126th Air Refueling Wing

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126th Air Refueling Wing
126th Air Refueling Wing - KC-135 - 2011.jpg
126th Air Refueling Wing KC-135 59–1500 taking off to a forward deployed location in support of Joint Task Force Odyssey Dawn, 24 March 2011
Active8 September 1942–Present
CountryFlag of the United States (23px).png  United States
AllegianceFlag of Illinois.svg  Illinois
Branch US-AirNationalGuard-2007Emblem.svg   Air National Guard
TypeWing
RoleAir Refueling
Part of Illinois Air National Guard
Garrison/HQ Scott Air Force Base, Belleville, Illinois
Motto(s)Anytime, Anywhere
Tail CodeBlue tail stripe bordered in orange, with "Illinois" in white letters over an orange "I" to the left
Commanders
Current
commander
Colonel Nicolas Henschel
Insignia
126th Air Refueling Wing emblem 126th Air Refueling Wing.png
Aircraft flown
Tanker KC-135R
A 126th ARW KC-135E taking off from Eielson AFB Alaska, in 2004. KC-135E Illinois ANG takes off Eielson AFB 2004.JPEG
A 126th ARW KC-135E taking off from Eielson AFB Alaska, in 2004.

The 126th Air Refueling Wing (126 ARW) is a unit of the Illinois Air National Guard, stationed at Scott Air Force Base, Belleville, Illinois. If activated to federal service, the Wing is gained by the United States Air Force Air Mobility Command.

Contents

The 108th Air Refueling Squadron, assigned to the Wing's 126th Operations Group, is a descendant organization of the World War I 108th Aero Squadron, established on 27 August 1917. It was reformed on 1 July 1927, as the 108th Observation Squadron, and is one of the 29 original National Guard Observation Squadrons of the United States Army National Guard formed before World War II.

Mission

The primary mission of the 126th Air Refueling Wing is to provide air refueling support to major commands of the United States Air Force, as well as other U.S. military forces and the military forces of allied nations. Additionally, the unit can support airlift missions. The unit is also tasked with supporting the nuclear strike missions of the Single Integrated Operational Plan.

During peacetime, the 126th ARW receives direction through the adjutant general of Illinois, the governor of Illinois and the National Guard Bureau. Upon federal mobilization, the wing is assigned to Air Mobility Command and the 15th Expeditionary Mobility Task Force.

Units

108th Air Refueling Squadron
906th Air Refueling Squadron

The 126 ARW also has two associate partners: the Active Associate 906th Air Refueling Squadron with the 126 ARW serving as the host organization for this Total Force Initiative association, and the Classic Associate 126th Supply Chain Management Squadron as part of a regionalized Air Mobility Command supply facility.

History

World War II

Unidentified B-26 of the 344th Bomb Group at Stansted, 1944. B-26-stanst.jpg
Unidentified B-26 of the 344th Bomb Group at Stansted, 1944.
Martin B-26G-1-MA Marauder AAF Serial No. 43-34181 of the 495th Bomb Squadron preparing to take off at Stansted Airfield, 1944. B-26-43-34181-495bs-stanst.jpg
Martin B-26G-1-MA Marauder AAF Serial No. 43-34181 of the 495th Bomb Squadron preparing to take off at Stansted Airfield, 1944.

The 344th Bombardment Group (Medium) was constituted on 31 August 1942, and activated on 8 September 1942 at Drane Field in Lakeland, Florida, an auxiliary facility to MacDill Field in Tampa. Initially, the group was equipped with Martin B-26 Marauders and served as a replacement training unit. Moved to RAF Stansted, England, January–February 1944 and assigned to Ninth Air Force.

The 344th BG began operations in March 1944, attacking airfields, missile sites, marshaling yards, submarine shelters, coastal defenses, and other targets in German-occupied France, Belgium, and the Netherlands. Beginning in May, the 344th helped prepare for the Normandy invasion by striking vital bridges in France. The Pathfinders were a provisional squadron equipped with the top-secret Pff (Oboe) navigational equipment. The Pathfinders would lead a group of 17 planes over the target. [1] The 344th Bombardment Group was selected to lead the IX Bomber Command formations on D-Day, with the first aircraft taking off at 04:12 hours, attacking coastal batteries at Cherbourg, and during the remainder of June, it supported the drive that resulted in the seizure of the Cotentin Peninsula.

The unit also defended positions to assist British forces in the area of Caen and received a Distinguished Unit Citation for a three-day action against the enemy in late July when the group struck troop concentrations, supply dumps, a bridge, and a railroad viaduct to assist advancing ground forces at Saint-Lô.

Another action of the 344th was to knock out bridges to hinder the German Army's withdrawal through the Falaise gap, and bombed vessels and strong points at Brest during August and September.

On 30 September the 344th moved to their Advanced Landing Ground at Cormeilles-en-Vexin, France, France (A-59). While at Stansted the group flew over 100 missions, and lost 26 aircraft in combat.

After V-E Day the group moved to Schleissheim, Germany for occupation duty and began training with Douglas A-26 Invaders, but continued to use B-26 aircraft. It was transferred, without personnel and equipment, to the United States on 15 February 1946 where it was inactivated on 31 March 1946. [2]

Cold War

B-26C of the 180th LBS Bor-b26b-180lbs.jpg
B-26C of the 180th LBS

Redesignated 126th Bombardment Group (Light). Allotted to Illinois Air National Guard on 24 May 1946 and assigned to Chicago Municipal Airport.

Extended federal recognition on 29 June 1947. Redesignated 126th Composite Group in November 1950, and 126th Bombardment Group (Light) in February 1951. The unit was ordered to active service on 1 April 1951 as a result of the Korean War. The unit was initially assigned to Tactical Air Command at Langley AFB, Virginia.

The wing moved to Bordeaux-Merignac Air Base, France with the first elements arriving in November 1951. The 126th BW was assigned to United States Air Forces in Europe. By 10 November, Bordeaux was considered an operational base and was assigned to the 12th Air Force.

At Bordeaux, the 126th BW consisted of the 108th, 168th and 180th Bomb Squadrons (Light). The aircraft were marked by various color bands on the vertical stabilizer and rudder. Black/Yellow/Blue for the 108th; Black/Yellow/Red for the 168th, and Black/Yellow/Green for the 180th.

It flew B-26's for training and maneuvers and stayed at Bordeaux AB until being transferred Laon AB, France on 25 May 1952 where it remained for the balance of the year.

The 126th was relieved from active duty and transferred, without personnel and equipment, back to the control of the Illinois ANG on 1 January 1953 as the 126th Fighter-Bomber Group and assigned to Tactical Air Command. Flew F-86 Sabres. In 1955, redesignated as the 126th Fighter-Interceptor Group, equipped with F-86Ds.

On 1 July 1961, the 126th's mission was changed to an air refueling one and was redesignated as the 126th Air Refueling Group, being assigned the KC-97 aircraft.

Reassigned to Strategic Air Command 1 July 1976 at Chicago O’Hare International Airport and redesignated as the 126th Air Refueling Wing. The 126th AREFW flew KC-97Ls for a brief time before converting to KC-135As. It was composed of the 108th Air Refueling Squadron and the 145th Air Refueling Squadron from the Ohio ANG along with the 126th Air Refueling Squadron from the Wisconsin ANG. In 1978 the KC-97s were sent to AMARC. Many of the 126th AREFW's KC-97Ls became gate guards and one is on the field of the former Grissom AFB, Indiana, where the 126th AREFW conducted many hours of transition practice.

In 1983 the wing began receiving the KC-135E as a replacement for the "A" model water-wagons, a named used because of 110 seconds of water injection, used to increase thrust for take-off power. With the inactivation of SAC, the group was assigned to Air Mobility Command on 1 June 1992.

Post Cold War

The 126th moved from the former Air Reserve Station at O'Hare International Airport in 1999 as recommended by the Base Realignment and Closure Commission's Report to Congress in conjunction with the closure of the Air Force Reserve and Air National Guard facilities at O'Hare. In 2000, the unit's KC-135E aircraft were upgraded with the new Pacer CRAG (Compass, Radar & GPS) avionics systems. In 2008, the unit completed a transition to KC-135R aircraft as the KC-135E fleet was retired.

Lineage

Legacy 344th Bombardment Group Emblem 344th bombardment gp-emblem.jpg
Legacy 344th Bombardment Group Emblem
Activated on 8 September 1942
Inactivated on 31 March 1946
Extended federal recognition on 29 June 1947
Organized and received federal recognition, 1 November 1950, assuming personnel and equipment of 66th Fighter Wing (Inactivated)
126th Composite Group assigned as subordinate unit
Re-designated: 126th Bombardment Wing (Light) in Feb 1951
Group re-designated 126th Bombardment Group
Federalized and ordered to active service on: 1 April 1951
Released from active duty and returned to Illinois state control, 1 January 1953
Re-designated: 126th Fighter-Bomber Wing, 1 January 1953
Group re-designated 126th Fighter-Bomber Group
Re-designated: 126th Fighter-Interceptor Wing, 1 July 1955
Group re-designated 126th Fighter-Interceptor Group
Re-designated: 126th Air Refueling Wing, 1 July 1961
Group re-designated 126th Air Refueling Group
126th Air Refueling Group inactivated 30 June 1974
Group re-activated and re-designated 126th Operations Group, 1 June 1992

Assignments

Attached to: XII Fighter Command, 15 September 1945 – 15 February 1946
Gained by: Tactical Air Command
Elements attached to: Seventeenth Air Force, United States Air Forces in Europe, 1 November 1951 – 1 January 1953
Gained by: Tactical Air Command, 1 January 1953
Gained by: Air Defense Command, 1 July 1955
Gained by: Tactical Air Command, 1 July 1961
Gained by: Strategic Air Command, 1 July 1976
Gained by: Air Combat Command, 30 June 1992
Gained by: Air Mobility Command, 1 Oct 1993–Present

Components

World War II

Air National Guard

Stations

Note: ALG = "Advanced Landing Ground" designation of temporary airfields constructed or used by the Allies in Europe following the D-Day landings in 1944.

Aircraft

See also

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References

PD-icon.svg This article incorporates public domain material from the Air Force Historical Research Agency

  1. "Oboe by Warren Butterfield, Martin B-26 Marauder Group Bombardier". B-26.com. Retrieved 2 January 2019.
  2. "344th Bombardment Group, Martin B-26 Marauder". 344th Bombardment Group. B-26.com. Retrieved 2 January 2019.