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135th Airlift Group Information

The United States Air Force's 135th Airlift Group is an airlift unit located at Warfield Air National Guard Base on the north side of the Martin State Airport in Middle River, Maryland.

Contents

Mission

Maintains combat-ready aircrew and aircraft to mobilize, deploy and provide intratheater airlift in support of U.S. interests worldwide. Supports theater commanders' requirements for combat delivery capability through tactical airland/airdrop operations and humanitarian aeromedical evacuations.

History[1]

The 135th Airlift Group was organized as the 135th Air Resupply Group on 10 Sept. 1955, making it the oldest group-level headquarters in the Maryland Air National Guard. When it was organized, it was one of a handful of Air National Guard units nationwide tasked with what was at the time called the air commando mission, which included covert infiltration, resupply and exfiltration of special operations troops. It remained a special operations-type unit until 1971, when it was reorganized as a tactical air support unit. In this role, it was tasked with providing Forward Air Controllers to direct air strikes in support of troops on the ground. In 1977 it was again reorganized, this time as a tactical airlift unit. The 135th Airlift Group was inactivated for two brief periods: 1958–1962 and 1996–1999, although its subordinate units continued to function as independent squadrons.

The 135th's only federal mobilization as a group occurred on 7 April 1968, when the group was federalized during the Baltimore Riot (the unit was already in active state status at the time, but was federalized along with most of the rest of the Maryland National Guard when federal troops arrived).[2] During the Global War on Terrorism, many members of the 135th have been mobilized as individuals or detachments, but the group itself has not been called into active federal service. Although never deployed in combat as a group per se, members of the 135th participated in most of the major military actions since the end of the Cold War, either as individual volunteers or as members of crews and aircraft provided to in-place expeditionary units. The 135th provided personnel and aircraft for the following actions: humanitarian airlift during the Bosnian Civil War and subsequent peacekeeping mission, the Kosovo peacekeeping mission, the 1994 Haiti intervention, the Iraq War, and the Afghanistan War.

It was originally stationed at Harbor Field in Baltimore, where it flew C-46 and SA-16 aircraft. In 1960, it relocated to the south side of the Martin Company Airport (now the Martin State Airport) in Middle River Maryland. In 1981, it moved across the field to join other Maryland Air National Guard units based on the north side of the field. The military facilities are named Warfield Air National Guard Base.

Heraldry

Symbolism: Ultramarine blue and golden yellow are the Air Force colors and symbolize that the unit is a part of the Air Force. The galloping steed, which symbolizes the ancient warrior's noble companion and represents the unit's mobility and swiftness in response to duty, is white for purity of purpose with wings to free its rider from the bonds of Earth. Above the charger, the abstract symbol for flight is a reminder of the unit's modern flight capability. The two blues behind the steed represent the duality of the unit's mission with the resolve to be ready in times of State disaster and National emergency and are bound together by a single red stripe symbolizing the lifeblood and willingness to sacrifice for both State and Country. The gold bolder around the shield speaks of value, integrity, and honor.

Background: Designed by Lt Wes Derr and approved by the Air Force for the 135th Tactical Airlift Group in 1979. Redesignated for the 135th Airlift Group in 1992. Design and description revised in 1999.

Assignments

Major command

Previous designations[3]

Subordinate units

Bases stationed

Aircraft Operated[4]

Decorations

References

  1. ^ The Maryland Air National Guard: A Commemorative History. Charlotte, NC: Fine Books Publishing Co. 2000.
  2. ^ Minami, Wayde R. Baltimore Riot Was Maryland Air Guard's Largest Mobilization, "http://www.175wg.ang.af.mil/news/story.asp?id=123191607"
  3. ^ The Maryland Air National Guard: A Commemorative History. Charlotte, NC: Fine Books Publishing Co. 2000.
  4. ^ The Maryland Air National Guard: A Commemorative History. Charlotte, NC: Fine Books Publishing Co. 2000.
  5. ^ Air Force Personnel Center Awards Search (Post-1991)

External links

United States Air Force portal
United States Air National Guard
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