35th Fighter Group
Constituted as 35th Pursuit Group (Interceptor) on 22 Dec 1939.
Activated on 1 Feb 1940. Trained with P-35, P-36, P-39, and P-40 aircraft.
Two squadrons (21st and 34th) moved to the Philippines in Nov 1941.
Headquarters and another squadron (70th) sailed for Manila on 5 Dec but
because of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor they returned to the US
where the squadron flew some patrols. Headquarters and the 70th squadron
sailed for Australia on 12 Jan 1942. Three days later all the combat
squadrons were relieved and three others, still in the US, were assigned.
Headquarters reached Australia in Feb 1942 and moved on to India.
Meanwhile the squadrons had moved from the US to Australia and were
training for combat with P-39's. Headquarters was transferred back to
Australia, without personnel and equipment, in May 1942.
Redesignated 35th Fighter Group. Served in combat with Fifth AF,
operating successively from bases in Australia, New Guinea, Owi, Morotai,
and the Philippines. First used P-38's and P-39's; equipped with P-47's
late in 1943 and with P-51's in Mar 1945. Helped to halt the Japanese
advance in Papua and took part in the Allied offensive that recovered the
rest of New Guinea, flying protective patrols over Port Moresby, escorting
bombers and transports, attacking Japanese airfields and supply lines, and
providing cover for Allied landings. In 1944 began long-range missions
against enemy airfields and installations in the southern Philippines,
Halmahera, and Borneo, preparatory to the US invasion of the Philippines.
Beginning in Jan 1945, operated in support of ground forces on Luzon. Also
escorted bombers and completed some fighter sweeps to Formosa and China.
Bombed and strafed railways and airfields in Kyushu and Korea after moving
to Okinawa in Jun 1945. Moved to Japan in Oct 1945 and, as part of Far
East Air Forces, trained, took part in maneuvers, and flew surveillance
patrols over Honshu. Redesignated 35th Fighter-Interceptor Group in Jan
1950. Equipped with F-80's.
Entered combat in the Korean War in Jul 1950 and almost immediately
began converting from F-80's to F-51's. Operated from bases in Japan and
Korea in support of UN ground forces, bombing and strafing enemy supply
lines, troop concentrations, and communications. Transferred without
personnel and equipment to Japan in May 1951. Remanned and equipped with
F-51's and F-80's. Provided air defense for Japan. Converted to F-86
aircraft in 1955.
Squadrons. 18th: 1940. 20th: 1940. 21st: 1940-1942. 34th: 1940-1942.
39th: 1942-. 40th: 1942-. 41st: 1942-. 70th: 1941-1942.
Stations. Moffett Field, Calif, 1 Feb 1940; Hamilton Field, Calif, 10
Sep 1940-5 Dec 1941 and 9 Dec 1941-12 Jan 1942; Brisbane, Australia, 1 Feb
1942; New Delhi, India, Mar 1942; Sydney, Australia, 4 May 1942; Port
Moresby, New Guinea, 22 Jul 1942; Tsili Tsili, New Guinea, 15 Aug 1943;
Nadzab, New Guinea, 5 Oct 1943; Gusap, New Guinea, 7 Feb 1944; Owi,
Schouten Islands, 22 Jul 1944; More tai, 27 Sep 1944; Mangaldan, Luzon, c.
20 Jan 1945; Lingayen, Luzon, c. 10 Apr 1945; Clark Field, Luzon, 19 Apr
1945; Okinawa, 28 Jun 1945; Irumagawa, Japan, Oct 1945; Yokota, Japan, 16
Mar 1950; Ashiya, Japan, 8 Jul 1950; Pohang, Korea, 14 Jul 1950; Tsuiki,
Japan, 13 Aug 1950; Pohang, Korea, 3 Oct 1950; Yonpo, Korea, 18 Nov 1950;
Pusan, Korea, c. 3 Dec 1950; Johnson AB, Japan, 25 May 1951; Yokota,
Japan, 14 Aug 1954-.
Commanders. Maj O R Strickland, 1940; Col George P Tourtellot,
1940-unkn; Col Richard A Legg, 12 Mar 1942; Lt Col Malcolm A Moore, 26 Jul
1943; Lt Col Edwin A Doss, 23 Oct 1943; Lt Col Furlo S Wagner, 12 Feb
1944; Col Edwin A Doss, 4 May 1944; Col Harney Estes Jr, 27 Jul 1945; Col
Raymond P Todd, 22 Mar 1946; Lt Col Richard D Dick, c. 13 Sep 1946; Col
James R Gunn Jr, c. 11 Feb 1947; Col Ford Lauer, 28 Apr 1947; Col Ray W
Clifton, 1 Sep 1947; Col Edgar M Scattergood Jr, 21 Jun 1948; Lt Col Bert
W Marshall Jr, Aug 1948; Lt Col Archie M Burke, 13 May 1949; Lt Col Jack D
Dale Jr, Nov 1949; Col William P McBride, 22 Feb 1951; Lt Col Homer M Cox,
May 1951; Col John C Habecker, 25 Jun 1951; Col John R Propst, 6 Jun 1952;
Lt Col Albert S Aiken, Feb 1955; Col Maurice L Martin, Jun 1955; Col
Raymond M Gehrig, Aug 1955-.
Campaigns. World War II: East Indies; Air Offensive, Japan; China
Defensive; Papua; New Guinea; Bismarck Archipelago; Western Pacific;
Leyte; Luzon; Ryukyus; China Offensive. Korean War: UN Defensive; UN
Offensive; CCF Intervention; 1st UN Counteroffensive; CCF Spring
Offensive.
Decorations. Distinguished Unit Citation: Papua, 23 Jul 1942-23 Jan
1943. Philippine Presidential Unit Citation. Republic of Korea
Presidential Unit Citation: 7 Sep 1950-7 Feb 1951.
Insigne. Shield: Azure, a dexter cubit arm or grasping a dagger point
to base gules. Motto: Attack To Defend (Approved 21 Feb 1941.) Data from Air Force Combat Units of World War II By Maurer, Maurer, Published 1986
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