992 Grenadier Kaserne: Stuttgart: Griesheim Army Airfield/Stars and Stripes Kaserne Griesheim: closed 2008 Stars and Stripes moved to Kaiserslautern Grossauheim Kaserne Hanau: closed 2008 Gruenewald Training Area Berlin ...
With the end of World War II, Stuttgart Army Airfield was declared excess and closed on 5 August 1946. [3] It was conveyed though the War Assets Administration (WAA) to the City of Stuttgart to establish a municipal airport. [3] Trans-Texas DC-3s stopped at Stuttgart from 1953 to 1958–59.
The U.S. Army, Europe (USAREUR) headquarters, located in Heidelberg since 1952 [3] as part of the garrison, was moved to Wiesbaden to a newly built installation at Lucius D. Clay Kaserne in 2012. All military installations in Heidelberg were handed over to the German state by 2015 for conversion to civilian use.