764th Bombardment Squadron

764th Bombardment Squadron
Emblem of the 764th Bombardment Squadron
Active 1943–1945
1953–1968
Country United States
Branch United States Air Force
Type Bombardment

The 764th Bombardment Squadron is an inactive United States Air Force unit. It was last assigned to the 461st Bombardment Wing. It was last stationed at Amarillo Air Force Base, Texas, and was inactivated on 28 March 1968.

History

Established in mid-1943 as a B-24 Liberator heavy bomber squadron, it trained under the Second Air Force. The unit deployed to the Mediterranean Theater of Operations (MTO) in February 1944, being assigned to the Fifteenth Air Force in Southern Italy.

The squadron engaged in very long range strategic bombardment missions against enemy strategic targets in Italy, France, Germany, Austria, Czechoslovakia, Hungary and the Balkans until April 1945. It bombed aircraft factories, assembly plants, oil refineries, storage areas, marshalling yards, airdromes and other objectives until the German capitulation in May 1945.

Most squadron personnel were demobilized in Italy in May 1945 and it returned to the United States with a skeleton staff. Re-equipped and redesignated a B-29 Superfortress very heavy bomber squadron, it also received new personnel. It began training under the Second Air Force for planned deployment to the Western Pacific Area (WPA), however, the Japanese capitulation in August led to the inactivation of the squadron in October.

Reactivated in 1953 under the Tactical Air Command of the Ninth Air Force as a B-26 Invader light bombardment squadron, it became a B-57B Canberra unit, receiving their first aircraft in January 1955 at Hill AFB, Utah. In the summer of 1955, it moved to Blytheville AFB, Arkansas, the first TAC bomb squadron to be fully equipped with B-57s. After three years of service with the B-57s, the decision was made to phase them out in favor of supersonic aircraft, and in April 1958 its parent 461st BG began to inactivate at Blytheville AFB, the squadron inactivating in June.

Reactivated under Strategic Air Command (SAC) in 1963, it replaced a provisional B-52G Stratofortess squadron at Amarillo AFB, Texas.It performed intercontinental training and deployments, also standing nuclear alert. At the beginning of 1966, the squadron deployed personnel to forward bases in the Western Pacific, where they engaged in combat missions over Indochina as part of Operation Arc Light. The unit was inactivated in 1968 with the closure of Amarillo AFB and a reduction in the B-52 force, their role being taken over by ICBMs.

Lineage

  • Constituted as the 764th Bombardment Squadron (Heavy) on 19 May 1943
Activated on 1 Jul 1943
Inactivated on 28 Aug 1945
  • Redesignated the 764th Bombardment Squadron (Light) on 11 Dec 1953
Activated on 23 Dec 1953
  • Redesignated the 764th Bombardment Squadron (Tactical) on 1 Oct 1955
Inactivated on 8 Jan 1958
  • Redesignated the 764th Bombardment Squadron (Heavy), activated on 15 Nov 1962
Organized on 1 Feb 1963; receiving aircraft/personnel/equipment as a redesignation of the 718th Bombardment Squadron
Inactivated on 28 Mar 1968

Assignments

Stations

Aircraft

  • B-24 Liberator, 1943–1945
  • B-26 Invader, 1954–1955
  • B-57 Canberra, 1955–1958
  • B-52 Stratofortress, 1963–1968

See also

References

 This article incorporates public domain material from the Air Force Historical Research Agency website http://www.afhra.af.mil/.

    • Maurer, Maurer, ed. (1982) [1969]. Combat Squadrons of the Air Force, World War II (PDF) (reprint ed.). Washington, DC: Office of Air Force History. ISBN 0-405-12194-6. LCCN 70605402. OCLC 72556.
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