303d Tactical Reconnaissance Squadron

303d Tactical Reconnaissance Squadron

Emblem of the 302d Tactical Reconnaissance Squadron
Active 1953-1959
Country United States
Branch United States Air Force

The 303d Tactical Reconnaissance Squadron is an inactive United States Air Force unit. It was last assigned to the 66th Tactical Reconnaissance Wing and stationed at Laon-Couvron Air Base, France.

Contents

History

Activated on 1 January 1953 as part of the 66th Tactical Reconnaissance Group at Shaw AFB. Initially equipped with second-line RF-51D Mustangs and trained as in tactical air reconnaissance, its parent organization being programmed for deployment to NATO. Equipped with RF-80A Shooting Star Jet aircraft returned from use in the Korean War in mid-1953.

Deployed to Sembach Air Base, West Germany in mid-1953, being assigned to the United States Air Forces in Europe Seventeenth Air Force, during the summer of 1953. Performed reconnaissance training at Sembach, being upgraded to the new RF-84F Thundersteak in 1955. Trained with NATO forces in Europe during the summer months, however, due to poor weather conditions in central Europe during the winter months, deployed frequently to Wheelus AB, Libya and Nouasseur AB, Morocco for training.

Moved to Laon AB, France in mid-1958 due to severe problems with the Sembach AB runway, operated from Phalsbourg AB while improvements were made to the Laon runway until September.

In early 1959 it was announced that the RF-84 equipped squadrons assigned to the 66th TRW were to be deactivated and their places in the 66th taken by the RF-101C Voodoo-equipped squadrons being deployed from Shaw AFB, South Carolina. These new squadrons arrived at Laon in May 1959 and the 303d was inactivated in late June.

Lineage

Inactivated on 20 June 1959

Assignments

Stations

Operated from: Phalsbourg-Bourscheid Air Base, France, 10 July-30 September 1958

Aircraft

References

Military of the United States portal
United States Air Force portal

 This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the Air Force Historical Research Agency.