- Graham Air Base
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Graham Air Base USGS aerial image, 10 January 1999 IATA: none – ICAO: none Summary Airport type Military Owner United States Air Force Elevation AMSL 110 ft / 34 m Coordinates 30°50′16″N 085°10′55″W / 30.83778°N 85.18194°W Runways Direction Length Surface ft m 8/26 4,895 1,492 Asphalt 18/36 4,896 1,492 Asphalt Graham Air Base was a United States Air Force base located in Marianna, Florida. After it was closed, it was reused as Marianna Municipal Airport.
Contents
History
Marianna Army Airfield
Before World War II, the City of Marianna managed an airport at the existing airport site, which covered 635 acres (2.57 km2) and included a 4,600-foot (1,400 m) long dirt runway. The federal government acquired the airport in 1942 and added 1,915 acres (7.7 km2) additional to construct the Marianna Army Air Field for the U.S. Army Air Forces. The airfield opened on 8 August 1942 and eventually had six hard surface runways averaging 4,000 feet (1,200 m) in length and was used as a training base for the Southeast Army Air Force Training Command. The Army Air Forces Pilot School (Advanced-Single Engine) was activated on 1 September 1942, with the 17th Single Engine Flying Training Group being the Operational Training Unit. Aircraft used during training were P-40 Warhawks and AT-6 Texans. Marianna AAF
was transferred from the jurisdiction of Eastern Flying Training Command to Third Air Force on 12 October 1944. The station came under the command of the 137th Army Air Forces Base Unit. With the reassignment to Third Air Force, the mission of the base was changed from the training of pilots for single-engine pursuit fighter aircraft to training of combat crews for the A-26 Invader light bomber aircraft.After the war ended, the airfield was closed on 15 February 1946 and the Federal Government returned control of 2,010 acres (8.1 km2) to the City of Marianna in 1947.[1]
Graham Air Base
In 1953, the old Marianna Army Air Field was reactivated as a United States Air Force installation under the Air Training Command (ATC) in response to increased demands for pilots as a result of the Cold War and the associated increase in number of Air Force combat flying wings, especially within the Strategic Air Command. The facility was activated on 27 January 1953 and renamed Graham Air Base for William J. Graham, a civilian instructor who provided primary flight training to pilots and headed the school. Graham AB replaced Greenville Air Force Base, Mississippi as a contract pilot training school as Greenville AFB became an ATC basic single engine and jet pilot training school.
The 3300th Pilot Training Squadron was reassigned from Greenville to Marianna to support the mission, with predominantly civilian instructors providing training in USAF PA-18 Super Cub and AT-6 Texan, and subsequently T-34 Mentor and T-28 Trojan aircraft, graduating a group of USAF student pilots from primary training every six weeks. Because its short runways could not readily accommodate the USAF jet trainers of the period, student pilots completing primary training were then assigned to other air force bases with longer runways for more advanced training in aircraft such as the T-33 Shooting Star. Although its instructor cadre was primarily civilian, Graham AB was still an Air Force installation with an overall military cadre in command and operated under constant military supervision.[1]
Students were a combination of both commissioned USAF officers and non-commissioned air cadets, the latter who would receive their commissions upon completion of flight training. New bachelor officer quarters, cadet barracks and other facilities were built, and by 1953 military personnel began arriving and were greeted warmly by the residents of Jackson County. The air base ultimately employed 700 civilians in addition to assigned USAF military cadre and student personnel .[1] Notable graduates of initial pilot training at Graham AB include former Chief of the National Guard Bureau, Lieutenant General Russell C. Davis[2] and former Vice Chief of Staff of the Air Force, General Michael P. C. Carns[3], who was also a member of the first graduating class of the USAF Academy in 1959.
In June 1958, the Air Force began replacing their prop-driven T-28s with the first T-37 Tweet jet trainers, and by 1960, the Air Force was fully committed to transitioning to the Undergraduate Pilot Training (UPT) concept at selected Air Training Command installations with longer runways which would eventually host T-37 Tweet and T-38 Talon jet trainers. Facilities like Graham AB, with civilian contractor instructors and short runways became obsolete and were eventually closed in the early 1960s.
The Air Force decided to close Graham AB in late 1960, despite the efforts of influential Florida Congressman Robert L. F. Sikes (D-FL) to keep it running. Jackson County lost a combined military and civilian payroll of $6 million, along with several hundred military and contractor families. As the installation was being scaled down as a military facility, the industrial committee of the Junior Chamber of Commerce began working to adapt the air base into a combination industrial park and civilian airport.[1] The 3300th Training Squadron was inactivated on 1 February 1961. ATC wanted to close the base in March, but an Air Force imposed freeze on shipping property delayed its final closure. However, on 31 August 1961 the base was turned over to civil control.
Civil use
Main article: Marianna Municipal AirportToday the airport is known as Marianna Municipal Airport. In addition to its civilian general aviation traffic, the airport continues to see significant use by military aircraft, with one third of the airport's daily operations normally consisting of transient military training flights, primarily Army helicopters from Fort Rucker and Navy helicopters from Naval Air Station Whiting Field.[4]
See also
- Florida World War II Army Airfields
References
- ^ a b c d History of Graham Air Base, Florida
- ^ http://www.ng.mil/ngbgomo/library/bio/davis_rc.htm
- ^ http://www.af.mil/information/bios/bio.asp?bioID=4927
- ^ Airport information for KMAI at AirNav
- Other sources
- This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the Air Force Historical Research Agency.
- Shaw, Frederick J. (2004), Locating Air Force Base Sites History’s Legacy, Air Force History and Museums Program, United States Air Force, Washington DC, 2004.
- Manning, Thomas A. (2005), History of Air Education and Training Command, 1942–2002. Office of History and Research, Headquarters, AETC, Randolph AFB, Texas ASIN: B000NYX3PC
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- Airfields of the United States Army Air Forces in Florida
- Airports in Florida
- Transportation in Jackson County, Florida
- USAAF Southeast Training Center
- USAAF Third Air Force Replacement Training Stations
- Closed facilities of the United States Air Force
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