Westover Air Reserve Base

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Westover Air Reserve Base

Part of Air Force Reserve Command (AFRC)
Located near: Chicopee, Massachusetts
A Westover C-5B Galaxy taxies in from a local training mission
Coordinates 42°11′38″N 72°32′05″W / 42.19389°N 72.53472°W / 42.19389; -72.53472 (Westover ARB)
Site information
Controlled by  United States Air Force
Site history
Built 1939
In use 1939 – present
Garrison information
Garrison  439th Airlift Wing
Airfield information
IATA: CEFICAO: KCEFFAA LID: CEF
Summary
Elevation AMSL 241 ft / 73.5 m
Website www.westover.afrc.af.mil
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
5/23 11,597 3,535 Asphalt/Concrete
15/33 7,082 2,159 Asphalt/Concrete
Source: Federal Aviation Administration[1]
Westover ARB
Location of Westover Air Reserve Base, Massachusetts

Westover Air Reserve Base (IATA: CEF, ICAO: KCEF, FAA LID: CEF) is an Air Force Reserve Command (AFRC) installation located in the Massachusetts communities of Chicopee and Ludlow, near the city of Springfield, Massachusetts. Westover hosts the largest Air Reserve Base in the world in terms of area. Until 2011, it was a backup landing site for the NASA Space Shuttle and in the past few years has expanded to include a growing civilian access airport sharing Westover's military-maintained runways.[2] The installation was named for Major General Oscar Westover who was commanding officer of the Army Air Corps in the 1930s. Westover was killed on 21 September 1938 in the crash of his high-speed Northrop A-17AS at Lockheed Aircraft's air field in Burbank, California (now known as Bob Hope Airport).[3] The host unit is the 439th Airlift Wing (439 AW) of the Twenty-Second Air Force (22 AF), Air Force Reserve Command. Outside of the AFRC command structure, the 439 AW and Westover are operationally gained by the Air Mobility Command (AMC).

Due to its location, Westover is transitted by many different aircraft.[4]

Overview

Physically, Westover is the largest Air Force Reserve base in the United States and will expand significantly over the next decade to further encompass Active and Reserve Component activities of the Navy, Marines, Army, and mainline Air Force functions from installations closed by the Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC) process.

Current military operations at Westover Air Reserve Base are centered around its exceptionally long runways. The Air Force Reserve Command (AFRC) uses Westover for its largest cargo aircraft. It maintains a fleet of sixteen C-5 Galaxy aircraft operated by the 439th Airlift Wing (439 AW), an Air Force Reserve unit that is operationally gained by the Air Mobility Command (AMC). In 2003, the Air Force Reserve Command briefly changed the name of Westover Air Reserve Base to Westover Joint Air Reserve Base. It has since been renamed to its previous designation of "Westover Air Reserve Base" as a military installation and is referred to as Westover Air Reserve Base/Metropolitan in DoD and FAA Flight Information Publications (FLIP).[5]

The Westover complex serves the "Joint Use" mission of military and civilian cooperation. The core aviation facilities at Westover are owned by the Department of Defense while nearly a 100 acres (400,000 m2) are under private ownership. The two parties coordinate operations in order to promote national defense and economic development. The 11,597-foot (3,535 m) and 7,082-foot (2,159 m) long runways provide the flexibility for significant separation between military and civilian operations.

Units

Main entrance sign
View of Westover ARB
Map of part of the base

439th Airlift Wing

337th Airlift Squadron
  • 439th Maintenance Group
  • 439th Mission Support Group

Air Force Auxiliary

  • Westover Composite Squadron, NER-MA-015, Massachusetts Civil Air Patrol

Army Reserve

  • 302d Maneuver Enhancement Brigade
  • 287th Medical Detachment, 804th Medical Brigade
  • 226th Transportation Company (Railway Operating)(assigned to the 757th Transportation Battalion (Railway), Milwaukee, WI)

Navy

  • Naval Mobile Construction Battalion 27

Marines

  • Marine Wing Support Squadron 472, Detachment B
  • Marine Air Support Squadron 6

All services

  • Springfield Military Entrance Processing Station

History

Major General Oscar Westover
Westover Field Massachusetts, January 1945
World War II postcard from Westover

Plans for Westover Field were made in 1939 as a result of the Nazi Germany invasion of Poland in 1939. Up to then, the country had only seventeen unimproved and ill-maintained air bases. The Army Air Corps began rapid expansion at the direction of President Franklin D. Roosevelt to provide an adequate air force for defense of the United States. The Mayor of Chicopee, Massachusetts, Anthony Stonina lobbied long and hard to a new military airfield in the Northeast, arguing convincingly for the town's flat, open tobacco fields as a natural air field. Within two weeks of the Polish invasion, Chicopee was chosen for a new base.[6]

President Roosevelt signed a $750,000 Works Progress Administration (WPA) project bill for the air base's construction in November 1939. Fourteen hundred WPA and Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) workers cleared the land, and actual construction was started in February 1940. The Quartermaster Corps proved to be unequal to the gigantic task of rapidly designing and building hundreds of military installations across the country, so to ease their burden, the Army Corps of Engineers was given all Army Air Corps work in November 1940.[6]

The original airfield at Westover consisted of three runways in the standard "A" pattern to accommodate landings in all directions based on wind direction. They were concrete, aligned 7000x150(N/S), 7000x150(NE/SW), 7000x150(NW/SE). A large parking apron was constructed to accommodate the aircraft with maintenance hangars and supporting buildings.

Since the Constructing Quartermaster had already planned the base, the first permanent masonry buildings were constructed east of the airfield to those designs, which were intended to be lasting and attractive. Wartime demands, made necessary several hundred buildings based on standardized plans and architectural drawings. The buildings were designed to be the "cheapest, temporary character with structural stability only sufficient to meet the needs of the service which the structure is intended to fulfill during the period of its contemplated war use." To conserve critical materials, most facilities were constructed of wood, concrete, brick, gypsum board and concrete asbestos. Metal was sparsely used.

Westover Field was designed to be nearly self-sufficient, with not only hangars, but barracks, warehouses, hospitals, dental clinics, dining halls, and maintenance shops were needed. There were libraries, social clubs for officers, and enlisted men, and stores to buy living necessities. The early permanent buildings were retained after the war and which have survived, while of the hundreds of temporary buildings later constructed to meet the tremendous needs of the war mobilization by the Corps of Engineers only a few remain.

On 6 April 1940, "Army Day" nationwide, the dedication, flag raising and ground breaking ceremony was held on site. The new air base was named for Major General Oscar Westover, Chief of the Air Corps, US Army, who had died in September 1938. Major General Oscar Westover was in part responsible for the beginning of a period of expansion that ended with the emergence of the U.S. Air Force as a separate service. He was named Chief of the Air Corps and promoted to Major General on 22 December 1935. He spent the next two-and-a-half years flying to bases around the country to step up pilot training and increase the emphasis on aviation which would be important in the 1940s. On 21 September 1938, General Westover lost his life in an airplane accident near the Lockheed plant at Burbank, California, when his plane burst into flames on landing.[6]

Building at the base was constant throughout 1941. At first, the base had been planned to accommodate 1,400 men as an airplane overhaul facility, but by 1940 this had been increased to 3,000 men. At the start of 1942 there was housing for approximately 3,300 enlisted and 500 officers, and at the close of that year there were quarters for about 8,000 officers and men. All but a few of these temporary buildings are now gone.

The first organization at the base was the 10th Signal Platoon in June 1940. The first Air Corps unit arrived in July. Throughout 1941 many organizations passed through, with some being being activated and others inactivated. For a brief time the all-black 369th Coast Artillery Regiment (Antiaircraft)(Colored), New York National Guard, known as "Harlem's Finest," was stationed here.[6]

World War II

Westover Field was placed under the jurisdiction of the Northeast Air District, later First Air Force, with the 25th Base Headquarters and Air Base Squadron the main Base Operating Unit. During the course of the war, it became the largest military air facility in the Northeast.[6]

The mission of Westover was to organize and provide initial training to new combat units. Pilots, navigators, bombardiers, flexible gunners and other aircrew would arrive and be assigned to newly organized squadrons and groups. Newly manufactured B-17 Flying Fortress, B-24 Liberator heavy bombers and P-47 Thunderbolt fighters and other aircraft would be ferried to Westover and be assigned to the newly formed units to begin their first phase of combat group training. After the personnel were assigned to aircraft as aircrews and squadrons, the airmen training consisted of aircraft familiarity, formation flying and other basic skills. Aircrews consisted of new graduates from Training Command and experienced aircrews being transferred into the new units. Along with the flight crews, ground echelon personnel were formed into aircraft maintenance squadrons, and the command and staff echelons were organized. From Westover, the units would proceed on to second-stage advanced training at other bases prior to their deployment into operational services

In 1942 Westover Field was training center for anti-submarine, engineering, chemical platoons, bomber and fighter groups. In 1943, training mainly focused on fighter groups and anti-submarine combat units, and in the fall of 1943 the base's main mission shifted from fighter training to training heavy bombardment groups.

On 7 April 1944, the Base Operating Unit was reorganized into the 112th Army Air Force Base Unit. As victory in Europe was achieved, some aircrews were brought back to be trained for re-deployment to the Pacific Theater. At the end of the war troops were prepared for inactivation.

During World War II Westover saw the training and formation of Airborne (glider) engineer aviation battalions to be used for rapidly establishing airfields in forward areas. On 1 November 1942 the 925th Engineer Airborne Regiment (Provisional) was activated at Westover Field, and initially the 871st through 874th Airborne Engineer Aviation Battalions were assigned to it. The unit was disbanded effective 1 April 1943 upon the activation of the 1st Airborne Engineer Aviation Unit Training Center, and the 925th’s personnel and equipment were transferred to the new unit.

Numerous Airborne Engineer Aviation battalions were activated and trained at Westover, to include the 871st (1 Sep 1942), 872d (14 Oct 1942), 873d (14 Oct 1942), 877th (15 Nov 1942), 878th (1 Feb 1943), 879th (1 Mar 1943), 880th (1 Mar 1943), and 881st (1 Mar 1943). Meanwhile, sister units 874th, 875th and 876th were activated at Camp Claiborne, LA, and the 882d (1 May 1943), 883d (1 May 1943), 884th (1 Jun 1943), 885th (1 Jun 1943), and 886th (1 Aug 1943) were activated at Bradley Field, CT. The 871st through 880th all went over overseas, with the 871st through 875th going to the Pacific region, the 876th through 878th going to the ETO, and the 879th and 880th to the China-Burma-India theatre. With the exception of the 882nd, which was inactivated on 15 Jan 1945 in New Guinea, the 880th through 886th were active for a comparatively short period, and all were inactivated between January and December 1944 without being fully manned or leaving the United States.

Air Transport Command/Military Air Transport Service

View of a Westover-based C-54 Skymaster rescuing aircrew from Kee Bird in 1947

With the end of World War II, Westover Field was designated as a permanent United States Army Air Force installation in 1945 and was not inactivated as most of the wartime temporary training airfields were in the fall of 1945.

On 1 February 1946 Westover became an Air Transport Command (ATC) base which meant that it was the terminus for air routes around the world. During World War II, ATC had developed into a huge military air carrier with a worldwide route pattern. Routes had been established to places that had seen few men before the war, and where aircraft had been unheard of. Airline personnel who had never left the United States before the war, had become veterans of long over-water flights to the remotest regions of earth.[6]

Four-engine C-54 Skymaster and shorter-range C-47 Skytrain transports took supplies and reinforcements from Westover to the armed forces and returned with the wounded and discharged troops. In 1947, ATC C-54 aircrews from Westover took part in the rescue of stranded airmen in the arctic, rescuing the crew of Kee Bird, a B-29 Superfortress that made an emergency landing in northern Greenland, hundreds of miles from an airfield.

With the establishment of the United States Air Force in September 1947, the name of Westover Field was changed to Westover Air Force Base on 13 January 1948.

On 1 June 1948 Air Transport Command was reorganized into the Military Air Transport Service (MATS), and Westover was designated as Headquarters, Atlantic Division, Military Air Transport Service. From Westover, MATS 1600th Air Transport Wing airlifters provided service across the Atlantic Ocean to Europe; to the Caribbean and South America; to North Africa and the Middle East to Dhahran, Saudi Arabia.

Westover was also the launching point of the heroic Berlin Airlift for 327 days during the Soviet blockade. Altogether 276,926 flights by C-47s and C-54s were flown, bringing an average of one ton of supplies and food to each Berlin resident. Chicopee schoolchildren responded to the plight of German children and organized "Operation Little Vittles" sending ten tons of candy attached to handkerchief parachutes which were dropped from the air.[6]

Westover took part in the Korean War transporting freight and passengers to the forces in Japan and South Korea, and casualties were brought to the Westover Air Force Base Hospital from 1950 to 1954.[6]

Air Defense Command

324th FIS F-86D Sabre inerceptors, about 1956 at Westover AFB
76th FIS Convair F-102A-75-CO Delta Dagger 56-1345, at Westover, October 1962

In 1951 Air Defense Command established an air defense interceptor presence at Westover, its units being assigned to the base in a tenant status until the turnover of the base to the Air Force Reserve in 1974.

The 60th Fighter-Interceptor Squadron (33d FIG, Otis Air Force Base, Massachusetts) was moved to the base in January 1951 flying F-86A Sabres and assumed an air defense mission, providing air defense in the northeastern United States. The squadron changed equipment in December 1951 to more-capable F-86E Sabres before receiving the ADC F-86D Sabre Interceptor in July 1953. The 60th FIS remained until August 1955 when it was moved back to the ADC 33d Fighter Group base at Otis.

A second ADC interceptor squadron, the 324th Fighter-Interceptor Squadron (4622d ADW, Otis AFB) was activated at Westover on 18 October 1955. The 324th FIS flew the F-86D Sabre Interceptor, and was later updated to the SAGE-capable computer-directed F-86L in October 1957.

ADC established a more substantial presence in July 1957 when the 4729th Air Defense Group was activated. The 4729th ADG was organized after the 4622d Air Defense Wing became the Boston Air Defense Sector at Stewart AFB, New York. The group was the command and control organization for the 324th FIS until ADC moved the 324th FIS to USAFE, where it began performing air defense duties at Sidi Slimane Air Base, Morocco for SAC B-47 Stratojets deployed there.

In February 1961, the 76th Fighter-Interceptor Squadron (Boston Air Defense Sector) was activated at Westover flying the supersonic F-102 Delta Dagger interceptor, assuming air defense duties. The 76th remained at Westover until 1 July 1963 when it was inactivated due to budget reductions.

In September 1972, the 4713th Defense Systems Evaluation Squadron (21st Air Division) moved to Westover AFB from Otis AFB. The mission of the squadron was to provide Electronic Counter-Measure (ECM) training and evaluation services to the various ADC ground-based Radar Squadrons. The squadron operated specially-equipped EB-57E Canberra bombers fitted with an assortment of Radar jamming devices to train radar squadrons with thousands of hours of ECM training. These specially-equipped EB-57Es were operated until April 1974 when the squadron was inactivated as part of the phase-down of Aerospace Defense Command.

Strategic Air Command

Detonation in August 1949 by the Soviet Union of an atomic bomb spawned a new strategy in the military, calling for massive retaliation in the event of an attack. General Curtis LeMay carried the strategy to its furthest conclusion: the military had to carry out a pre-emptive attack if it became clear that there were preparations for nuclear attack by an enemy in progress. This strategy was to be made manifest through the Strategic Air Command (SAC)

In 1955 the Strategic Air Command (SAC) assumed jurisdiction of Westover Air Force Base, and the MATS transport units assigned were transferred to McGuire Air Force Base, New Jersey. Westover's geographic location in New England made it preferable for SAC for its long distance, great circle route flights across the Atlantic Ocean and Arctic regions for strategic missions against the Soviet Union if the Cold War suddenly turned into an armed conflict.

499th Air Refueling Wing

KC-135A Stratotanker from the 99th ARS taxiing parallel to the DC Hangar with ARC Light personnel
Color 1960 postcard showing B-52s at Westover AFB
B-52D Stratofortress parked on the Christmas Tree (Alert Aircraft area near the "Mole hole") stands ready for action even in the most adverse of New England's weather.

SAC initially came to Westover with activation of the provisional 4050th Air Refueling Wing (later 499th Air Refueling Wing) and the Eighth Air Force headquarters. The wing supported SAC bombardment and Tactical Air Command fighter aircraft with air-to-air refueling. It was equipped initially with propeller-driven KC-97s and later upgraded to the jet-powered KC-135 Stratotanker. The 499th also flew the EC-135 Looking Glass missions in support of the Post Attack Command and Control System (PACCS) for Eighth Air Force. On 11 November 1957 a KC-135 tanker piloted by Gen. Curtis LeMay flew 6,350 miles from Westover AFB to Buenos Aires, Argentina, in 13 hours 2 minutes, a world record for nonstop nonrefueled jet flight. The 499th Air Refueling Wing was inactivated on 25 June 1966.

99th Bombardment Wing

The 99th Bombardment Wing moved from Fairchild AFB, Washington to Westover AFB in late 1956, and began operation of the B-52 Stratofortress. The 99th Bomb Wing kept bombers and tankers on ground alert at all times, and SAC crews lived on 24-hour alert for two weeks at a time. The 348th Bombardment Squadron operated the B-52 from December 1956 through April 1972 while assigned to the 99th Bombardment Wing at Westover AFB.

The Target Intelligence Training Building [Building 1875] was constructed in 1957. The Corps of Engineers in Boston oversaw its construction to designs by McClintock & Craig Engineers and Architects of Springfield. It was designated as Target Intelligence Training Building for the Reconnaissance Technical forces in 1957, but its functions were always highly secret. Original drawings of Building 1875 indicated rooms for radar bomb training, se-cure storage, predictions, mission support and operational intelligence maps. Here also were Link Trainers that simulated aircraft for training purposes.

In 1959 the "Mole hole", building 7450, was the first building erected as part of the SAC massive retaliation strategy. Here was where long-range B-52 bombers armed with nuclear devices were kept on continuous alert on a nearby runway, known as the Christmas tree. Their crews rotated through the mole hole, spending one week of 24-hour alert in underground quarters going everywhere together during that week so they were always ready for launch in a few moments. The lower control room was outfitted for SAC operations in case of nuclear war. Nuclear weapons were stored at the Stony Brook section of the base and planes loaded with these devices were kept on the ground ready to take off at a moment's notice. In case of nuclear war, an alternate SAC command bunker, called The Notch, was constructed deep within Mount Holyoke, in the Connecticut River Valley of western Massachusetts.[6]

In 1967, SAC crews were sent to Southeast Asia on B-52 Arc Light bombing missions and anti-war activists began protesting the war on a daily basis at Westover's main gate. President Richard Nixon ordered the inactivation of the Eighth Air Force in 1970, although the 99th Bomb Wing continued its missions over Southeast Asia. Many American prisoners of war returned from North Vietnam through Westover and this operation ended in 1973 with the return of the last POWs from North Vietnam.[6]

Strategic reconnaissance

Westover was the home of one of four photographic labs for film taken on strategic reconnaissance missions during the SAC era, processing film secretly made by Lockheed U-2 reconnaissance aircraft. In January 1961, the Air Force Satellite Photo Processing Laboratory (later designated the 6594th Test Squadron) was activated and placed under Eighth Air Force. The quantity of film taken by SAC reconnaissance aircraft was so great that another building on base operated primarily as a silver recovery facility.

Strategic reconnaissance was one of the primary missions of SAC since its establishment in 1946, and during the Cold War, it was critical to SAC's mission. Film exposed on high-speed reconnaissance aircraft over non-friendly territory was developed and translated to maps in Buildings 1900 and 1875. The climax came in 1962 when Soviet R-12 Dvina Intermediate-range ballistic missiles were being installed in Cuba. The Cuban Missile Crisis was in large part played out at Westover where U-2 film of the Russian cargo ships carrying additional missiles approaching Cuba was developed.

Air Force Reserve

A C-123K Provider (731st Tactical Airlift Squadron) and a C-130B Hercules (337th Tactical Airlift Squadron) are in front of the Westover Air Force Base Hangar for a 1977 publicity photo.

Strategic Air Command phased down operations at Westover in the early 1970s as part of the drawdown of United States forces after the end of the Vietnam War, but also in part due to the reduction of B-52 wings in favor of Intercontinental ballistic missiles. The last SAC aircraft at Westover left in the spring of 1975. They were three KC-135s of Det 1, 42nd Bomb Wing, out of Loring Air Force Base, Maine, the tankers which had pulled satellite alert at the Westover Alert Facility "mole hole." SAC's 4040th Air Base Group, the caretaker unit for Westover, departed in 1976.

One year later, SAC leadership turned the base over to the Air Force Reserve. From that time until October 1987 the 439th Tactical Airlift Wing operated C-130 Hercules and C-123 Provider aircraft. The wing converted to C-5 Galaxy heavy transports in 1987 and the unit eventually became designated as the 439th Airlift Wing. Westover ARB continues to operate as the world's largest Air Reserve Base and largest Air Reserve Component airlift wing, as well as being one of the country's two centers for Galaxy C-5A military transport aircraft.

Between March and July 1991, soldiers returning from the 1991 Gulf War landed at Westover where they were met by their families and friends.

On 30 July 2002, the old air traffic control tower at Westover ARB was destroyed using five earthmovers to pull down the 40-year-old building. Destruction of the tower followed the completion of a new 10-story, $4.1 million facility that rises 123 feet above the airfield, providing 100 percent visibility of the field as well as 21st century air traffic control equipment.

Previous names

  • Northeast Air Base, c. 1 Aug 1939
  • Westover Field, 1 Dec 1939
  • Westover Air Force Base, 13 Jan 1948

  • Westover Air Reserve Base, 1991
  • Westover Joint Air Reserve Base, 2003
  • Westover Air Reserve Base, 2003

Major commands to which assigned

  • Northeast Air District, Nov 1940
Re-designated First Air Force, 9 April 1941

  • Air Defense Command (Tenant Status), 1951–1974
  • Strategic Air Command, 1 Apr 1955
  • Air Force Reserve, 1 May 1974 – present

Major units assigned

  • 10th Signal Platoon, 6 Jun 1940 – 30 Jun 1940
  • Third Signal Service Co, 30 Jun 1940 – 22 Jul 1940
  • Detachment Base HQ and 26th Air Base Sq, 22 Jul 1940 – 1 Dec 1940
  • 25th Base HQ and Air Base Sq, 1 Dec 1940 – 1 Oct 1941
  • 1st Air Force Service Command 1 Oct 1941 – 5 Jan 1942
  • 34th Bombardment Group, 29 May 1941 – 22 Jan 1942
  • 60th Transport Group, 21 May 1941 – 20 May 1942
  • 13th Bombardment Group, 22 Jan 1942 – 30 Nov 1942
  • 64th Troop Carrier Group, 6 Jun 1942 – 20 Jul 1942
  • 301st Bombardment Group, 30 Jun 1942 – 3 Aug 1942
  • 326th Fighter Group, 1 Nov 1942 – 12 Oct 1943
  • 402d Fighter Group, 1 Oct 1943 – 12 Oct 1943
  • 459th Bombardment Group, 29 Oct 1943 – 3 Jan 1944
  • 471st Bombardment Group, 28 Jan 1944 – 10 Apr 1944
  • 386th Bombardment Group, 30 Sep 1945-7 Noy 1945
  • 409th Bombardment Group, 6 Oct 1945-7 Noy 1945
  • 341st Bombardment Group, 6 Oct 1945-7 Noy 1945
  • Army Air Forces (later Air Force) Separation Port, 14 Oct 1946-1 Noy 1949
  • 1st Air Transport Group (Provisional), 15 Mar 1947 – 1 Jun 1948
  • 2d Air Transport Wing (Provisional), 23 Apr 1947 – 2 Jun 1948
  • Atlantic Division, Air Transport Command, 1 Nov 1947 – 1 Jun 1948
  • 520th Air Transport Wing, 1 Jun 1948
Redesignated 1600th Air Transport Wing, 1 Oct 1948 – 1 Apr 1955
  • Atlantic Division, Military Air Transport Service, 1 Jun 1948 – 31 May 1955
  • 143d Airways & Air Communications Service Squadron, 1 Jun 1948
Redesignated 1917th Airways & Air Communications Squadron, 1 Oct 1948
Redesignated 1917th Communications Squadron, 1 Jul 1961–1984
  • 8501st Air Transport Group, 27 Jun 1949 – 19 Jul 1951
  • Squadron VR-6 (US Navy), 3 Aug 1949-c. 10 Jun 1955
  • 60th Fighter-Interceptor Squadron, 1 January 1951 – 18 August 1955

  • 3084th Aviation Depot Squadron (Later:) Group,
Stoneybrook AFS [next to Weatover AFB] till 17 Mar 1954 – 1 Nov 1954
  • 26th Air Refueling Squadron, 22 Apr 1955 – 7 Aug 1957
  • 324th Fighter-Interceptor Squadron, 18 Oct 1955 – 25 Jun 1958
  • 337th Fighter-Interceptor Squadron, 18 Oct 1955 – 25 Jun 1958
  • 384th Air Refueling Squadron, 1 Apr 1955 – 25 Jun 1966
  • 4050th Air Refueling Wing, 1 Apr 1955 – 1 Jan 1963
  • Eighth Air Force, 13 Jun 1955 – 1 Apr 1970
  • 8th Reconnaissance Technical Squadron, 1 May 1955 – 31 March 1970
  • 18th Communications Squadron (Air Force), 8 May 1955 – 30 Nov 1973
  • 57th Air Division, 4 Sep 1956 – 2 Jul 1969
  • 99th Bombardment Wing, 4 Sep 1956 – 31 Mar 1974
  • 24th Aviation Depot Squadron 1 Jan 1957
Redesignated 24th Munitions Maintenance Squadron 1 Jan 1960 – 30 Sep 1972
  • 99th Munitions Maintenance Squadron 30 Sep 1972 – 31 Mar 1974
  • 99th Air Refueling Squadron, 22 Aug 1957 – 30 Sep 1973
  • 4729th Air Defense Group, 8 Jul 1957 – 25 Jun 1958
  • North Atlantic Communications Region, 2 Jun 1958 – 1 Jul 1963
  • Air Force Satellite Photo Processing Laboratory
Redesignated 6594th Test Squadron, 26 Jan 1961 – 10 Nov 1965
  • 76th Fighter-Interceptor Squadron, 1 Feb 1961 – 1 Jul 1963
  • 499th Air Refueling Wing, 15 Nov 1962 – 25 Jun 1966
  • 337th Military Airlift Squadron, 1 April 1966
Redesignated: 337th Tactical Airlift Squadron, 1972
Redesignated: 337th Military Airlift Squadron, 1 October 1987
Redesignated: 337th Airlift Squadron, 1 February 1992 – present
  • 905th Military Airlift Group, 1 April 1966
Redesignated: 905th Tactical Airlift Group, 1972-1 April 1974
Redesignated: 439th Military Airlift Wing, 1 October 1987
Redesignated: 439th Airlift Wing, 1 February 1992 – present

Expansion

The 2005 Base Realignment and Closure Commission ruled that Westover would absorb other military units in New England. The expansion proposed the transfer of all military operations at Bradley International Airport to Westover and the nearby Barnes Municipal Airport. The exception to this decision is the 103rd Airlift Wing, which will remain at Bradley. A $32 million building project is underway to accommodate the additional 1600 service members required by the plan.[7]

The new Armed Forces Reserve Center will host Army, Air Force, Marine Corps, and Navy Reserve operations. The Massachusetts Army National Guard will also make its debut at the base.[8]

Economic impact

The air base is one of the biggest employers in the Springfield area and produces an estimated $231 million in economic activity at current levels. Much of base's extensive landholdings have been sold as surplus and developed into industrial parks for tenants such as Friendly's Ice Cream.

The local government credits Westover with spurring development of the Memorial Drive corridor, including several planned hotels and a high-end retail plaza.[8]

Environmental impact

As a center for military air operations, Westover Air Reserve Base poses several hazards to local residents. These include air pollution, noise pollution, and water contamination hazards – all of which are shared with similar-sized commercial airports.[9]

Air pollution

Due to its sheer size, the C-5 Galaxy comes fitted with powerful engines (GE TF-39 on classic models), which burn fuel at an elevated rate, causing concern over the release of air pollutants. As with all military aircraft, the C-5 Galaxy runs on JP-8 fuel – a practical and economic fuel, but one renowned for its high impurity levels (e.g. sulfur) and variable composition. During operation, C-5 Galaxy aircraft are expected to release significant levels of contaminants – including sulfur dioxide, arising from the oxidation of sulfur present in the fuel; carbon monoxide, due to the incomplete oxidation of hydrocarbon molecules; and particulate matter. The release of such air pollutants is not exclusive to C-5 Galaxy aircraft. Comparable commercial aircraft, such as the Boeing 747 airliner, employ GE CF-6 engines – a direct descendant of the GE TF-39 model found in C-5 Galaxy aircraft – which burn fuel at comparable rates, and can produce similar levels of air pollutant concentrations.

Noise pollution

The engine model employed by the C-5 Galaxy, General Electric's TF-39, holds the unique distinction of being the first successful high-bypass turbofan engine ever developed, and is the predecessor to modern-day engines employed in large airliners – such as the General Electric CF-6, employed in some Boeing 747 airliners. Despite this distinction, the TF-39 was not optimized for noise control, as were its commercial successors. As a result, the C-5 Galaxy has become known as a notoriously loud aircraft, with a very distinctive high-pitched sound. This has led to concerns among local residents regarding the loud engine noise, which can become obtrusive for residents living very near the base. It should be noted that the C-5's currently stationed at Westover are much quieter than the B-52 aircraft that they replaced. To moderate concerns of noise pollution, Westover A.R.B. has in place a strict curfew on maintenance engine runs, which are not allowed to take place after 10PM – although, depending on operational requirements, aircraft may still depart any time. Westover A.R.B. operates a noise complaint phone line, which can be used by residents concerned with elevated engine noise levels.

Water contamination

As a C-5 Galaxy maintenance hub, Westover A.R.B. makes significant use of aerospace chemicals which pose well-known environmental hazards. These include aircraft deicing fluid, used to deice aircraft during winter operations, and which has been reportedly found in the chemical analysis of water in the Cooley Brook, which feeds into the Chicopee water reservoir. Other chemicals are used during day-to-day maintenance operations – including JP-8 fuel, hydraulic fuel, and a variety of lubricants, among others. Westover A.R.B. implements strict chemical disposal policies, designed to prevent entry of these and other harmful chemicals into the local environment.

However, Westover's extended operations history has produced numerous hazardous waste sites. The Institute for Science and Interdisciplinary Studies concluded that

"Fifty years of military operations at Westover have created a complex set of hazardous waste sites. USAF has identified over two-dozen sites on the active Base and on nearby Formerly Used Defense Sites (FUDS) that were sold off as the Westover has downsized."[10] According to the military's estimates, the waste sites may affect 21,000 people who live within a one mile radius of the Base, Chicopee Memorial State Park and the Chicopee Reservoir (both active recreational areas for surrounding communities), underground drinking water resources, wetlands areas, and critical wildlife habitats.[10]

Agent Orange

The 731st Tactical Airlift Squadron was assigned C-123K Provider aircraft (used during the Vietnam War to spray Agent Orange) between 1972–1982, at which time those aircraft were retired to storage. In 1994 the Air Force Museum identified dioxin contamination remaining from one of the squadron's aircraft (Tail #362, Patches). Other Air Force tests confirmed dioxin contamination remaining on stored aircraft at Davis-Monthan AFB, Arizona. All stored aircraft were destroyed by smelting in 2010. Former crews and maintenance personnel are pursuing medical treatment from the US Department of Veterans Affairs for dioxin exposure, although the VA has determined not enough dioxin residue remained after Vietnam to affect crews' health. On 26 January 2012 the Center For Disease Control's Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry issued an official letter disputing the VA's position and confirming crews and maintenance personnel were "likely" exposed to a 200 times greater risk for cancer. No issue regarding the aircraft leaving any contamination at Westover AFB has been raised.

Facilities and aircraft

The portion of the Westover complex still under military control covers an area of 2,500 acres (10 km²) which contains two runways: 5/23: measuring 11,597 x 301 ft (3,535 x 92 m) and 15/33 measuring 7,082 x 150 ft (2,159 x 46 m).[1] A new Air Traffic Control tower was constructed in 2002 and the old tower was demolished.

According to Federal Aviation Authority records for the 12-month period ending 26 September 1994, the airport had 38,137 aircraft operations, an average of 104 per day: 81% military, 18% general aviation and 1% air taxi. There were 46 aircraft based at this airport: 35% military, 50% single engine, 9% multi-engine, 2% jet aircraft, 2% helicopters and 2% ultralight.[1]

Military facilities are under control of the Commander, 439th Airlift Wing, currently Col Steven D. Vautrain.[11] The civilian portion of the airport is run by the Director of Civil Aviation, an employee of the Westover Metropolitan Corporation.

See also

References

 This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the Air Force Historical Research Agency.
 This article incorporates public domain material from the United States Government document "Westover Air Reserve Base".

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 FAA Airport Master Record for CEF (Form 5010 PDF), effective 2011-07-30
  2. Westover AFB, Mass – 99th Bomb Wing – B-52 – NEED INFO
  3. Bowers, Peter M., "Captain of the Clouds", Airpower, Granada Hills, California, July 1972, Volume 2, Number 4, page 33.
  4. "Presidential aircraft parked temporarily at Westover". 439th Airlift Wing Public Affairs. 25 September 2012. Retrieved 5 October 2012. 
  5. Westover Air Reserve Base, Mass – Home
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 6.5 6.6 6.7 6.8 6.9 Faulkner, Frank (January 1990). Westover: Man, Base and Mission (1st ed.). Springfield, Mass.: Hungry Hill Press. p. 160. ISBN 0-9616486-1-9. 
  7. Groundbreaking held for new reserve center – MassLive.com
  8. 8.0 8.1 Westover project good for economy – MassLive.com
  9. "ALLEY CITIZENS FOR A SAFE ENVIRONMENT, Plaintiff, Appellant, v. Edward C. ALDRIDGE, etc., et al., Defendants, Appellees.". 
  10. 10.0 10.1 "Military Waste Cleanup Project". 
  11. http://www.westover.afrc.af.mil/library/biographies/bio.asp?id=14888
  • Maurer, Maurer. Air Force Combat Units of World War II. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office 1961 (republished 1983, Office of Air Force History, ISBN 0-912799-02-1).
  • Ravenstein, Charles A. Air Force Combat Wings Lineage and Honors Histories 1947–1977. Maxwell Air Force Base, Alabama: Office of Air Force History 1984. ISBN 0-912799-12-9.
  • Mueller, Robert, Air Force Bases Volume I, Active Air Force Bases Within the United States of America on 17 September 1982, Office of Air Force History, 1989

External links

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