taking off from Elmendorf Air Force Base on 26 March 2010
World War II Construction on Elmendorf Field began on 8 June 1940, as a major and permanent military airfield near Anchorage. The first
United States Army Air Corps personnel arrived on 12 August 1940. On 12 November 1940, the
War Department formally designated what had been popularly referred to as Elmendorf Field as
Fort Richardson. The air facilities on the post were named Elmendorf Field in honor of Captain Hugh M. Elmendorf, killed on 13 January 1933, while flight testing the experimental
Consolidated Y1P-25, fighter,
32-321, near
Wright Field, Ohio. The first Army Air Corps unit to be assigned to Alaska was the
18th Pursuit Squadron, which arrived in February 1941. The 23d Air Base Group was assigned shortly afterward to provide base support. More units from the
United States Army Air Forces (which legally changed its name in June 1941) poured into Alaska as the
Japanese threat developed into
World War II in the aftermath of the surprise
attack on Pearl Harbor in December 1941. The Eleventh Air Force was formed at Elmendorf AFB in early 1942. The field played a vital role as the main air logistics center and staging area during the
Aleutian Islands Campaign and later air operations against the
Kurile Islands. After World War II, the Army moved its operations to the new
Fort Richardson and following the separation from the Army in 1947, the newly-formed
United States Air Force (USAF) assumed control of the original Fort Richardson and renamed it Elmendorf Air Force Base.
Cold War Following World War II, Elmendorf assumed an increasing role in the defense of North America as the uncertain wartime relations between the
United States and the
Soviet Union deteriorated into the
Cold War. The Eleventh Air Force was redesignated as the
Alaskan Air Command (AAC) on 18 December 1945. The Alaskan Command, established 1 January 1947, also headquartered at Elmendorf, was a unified command under the
Joint Chiefs of Staff based on lessons learned during World War II when a lack of unity of command hampered operations to drive the Japanese from the western
Aleutian Islands of Attu and Kiska. The uncertain world situation in late 1940s and early 1950s caused a major buildup of air defense forces in Alaska. The propeller-driven
P-51s were replaced with
F-80 jets, which in turn were replaced in succession by
F-94s,
F-89s, and
F-102s interceptor aircraft for defense of North America. The Air Force built an extensive aircraft control and warning radar system with sites located throughout Alaska's interior and coastal regions. Additionally, the USAF of necessity built the
White Alice Communications System (with numerous support facilities around the state) to provide reliable communications to these far-flung, isolated, and often rugged locales. The Alaskan NORAD Regional Operations Control Center (ROCC) at Elmendorf served as the nerve center for all air defense operations in Alaska. The
U.S. Air Force Security Service (USAFSS) activated the
6981st Security Group tasked with monitoring, collecting and interpreting
signals intelligence of concern to the region, including installation of an
AN/FLR-9 antenna array as part of a worldwide network known collectively as "Iron Horse". Air defense forces reached their zenith in 1957 with almost 200 fighter aircraft assigned to six fighter interceptor squadrons located at Elmendorf AFB and
Ladd AFB. Eighteen aircraft control and warning radar sites controlled their operations. Elmendorf earned the motto "Top Cover for North America". AAC adopted the motto as its own in 1969. The late 1950s, 1960s, and early 1970s brought about a gradual, but significant decline in air defense forces in Alaska due to mission changes and the demands of the
Vietnam War. The USAF inactivated five fighter squadrons and closed five radar sites. In 1961, the
Department of Defense (DoD) consigned Ladd AFB to the Army which renamed it
Fort Wainwright. The Alaskan Command was disestablished in 1975. Elmendorf began providing more support to other USAF commands, particularly
Military Airlift Command C-5 Galaxy and
C-141 Starlifter flights to and from the Far East. Despite a diminished number of personnel and aircraft, a turning point in Elmendorf's history occurred in 1970 with the arrival of the
43d Tactical Fighter Squadron in June 1970 from
MacDill AFB, Florida flying the
F-4E Phantom II. The squadron gave AAC an air-to-ground capability which was further enhanced with the activation of the
18th Tactical Fighter Squadron at Elmendorf (also with the F-4E) on 1 October 1977. The strategic importance of Elmendorf AFB was graphically realized during the spring of 1980 when the 18th Tactical Fighter Squadron deployed eight of its F-4Es to
South Korea to participate in exercise
Team Spirit. It was a historical first and underlined an increasing emphasis AAC placed on its tactical role. The strategic location of Elmendorf AFB and Alaska made it an excellent deployment center, a fact that validated the contention of
Billy Mitchell who, in 1935, stated that "Alaska is the most strategic place in the world". Deployments from Elmendorf AFB and
Eielson AFB to the Far East are now conducted on a routine basis. The 1980s witnessed a period of growth and modernization of Elmendorf AFB. During 1982, the
21st Tactical Fighter Wing converted from F-4Es to
F-15A/B Eagles. The 18th Tactical Fighter Squadron was assigned to Eielson AFB where it was equipped with
A-10 Thunderbolt IIs. The
54th Tactical Fighter Squadron, of
Aleutian Campaign fame, activated once again in 1987. Operating two F-15 squadrons (43rd and 54th TFS), the F-15s were housed next to the 5021st Tactical Operations Squadron's
T-33 Shooting Stars. Rounding out the modernization program was the construction of an enhanced Regional Operations Control Center (completed in 1983), and the replacement of the 1950s generation aircraft control and warning radars with the state of the art
AN/FPS-117 Minimally Attended Radars. The integrated air warning and defense system became fully operational in mid-1985. Alaska's air defense force was further enhanced with the assignment of two
E-3 Sentry AWACS aircraft to Elmendorf AFB in 1986. The Alaskan Command was re-established at Elmendorf in 1989 as subunified joint service command under the Pacific Command in recognition of Alaska's military importance in the Pacific region. Elmendorf AFB was a site of one of the now decommissioned
FLR-9 Wullenweber-class antennas, a node of the now obsolete High Frequency SIGINT
direction finding system. In the 1983 film
WarGames, Elmendorf AFB was mentioned as one of the first three targets to be destroyed in the (simulated) full scale Soviet nuclear strike in the climax of the film.
1991–2010 George W. Bush speaks to troops at Elmendorf in 2005 F/A-18 Hornets flying in delta formation into the rainy mists surrounding Elmendorf AFB during
Arctic Thunder, August 2006 Alaska's military importance in the Pacific region was further recognized when the
F-15E Strike Eagle-equipped
90th Tactical Fighter Squadron was reassigned to Elmendorf AFB from
Clark Air Base in the Philippines in May 1991. The Pacific Regional Medical Center moved from Clark to Elmendorf and construction of a new, greatly expanded hospital began in 1993. In the early 1990s there were major organizational changes and an expansion of Elmendorf's importance. In 1991, the 21st Tactical Fighter Wing was reorganized as an objective wing and all the major tenant units on Elmendorf were placed under it. The 21st Wing was inactivated and the
3d Wing was reassigned from Clark AB to Elmendorf AFB on 19 December 1991. This was in keeping with the USAF's policies of retaining the oldest and most illustrious units during a period of major force reductions. It was also an alternative landing site for the
Space Shuttle. The DoD proposed a major realignment of the base as part of the
Base Realignment and Closure recommendations announced on 13 May 2005. Under the plan, one
F-15E and one
F-15C squadron were replaced with the
F-22, and the
C-130 fleet has been replaced with the
C-17 Globemaster III. The base (now
Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson) hosts the headquarters of the
Alaska Wing of the Civil Air Patrol. ==Major commands to which assigned==