Williams Air Force Base

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Williams Air Force Base

Part of Air Training Command (ATC)
Located near Chandler, Arizona

Williams AFB, 8 May 1997


Location of Williams AFB

Type Air Force Base
Coordinates 33°18′29.00″N 111°39′35.81″W / 33.3080556, -111.6599472
Built 1941
In use 1941-1993
Controlled by United States Air Force
Garrison Air Training Command
Occupants 82d Training Wing (1973-1993)

Williams Air Force Base is a former United States Air Force (USAF) base, located 8 miles east of Chandler, and about 30 miles southeast of Phoenix, Arizona.

It was active as a training base for both the United States Army Air Forces, as well as the USAF from 1941 until its closure in 1993. Williams was the leading pilot training facility of the USAF, supplying 25% of all pilots.

Contents

[edit] Current Status

Since its closure most of the base has since been annexed as part of Mesa, Arizona. Some property was retained by the US government while other portions were conveyed and converted into the civilian Williams Gateway Airport which was later renamed Phoenix-Mesa Gateway Airport and an educational campus anchored by Arizona State University Polytechnic Campus and Chandler-Gilbert Community College.

[edit] History

The base was named in honor of Arizona native 1st Lt Charles Linton Williams (1898-1927). Lieutenant Williams died on 6 Jul 1927 when his Boeing PW-9A pursuit aircraft crashed near Ft DeRussy, Hawaii.

Previous names of the base were:

  • Mesa Military Airport, Higley, Arizona, 19 Jun 1941
  • Higley Field, Oct 1941
  • Williams Field, 24 Feb 1942.

[edit] Base Operating Units

  • 89th Base HQ and Air Base Sq (advance detachment), 16 Oct 1941 - 4 Dec 1941
  • 89th Base HQ and Air Base Sq, 4 Dec 1941 - 1 May 1944
  • 3010th AAF Base Unit, 1 May 1944 - 26 Sep 1947
  • 3010th AF Base Unit, 26 Sep 1947 - 26 Aug 1948
  • 3525th Air Base Gp, 26 Aug 1948 - 1 Jul 1958
  • 4530th Air Base Gp, 1 Jul 1958 - 1 Oct 1960
  • 3525th Air Base Gp, 1 Oct 1960 - 1 Feb 1973
  • 82d Air Base Gp, 1 Feb 1973 - 30 Jun 1993

[edit] Major Commands Assigned

  • Air Corps Flying Training Comd, 23 Jan 1942
  • AAF Flying Training Comd, 15 Mar 1942
  • AAF Training Comd, 31 Jul 1943
  • Tactical Air Command 1 July 1958 - 1 October 1960
  • Air Training Command 1 Jul 1946 - 1 July 1958, 1 October 1960 - Jun 1993

[edit] Operational History

The United States Army Air Forces broke ground for its Advance Flying School there on July 16, 1941. During the fifty-two years it was operational, the base graduated more pilots and instructors than any other base in the country and supplied twenty-five percent of the Air Force's pilots annually.

Construction of the base started on 16 July 1941 and the initial construction was completed in December, making the base oprational, although the airfield was not ready for 4-engined aircraft until late 1943. During World War II, Williams Field was under the command of the 89th Army Air Force Base Unit, AAF West Coast Training Center. The training mission of the base 4-engined aircraft transtitonal training predominated during 1944-1945, but was changed to fighter pilot training in early 1945.

During the 1950s, a fighter gunnery school was added in 1954, however the base's mission returned exclusively to undergraduate pilot training in 1961.

The primary training aircraft used during the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s were the Cessna T-37 "Tweet" and the Northrop T-38 Talon. Both trainers were two-seat, dual-engine jet aircraft.

The undergraduate flight training program lasted just less than one full year and involved classroom, simulator, and aircraft training activities. Graduates were selected to remain as instructors, after an intensive training course, or went on to train in their primary weapon system aircraft.

Students proceeded from the academic phase of classroom and simulator instruction around the six-week point of the program. The first flight was largely a 'demo' flight in the T-37 aircraft with the instructor orienting the student to the aircraft, the local training area, and some basic flight maneuvers.

The base was closed in September, 1993 as a result of BRAC 1991. The host unit, the 82d Flying Training Wing and its squadrons (96, 97, 98, and 99th FTS) were inactivated.

[edit] See Also

[edit] References

  • Active Air Force Bases Within the United States of America on 17 September 1982 USAF Reference Series, Office of Air Force History, United States Air Force, Washington, D.C., 1989

[edit] External links