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113th Operations Group

The 113th Operations Group is a flying group of the United States Air Force. It provides air sovereignty forces to defend District of Columbia and also provides fighter, airlift and support forces capable of local, national and global employment.

History
World War II The 352d Fighter Group was activated at Mitchel Field, New York on 1 October 1942, and quickly moved to Bradley Field, Connecticut to begin organization. On 8 April 1944, the 352d exchanged its radial-engined P-47s for sleek North American P-51 Mustang fighter planes. It was then that the Group adopted their unique blue nose marking and the nickname the "Blue Nosed Bastards of Bodney." Notable pilots of the 352d include top scoring P-51 aces Major George Preddy and Col. John C. Meyer, Capt. John Thornell, Capt. William T. Whisner, Captain Donald S. Bryan, Capt. Raymond H. Littge, Lt. Robert "Punchy" Powell, Capt. John "Smokey" Stover and Capt. William C. Miller. New Year's Day 1945 at Y-29 One of the 352d's greatest accomplishments was its huge victory over the Luftwaffe on 1 January 1945. In December 1944, the 352d received orders to deploy to Asch Airfield, a remote field approximately 3 miles south-southeast of As, Belgium. After arriving on 22 December, it began operating on the 24th. Poor weather hampered flight operations and the Battle of Bulge was raging nearby. Unknown to the Allies, the Luftwaffe was preparing a New Year's Day attack, designated Operation Bodenplatte against sixteen forward deployed Allied airfields in the area. Similar to the preparations for the Battle of Bulge, the Luftwaffe had been quietly preparing and assembling virtually every available fighter on the Western Front and had an estimated 800 fighters and fighter bombers ready to execute an attack when the Allies might be off guard following celebration of New Year's Eve. The concept was simple – a mass attack on newly established continental bases to destroy as many Allied aircraft on the ground and ease the pressure on German ground forces engaged in the battle of the Bulge. However, many of the Luftwaffe pilots were poorly trained and did not have the experience necessary to battle seasoned Allied pilots. John C. Meyer had risen to be Deputy Commander of the 352d by December and was now a lieutenant colonel. He suspected that the Germans might use New Year's Day as an opportunity to attack and decided to have Y-29 in readiness when the sun rose. While haggling with higher authorities at Ninth Air Force throughout the night, he ordered a squadron assigned to do a morning sweep and ordered the pilots not to engage in any alcoholic celebration the night prior. Although he did not get permission until 0800, he joined the 487th Fighter Squadron in the frigid cold of the snowy weather at 0530 preflighting their Mustangs and was sitting in the cockpit of the lead aircraft. As the Mustangs were awaiting take-off for the morning patrol, their airfield was overrun with Luftwaffe fighters from Jagdgeschwader 11 (JG.11). Nevertheless, when the group of 50+ Bodenplatte aircraft of JG.11 showed up over Y-29, the 12 blue-nosed Mustangs of the 487th were queuing for take-off with Meyer in the lead Mustang. While accelerating down the snow-packed runway, Lt. Col. Meyer opened the day's count by shooting down a German fighter in a head-on pass as it tried to strafe a parked Douglas C-47 Skytrain next to the runway. The German had not noticed the P-51 taking off. Meyer began firing before his wheels fully retracted and downed the marauding Focke-Wulf Fw 190. Though surrounded by strafing fighters, every one of the 487th planes got off the ground to meet their attackers. In the battle that followed, 24 Luftwaffe fighters were destroyed by the 352d Group. However, one pilot, Lt. Dean Huston, was forced to belly land his P-51 after its cooling system was holed from the fire of zealous British antiaircraft gunners. Two pilots of the 487th claimed 4 German fighters shot down. The 487th received the Distinguished Unit Citation. Meyer, Capt. Stanford Moats, and Capt. William T. Whisner, who scored his fourth victory while his Mustang was starting to overheat from battle damage, were each awarded the Distinguished Service Cross and four other pilots were award the Silver Star. Despite the group losing a couple of aircraft to battle damage, not a single pilot was lost during the New Year's Day battle. But the tragedy of war was never far away. During the afternoon of the same day, fighters of the 328th Squadron were patrolling the skies above As when they spotted what they thought were four inbound enemy aircraft. Due to static on radio communications with the 328th, identification of the aircraft came too late, and one of the approaching aircraft was shot down, crashing near the village of Zutendaal. The aircraft turned out to be RAF Hawker Typhoons of 183 Squadron from Gilze-Rijen on their way to their new base at Chievres. The pilot who was killed in the Typhoon that was shot down was F/Lt. Don Webber. The group remained in England after V-E Day until November, when it returned to the United States and was inactivated at the New York Port of Embarkation. With the surprise invasion of South Korea on 25 June 1950, and the regular military's lack of readiness, most of the Air National Guard was federalized placed on active duty. The 113th Fighter Group became part of Air Defense Command (ADC) on 1 February 1951 and was redesignated as a Fighter-Interceptor Group. The 121st Squadron was the only one of its squadrons activated with the group, which moved to Newcastle Air Force Base, where they were joined by the 142d Fighter-Interceptor Squadron if the Delaware Air National Guard, also equipped with the F-84Cs and the 148th Fighter Squadron of the Pennsylvania Air National Guard, flying F-51D Mustangs. In April 1951, the 148th began to convert to the F-84 as well. Once it completed its conversion to Thunderjets, the 148th moved to Dover Air Force Base, Delaware Its squadrons were assigned to the 4710th Defense Wing. In late 1958, the gaining command for the 113th was changed from ADC to Tactical Air Command (TAC) and the mission was changed to tactical air support, although air defense remained as a secondary mission. The Sabres were phased out in 1960 with the receipt of relatively new North American F-100C Super Sabres. The Super Sabre brought the group into the supersonic age. In January 1968 the Pueblo Crisis by North Korean forces brought the callup of the 113th to active duty. The group moved to Myrtle Beach Air Force Base, South Carolina while the 354th Tactical Fighter Wing moved to Kunsan Air Base, South Korea. At Myrtle Beach the group was a paper unit, with its squadron assigned directly to the 113th Wing under the dual deputy organization used by TAC. The group returned to Andrews in June 1969, and transitioned into the Republic F-105D Thunderchief, which was beginning to be withdrawn from the active inventory. The 113th was one of four Air National Guard units to receive the F-105, a very large and complex aircraft. The 113th was fortunate to have many Vietnam Veteran airmen in its ranks by 1970, many of whom had F-105 experience. In December 1974, the 113th Tactical Fighter Group was inactivated and its 121st Squadron was assigned directly to the 113th Tactical Fighter Wing. In the early 1990s the Air Force began implementing the Objective Wing organization, which again called for squadrons to be assigned to functional groups, rather than directly to the wing. As a result, the group was once again activated as the 113th Operations Group. ==Lineage==
Lineage
• Constituted as the 352d Fighter Group on 29 September 1942 : Activated on 1 October 1942 : Inactivated on 10 November 1945 : Redesignated 113th Fighter Group and allotted to the National Guard on 24 May 1946 : Extended federal recognition on 2 October 1946 • Federalized and ordered to active service on 1 February 1951 26 February 1947 – 1 February 1951 • 486th Fighter Squadron, 1 October 1942 – 10 November 1945 • 487th Fighter Squadron, 1 October 1942 – 10 November 1945 Stations • Mitchel Field, New York, 1 October 1942 • Bradley Field, Connecticut, October 1942 • Westover Field, Massachusetts, November 1942 • Trumbull Field, Connecticut, c. 15 January 1943 • Republic Field, New York, C. 9 March–June 1943 • RAF Bodney (Sta 141), England, 7 July 1943 • Chièvres Airfield (A-84, Sta 181), Belgium, c. 27 January 1945 • RAF Bodney (AAF-141), England, c. 14 April – 3 November 1945 • Camp Kilmer, New Jersey, c. 9 – 10 November 1945 • Andrews Field (later Andrews Air Force Base), 20 October 1946 • Newcastle Air Force Base, 16 February 1951 – 6 February 1952 • Andrews Air Force Base, 1 November 1950 • Myrtle Beach Air Force Base, 26 January 1968 • Andrews Air Force Base, 18 June 1969 – 9 December 1974 • Andrews Air Force Base (later Joint Base Andrews), 1 January 1993 – present AircraftRepublic P-47B Thunderbolt (blocks 5 to 16), c. 13 July 1943 – 20 April 1944. • North American P-51B Mustang (from blocks 5), 8 April 1944 • North American P-51C Mustang, 1944–1945 • North American P-51D Mustang, 1944–1945 • North American P-51K Mustang, 1944–1945 • Republic F-47D Thunderbolt, 1947–1949 • Republic F-84C Thunderjet, 1949–1951 • Lockheed F-94B Starfire, 1951–1952 • North American F-51H Mustang, 1952–1954 • North American F-86A Sabre, 1954–1955 • North American F-86E Sabre, 1955–1957 • North American F-86H Sabre, 1957–1960 • North American F-86H Sabre, 1957–1960 • North American F-100C Super Sabre, 1960–1971 • North American F-100F Super Sabre, 1960–1971 • Republic F-105D Thunderchief, 1971–1974 • Republic F-105F Thunderchief, 1971–1974 • F-16A Fighting Falcon, 1993–1994 • F-16B Fighting Falcon, 1993–1994 • F-16C Fighting Falcon, 1994–Present • F-16D Fighting Falcon, 1994–Present • Gulfstream C-38A Courier, 1998–Present • Boeing C-40 Clipper, 2004–Present − ==References==
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