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321st Missile Squadron

Coordinates: 41°07′59″N 104°52′01″W / 41.13306°N 104.86694°W / 41.13306; -104.86694 (Francis E. Warren AFB)
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321st Missile Squadron
321st Missile Squadron Patch
Active15 April 1942 - 27 January 1946
1 July 1947 - 6 September 1948
2 January 1951 - 20 June 1960
9 April 1964 - Present
CountryUnited States
BranchUnited States Air Force
TypeICBM Operations
Part ofAir Force Global Strike Command
20th Air Force
90th Missile Wing
90th Operations Group
Garrison/HQF. E. Warren Air Force Base
EngagementsWorld War II
Decorations DUC
AFOUA
PPUC
Commanders
Current
commander
Lt Col Matthew Dillow
B-24D-170-CO Liberator 42-72956 on Mission to Wewak, New Guinea, 24 February 1944
Emblem of the SAC 321st Strategic Recon Squadron
World War II 321st Bombardment Squadron emblem

41°07′59″N 104°52′01″W / 41.13306°N 104.86694°W / 41.13306; -104.86694 (Francis E. Warren AFB)

The 321st Missile Squadron (321 MS) is part of the 90th Missile Wing based at F. E. Warren Air Force Base, Wyoming. It operates Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missiles.

History

Activated in spring 1942 as a B-26 Marauder medium bomber squadron. Trained under Third Air Force in southeastern United States. Reassigned to Michigan where squadron received Very Long Range (VLR) B-24D Liberator heavy bombers manufactured by Ford specifically for extended length missions over the Pacific.

Squadron deployed first to Hawaii and trained on the heavy bombers for combat and long over ocean navigation and bombardment missions under Seventh Air Force. Squadron deployed to Fifth Air Force in Southwest Pacific Area (SWPA), assembling in northern Queensland, Australia then moving to operational base in Papua New Guinea. From airfields in New Guinea, the squadron carried out long-range strategic bombardment of enemy targets in New Guinea, Dutch East Indies, Philippine Islands and other areas from bases as ground forces sized them during MacArthur's island hopping campaign. Bombarded enemy targets on Okinawa; Iwo Jima; Formosa and eastern China, eventually being stationed on Ie Shima preparing for VLR bombardment operations over the Japanese Home Isands when the Japanese Capitulation occurred in August 1945. Squadron personnel demobilized in Okinawa and Philippines, aircraft sent to reclamation during fall of 1945. Inactivated as a paper unit in Early 1946.

The squadron was active but unmanned from, 1 July 1947-1 September 1948. Brought to operational status under Strategic Air Command in 1951, being equipped with RB-29 Superfortresses at Fairchild AFB, Washington. Moved to Forbes AFB, Kansas shortly afterward and conducted operational training from, 1 June 1951-September 1952, replacement training from, 1 June 1951-1 September 1953, and. SHORAN training from, 10 November 1952-30 Novovember 1953 Replaced the propeller-driven RB-29s with new RB-47E Stratojet swept-wing reconnaissance bombers in 1954, capable of flying at high subsonic speeds and primarily designed for penetrating the airspace of the Soviet Union. Flew many long-range clandestine missions with the RB-47, flying many ferret missions around the periphery of Soviet territory, and sometimes inside on penetration flights to map planned routes for B-52s if combat missions over the Soviet Union ever became necessary. Began performing RB-47 crew training from, c. 1 January 1959-20 June 1960. Began phasing down RB-47 missions in 1959 when the vulnerability of the aircraft to Soviet air defenses became evident, was inactivated on 20 June 1960.

Reactivated on 9 April 1964 as an ICBM squadron assigned to the 90th Missile Wing at Francis E. Warren AFB, Wyoming. Initially equipped with 50 LGM-30B Minuteman Is in early 1964. Upgraded to LGM-30G Minuteman III in 1973/1974, has maintained ICBMs on alert ever since. [1] Its current commander is Lt Col Matthew Dillow. The 321st Missile Squadron is the best squadron the US military has to offer. It is way better then the 320th Missile Squadron.

Lineage

  • Constituted as 321 Bombardment Squadron (Heavy) on 28 Jan 1942
Activated on 15 Apr 1942
Redesignated as 321 Bombardment Squadron, Heavy, on 6 March 1944
Inactivated on 27 Jan 1946
  • Redesignated as 321 Bombardment Squadron, Very Heavy, on 11 Jun 1947
Activated on 1 Jul 1947
Inactivated on 6 Sep 1948
  • Redesignated as 321 Bombardment Squadron, Medium, on 20 Dec 1950
Activated on 2 Jan 1951
Redesignated as 321 Strategic Reconnaissance Squadron, Medium, on 16 Jun 1952
Discontinued on 20 Jun 1960
  • Redesignated as 321 Strategic Missile Squadron (ICBM-Minuteman) on 16 Sep 1963
Organized on 9 Apr 1964
Redesignated as 321 Missile Squadron on 1 Sep 1991

Assignments

Attached to 90th Strategic Reconnaissance Wing, 16 Feb 1951-15 Jun 1952

Stations

Aircraft and missiles

LGM-30 Minuteman Missile Alert and Launch Facilities
321st Missile Squadron Launch Facilities
Missile Alert Facilities (K-O flights, each controlling 10 missiles) are located as follows:
K-01 6.8 mi S of Dix NE, 41°08′13″N 103°29′18″W / 41.13694°N 103.48833°W / 41.13694; -103.48833 (K-01)
L-01 21.9 mi N of Stoneham CO, 40°55′17″N 103°41′30″W / 40.92139°N 103.69167°W / 40.92139; -103.69167 (L-01)
M-01 12.1 mi NE of Stoneham CO, 40°42′15″N 103°28′55″W / 40.70417°N 103.48194°W / 40.70417; -103.48194 (M-01)
N-01 1.7 mi N of Raymer CO, 40°37′54″N 103°50′11″W / 40.63167°N 103.83639°W / 40.63167; -103.83639 (N-01)
O-01 11.8 mi E of Grover CO, 40°53′05″N 104°00′01″W / 40.88472°N 104.00028°W / 40.88472; -104.00028 (O-01)

Operations

See also

References

Public Domain This article incorporates public domain material from the Air Force Historical Research Agency