Activation and training mission loads a simulated patient during an
exercise The
squadron was first activated as the
48th Air Rescue Squadron in November 1952, when
Air Rescue Service expanded its existing rescue squadrons into groups. The 48th was established with the assets of Flight C of the 5th Air Rescue Squadron at
Maxwell Air Force Base, Alabama. In January 1955, the squadron moved to
Eglin Air Force Base, Florida. At Maxwell and Eglin, the 48th flew search, rescue and recovery missions, mostly over water.
Survival School support The squadron, now the
48th Aerospace Rescue and Recovery Squadron was reactivated at
Fairchild Air Force Base, Washington in September 1972. It supported the
3636th Combat Crew Training Wing, which conducted the Air Force's advanced survival school at Fairchild, while continuing to fly
search and rescue (SAR) missions. The squadron was inactivated at Fairchild in August 1976. The squadron was again activated to support survival training in October 1985 at
Homestead Air Force Base, Florida, where the USAF Water Survival School, run by a squadron of the 3636th Wing, was located. Again it flew SAR missions in addition to its training role. In addition, squadron personnel performed interdiction missions in support of the
South Florida Drug Interdiction Task Force while at Homestead. In December 1987, the squadron was again inactivated.
Rescue in the southwest The 48th was reactivated at
Holloman Air Force Base, New Mexico in 1993 and for the next six years flew combat search and rescue missions. Its most recent activation at
Davis–Monthan Air Force Base, Arizona in 2004 was as a "guardian angel" squadron, providing
pararescuemen, flying on the aircraft and helicopters of the other squadrons of the
563d Rescue Group. ==Lineage==