350th Air Refueling Squadron

350th Air Refueling Squadron

350th Air Refueling Squadron Patch
Active 1 June 1942 - 15 December 1945
16 July 1947 - 27 June 1949
1 January 1956 - 1 July 1976
28 January 1982 - Present
Country United States
Branch United States Air Force
Type Aerial refueling
Part of Air Mobility Command
18th Air Force
22d Air Refueling Wing
22d Operations Group
Garrison/HQ McConnell Air Force Base
Nickname Red Falcons
Decorations DCU
AFOUA w/ V Device
FCdG w/ Palm
Commanders
Current
commander
Lt Col Jeff Crouse

The 350th Air Refueling Squadron (350 ARS) is part of the 22d Air Refueling Wing at McConnell Air Force Base, Kansas. It operates the KC-135 Stratotanker aircraft conducting aerial refueling missions.

Contents

Mission

To Organize, Train, and Equip to Provide Global Mobility, 24 Hours per Day, 7 Days per Week.

History

Established as a B-17 Flying Fortress heavy bombardment squadron in mid-1942; trained initially under Third Air Force in the southeast, then transferring to Second Air Force in the Pacific Northwest. Operated as an Operational Training Unit (OTU) in the Midwest until being deployed to the European Theater of Operations (ETO), being assigned to VIII Bomber Command in England in June 1949.

Engaged in strategic bombardment operations over Occupied Europe and Germany, sustaining very heavy losses of personnel and aircraft while conducting many unescorted missions over enemy territory attacking airfields, industries, naval facilities and transportation hubs. During the summer of 1944, aircrews bombed enemy positions at Saint-Lô, followed by similar campaigns at Brest in August and September. In October 1944, the squadron attacked enemy and ground defenses in the allied drive on the Siegfried Line, then bombed marshaling yards, German occupied villages, and communication targets in the Ardennes during the Battle of the Bulge from December 1944 to January 1945. Attacked enemy targets in Germany during the spring of 1945, ending combat operations with the German Capitulation in May 1945.

Remained in Europe as part of the United States Air Forces in Europe occupation forces, dropping food to the people in the west of the Netherlands, and in June transported French Allied former prisoners of war from Austria to France. Demobilizing in England, in December 1945 the squadron inactivated as a paper unit.

Activated in the Reserves in 1947 at Miami Airport, Florida. Unclear whether or not the unit was manned or equipped; inactivated in 1949 due to budget restrictions. Reactivated under Strategic Air Command received new, swept wing B-47 Stratojets in 1956 which were designed to carry nuclear weapons and to penetrate Soviet air defenses with its high operational ceiling and near supersonic speed. The squadron flew the B-47 for about a decade when by the mid-1960s it had become obsolete and vulnerable to new Soviet air defenses. The squadron began to send it's stratojets to AMARC at Davis-Monthan AFB for retirement in 1965, the last being retired in 1966, one of the last B-47 Squadrons.

Redesignated as a strategic reconnaissance squadron, operating AQM-34 Firebee strategic reconnaissance drones launched from DC-130 Hercules aircraft and recovered by CH-3 helicopters from, 1966–1976. Additionally, it provided refueling support for SR-71 aircraft from, 1983–1990. The 350th also provided cargo support and intratheater refueling during combat in Southwest Asia from, August 1990–March 1991.[1]

Lineage[1]

Activated on 1 Jun 1942
Redesignated 350 Bombardment Squadron, Heavy, on 20 Aug 1943
Inactivated on 15 Dec 1945
Activated in the Reserve on 16 Jul 1947
Inactivated on 27 Jun 1949
Activated on 1 Jan 1956
Redesignated 350 Strategic Reconnaissance Squadron on 25 Jun 1966
Inactivated on 1 Jul 1976
Activated on 28 Jan 1982
Redesignated 350 Air Refueling Squadron on 1 Sep 1991.

Assignments[1]

Attached to Sixteenth Air Force, 4 Mar-4 Apr 1958

Bases stationed[1]

Not equipped or manned

Aircraft Operated[1]

Operations[1]

References

United States Air Force portal
Military of the United States portal
World War II portal

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

  1. ^ a b c d e f AFHRA 350 ARS Page

See also