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39th Air Division

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39th Air Division
39th Air Division emblem
Active1 March 195215 January 1968
CountryUnited States
BranchUnited States Air Force
Garrison/HQsee "Stations" section below
Equipmentsee "Aircraft / Missiles / Space vehicles" section below
Decorationssee "Lineage and honors" section below


History

Throughout the 1950s and 1960s the 39th Air Division controlled all of the units responsible for the air defense of north Japan, which included northern Honshu and Hokkaido islands and the contiguous territorial waters. In this role the 39th trained the assigned units and controlled aerial interception missions when Japanese air space was violated. The division also controlled air refueling and ECM missions, and trained personnel of the Japanese Air Self Defense Force in flying operations, radar operations and maintenance, and proper radio procedures. After the Soviet Union shot down an RB-29 Superfortress reconnaissance aircraft on 7 November 1954, the 39th provided fighter escort for all friendly reconnaissance aircraft flying near Soviet territory and the Northern Air Defense Sector. The division also supported combat operations during the Vietnam War.

Background of name

Mission

Operations

Lineage and honors

Designated 39 Air Division (Defense), and organized, on 1 March 1952. Redesignated 39 Air Division on 18 March 1955. Discontinued, and inactivated, on 15 January 1968.

Service streamers

This unit earned the following organizational service streamers:

  • Korean Service

Campaign streamers

This unit earned the following organizational campaign streamers:

none

Armed forces expeditionary streamers

none

Decorations

This unit earned the following unit decorations:

none

Awards

Emblem

On a shield azure edged and a bend or, over all a roundel, per fess argent and of the first, charged with two electronic discharges chevronways, points to chief gules, all encircled with an annulet of the firmament proper, charged with thirteen stars argent. (Approved 25 June 1954)

Assignments

Japan Air Defense Force (later, Japan Air Self-Defense Force), 1 March 1952; Fifth Air Force, 1 September 195415 January 1968.

Components

Wings:

Squadrons:

Stations

Misawa Air Base, Aomori Prefecture, Japan, 1 March 195215 January 1968.

Aircraft / Missiles / Space vehicles

F-84 Thunderjet, 1952–1954, 1958–1959; KB-29 Superfortress, 1953–1954; F-86 Sabre, 1954–1960; F-100 Super Sabre, 1957–1964; F-102 Delta Dagger, 1960–1965; RF-101, 1958–1968; F-105 Thunderchief, 1967–1968.

Commanders

Colonel Boyd Hubbard Jr., 1 March 1952; Colonel Curtis R. Low, 30 May 1952; Colonel German P. Culver, 6 June 1953; Colonel William E. Elder, 15 September 1953; Brigadier General Edward N. Backus, 9 August 1955; Brigadier General James O. Guthrie, 25 July 1956; Colonel William W. Ingenhutt, 2 June 1959; Brigadier General Travis M. Hetherington, 24 July 1959; Colonel Dean Davenport, by 30 June 1961; Brigadier General Ernest H. Beverly, 5 August 1961; Colonel Roscoe C. Crawford Jr., 13 August 1963; Colonel Robert W. Shick, 29 May 1965; Colonel Frank E. Angier, 12 September 1966; Brigadier General John W. Harrell Jr., 27 October 1966; Colonel Oliver B. Bucher Jr., 1 July 196715 January 1968.

See also

References

Public Domain This article incorporates public domain material from the Air Force Historical Research Agency