Nanumea Airfield

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Nanumea Airfield

Part of Seventh Air Force
Nanumea, Tuvalu
F4F-4s of VMF-441 on alert at Nanumea 23 October 1943
Coordinates 05°41′00″S 176°07′44.4″E / 5.68333°S 176.129000°E / -5.68333; 176.129000
Type Military Airfield
Site information
Controlled by United States Army Air Forces
United States Marine Corps
Condition abandoned
Site history
Built 1943
In use 1943-5
Built by Seebees
Materials Coral

Nanumea Airfield is a former World War II airfield on the island of Nanumea in the Ellice Islands.

History

World War II

On 5 September 1943 elements of the 16th Naval Construction Battalion arrived on Nanumea and on 11 September they started work on a 7,000 feet (2,100 m) by 200 feet (61 m) bomber strip. On 19 September F4F-4s of VMF-441 landed on the strip and continued to use the runway during the remainder of the construction period. The first bombers landed on 12 November. The Seabees also built the camp and operation facilities for the airfield, including an 8,000-barrel tank farm for aviation gasoline. [1]

USAAF units based at Nanumea included:

  • 30th Bombardment Group headquarters from 11 November 1943-4 January 1944
  • 27th Bombardment Squadron operating B-24s from 10 November 1943-26 February 1944
  • 28th Bombardment Squadron operating B-24s from 12 November 1943 - 13 March 1944
  • 45th Fighter Squadron operating P-40Ns from 28 November 1943-4 January 1944

USMC units based at Nanumea included:

  • VMF-441 from 19 September-December 1943

On 11 November 1943 a Japanese air raid on Nanumea resulted in the destruction of one B-24.

On 19 November 1943 B-24 #42-72980 of the 27th Bombardment Squadron crashed on landing.

On 27 November 1943 SBD #38035 of VMSB-331 crashed due to undercarriage failure.

By September 1944 base roll-up and salvage operations had commenced and were completed by the end of March 1945.[1]

F4Fs of VMF-441 at Nanumea, 19 September 1943

Postwar

The airfield is completely overgrown with vegetation.

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Building the Navy's Bases in World War II History of the Bureau of Yards and Docks and the Civil Engineer Corps 1940-1946. US Government Printing Office. 1947. p. 236. 

External links

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