VP-16
VP-16 | |
---|---|
Active | 1953- |
Country | USA |
Branch | US Navy |
Role | maritime patrol |
Size | squadron |
VP-16, nicknamed the War Eagles, is an active Patrol Squadron of the U.S. Navy. It has been based at NAS Jacksonville, Florida since its founding in 1953. The squadron's mission is to operate Maritime patrol aircraft to the fleet in support of national interests.[1] It is the third squadron to have held the VP-16 designation. This article is about the current squadron, but it includes the lineages of the first two VP-16s.[2]
History
- VP-906 was established in May 1946 as a reserve squadron, home-ported at NAS Jacksonville, Florida, under the operational control of FAW-11 and administratively under Naval Air Reserve Training Command. The squadron was one of 21 reserve patrol squadrons established after the war to accommodate the large number of aircrews recently released from active duty, utilize the enormous stocks of aircraft in the inventory and serve as a pool of experienced manpower in the event that the new Cold War tensions erupted into actual war. VP-906 flew the Lockheed PV-2 Harpoon and the amphibious Consolidated PBY-5A/6A Catalina.
- On 15 November 1946 VP-906 was redesignated VP-ML-56 while at Cecil Field, Florida. Under the new designation system, reserve squadron number designations began with the number 51 and regular Navy squadrons began with 1. All reserve patrol squadrons were designated as ML. The ML designation used by the reserves stood for either Medium Patrol Squadrons flying the twin-engine PV-2 Harpoon or Medium Seaplane Squadrons flying the amphibious PBY-5A Catalina. Regular Navy patrol squadrons flying the PV-2 were designated ML also, but those flying the PBY-5A were designated AM for Amphibian.
- In February 1950 VP-ML-56 was redesignated VP-741 during the reorganization of Naval Aviation reserve units. In this period of extensive defense spending reductions the number of Naval Aviation reserve patrol squadrons was reduced from 24 in 1949 to only 9.
- On 1 Mar 1951 VP-741 was recalled to active duty, the last of the nine reserve patrol squadrons recalled for service during the Korean War. In February 1953 the decision was made to augment all of the nine reserve patrol squadrons activated during 1950 to 1951 as part of the regular Navy. VP-741 was redesignated VP-16. The redesignations did not require changes in tail codes or home ports.
- On 10 Nov 1956, the squadron deployed to Keflavik, Iceland. During the Middle East Crisis, sparked by the seizure of the Suez Canal, the squadron was flying around the clock to protect NATO’s northern flank. After the situation was defused, VP-16 conducted a series of goodwill tours to several European countries before returning to the U.S. in April 1957.
- Mar 1960: VP-16 deployed to NS Roosevelt Roads, P.R., and participated in Operation Springboard 1960.
- May 1960: The squadron participated in test shots of the Redstone and Atlas missiles as part of Task Force 140, Project Mercury Recovery Force.
- 12 Dec 1960: VP-16 deployed to Naval Air Station Sigonella, Sicily, for a five-month tour of duty, relieving VP-5. The squadron provided shipping surveillance in the Mediterranean Sea for the U.S. Sixth Fleet.
- In January 1961, it was one of several squadrons called on to assist in the search for the Portuguese cruise liner Santa Maria after it had been hijacked by opponents of the Salazar regime.
- Between 29 November 1963 and March 1964 seven squadron aircraft operated from Guantanamo Bay Naval Base, Cuba, to provide surveillance during the Cuban Missile Crisis, relieving VP-23. The detachment was itself relieved in March 1964 by VP-11.
- 1 Dec 1964: VP-16 relieved VP-49 at Kindley Air Force Base, Bermuda. This was the first deployment for the squadron in its new P-3A Orion aircraft.
- 23 Mar 1965: The squadron participated in operations involving the launching and recovery of the Gemini 3 space capsule, which carried John Young and Virgil Grissom into orbit and returned them safely after completing three orbits.
- 15 Feb 1966: A detachment of three aircraft was sent to Ascension Island in support of the project Apollo-Saturn 201 flight, Task Force 140. This operation was the first unmanned spacecraft of the Apollo series to be fired into suborbital flight by a Saturn rocket.
- On 2 December 1966: VP-17 deployed to Naval Station Sangley Point in the Philippines. A detachment was based at U-Tapao Royal Thai Navy Airfield, Thailand and participated in the Vietnam War. During this deployment the squadron missions included Market Time patrols to interdict supplies by sea from North Vietnam, Yankee Team patrols, Ocean Surveillance Air Patrol, and Special Ocean Surveillance Air Patrols. Patrols were often conducted within 12 miles of the coasts of North Vietnam and throughout the Gulf of Tonkin. The squadron completed over 500 missions during its only tour in the Vietnam zone of operations.
- 12 Dec 1967: The Eagles deployed to Naval Station Rota Spain in southern Spain, as the first P-3 Orion detachment to operate from a Mediterranean base.
- Jan 1971: VP-16 retrofitted all of its P-3A aircraft with the DIFAR advanced submarine detection system. In July, the Eagles deployed to Sigonella, Sicily, to test their newly outfitted DIFAR aircraft. The squadron conducted extensive testing of the new equipment during numerous exercises in the Mediterranean Sea.
- 25 Oct–2 Nov 1983: VP-16 provided several aircraft and crews for patrols in the vicinity of Grenada during Operation Urgent Fury, in which U.S. forces invaded the island of Grenada in response to a military coup.
- Aug 1985: VP-16 deployed to Naval Air Station Bermuda. During the deployment three-aircraft detachments were maintained at Roosevelt Roads Naval Station, Puerto Rico, to participate in Operation Hat Trick II, drug interdiction patrols in the Caribbean.
- 10 Aug 1988: VP-16 deployed to Bermuda, relieving VP-24. The squadron participated in Operation Checkmate 7, interdicting suspected drug trafficking in the Caribbean.[2]
Lineage
Current VP-16
The current squadron has held the VP-16 designation for over 50 years. Its lineage is as follows:[2]
- Established as Reserve Patrol Squadron VP-906 in May 1946.
- Redesignated Medium Seaplane Squadron VP-ML-56 on 15 November 1946.
- Redesignated VP-741 in February 1950.
- Redesignated VP-16 on 4 February 1953, the third squadron to be assigned the VP-16 designation.
First VP-16
The first use of the VP-16 designation was 21 months in 1937-1939, with a squadron that ultimately became VP-3. Its lineage is as follows:[3]
- Established as VP-16F on 2 Jan 1937
- Redesignated VP-16 on 1 Oct 1937
- Redesignated VP-41 on 1 Jul 1939
- Redesignated VB-136 on 1 Mar 1943
- Redesignated VPB-136 on 1 Oct 1944
- Redesignated VP-136 on 15 May 1946
- Redesignated VP-ML-3 on 15 Nov 1946
- Redesignated VP-3 on 1 Sep 1948
- Disestablished 1 Nov 1955
Second VP-16
The second VP-16 held the designation for 10 months in 1943-1944, with a squadron that ultimately became VPB-16. Its lineage is as follows:[3]
- Established as VP-16 on 20 Dec 1943
- Redesignated VPB-16 on 1 Oct 1944
- Disestablished on 30 Jun 1945
Aircraft assignment
The squadron first received the following aircraft on the dates shown:[2]
Aircraft type | From |
---|---|
PV-2 Harpoon | May 1946 |
PBY-5A/PBY-6A Catalina | May 1946 |
P2V-2/3 Neptune | 1950 |
P2V-5 Neptune | Feb 1955 |
P2V-5F Neptune | Mar 1956 |
SP-2E Neptune | Dec 1962 |
P-3A Orion | Jul 1964 |
P-3A DIFAR Orion | Jan 1971 |
P-3C Orion | Aug 1973 |
P-3C UII.5 Orion | Jun 1983 |
P-3C UIIIR Orion | Oct 1990 |
P-8A Poseidon | Mar 2012 |
See also
- List of Lockheed P-3 Orion variants
- List of United States Navy aircraft squadrons
- List of inactive United States Navy aircraft squadrons
References
This article incorporates text from the public domain Dictionary of American Naval Aviation Squadrons.
- ^ "U.S. Navy Patrol Squadron Sixteen War Eagles". VP-16 Website. United States Navy. Retrieved 2014-03-03.
- ^ a b c d Roberts, Michael D. (2000). "Chapter 3 Section 3". Dictionary of American Naval Aviation Squadrons. Vol. Volume 2. Washington, D.C.: Naval Historical Center, Department of the Navy. pp. 91–96.
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