35th Flying Training Wing (U.S. Army Air Forces)
The 35th Flying Training Wing is an inactive United States Air Force unit. It was last assigned to the Western Flying Training Command, and was disbanded on 16 June 1946 at the Minter Field, California.
There is no lineage between the United States Air Force 35th Fighter Wing, established on 10 August 1948 at Irumagawa Airbase, Japan, and this organization.
History
The wing was a World War II Command and Control organization which supported Western Flying Training Command Flight Schools in California. Most of the assigned schools provided phase II basic flying training for Air Cadets, although the wing also commanded both contract basic and advanced single and two-engine Army schools. In addition, an advanced navigation school at Mather Field for Air Cadets selected at the Santa Ana Classification Center was controlled by the wing. Graduates of the advanced schools were commissioned as Second Lieutenants, received their "wings" and were reassigned to Operational or Replacement Training Units operated by one of the four numbered air fores in the zone of interior.As training requirements changed during the war, schools were activated and inactivated or transferred to meet those requirements.
Lineage
- Established as 35th Flying Training Wing on 17 December 1942
Assignments
- AAF West Coast Training Center, 8 January 1943 – 16 June 1946
Training aircraft
The schools of the wing used a wide variety of planes to support its numerous training needs:- Primary training aircraft were the Boeing-Stearman PT-17 and Ryan PT-22. PT-13 and PT-27 aircraft were also used which were basic Stearmans with varying horsepower ratings.
- The Vultee BT-13 was the basic training aircraft, along with the higher-horsepower Vultee BT-15
- The North American AT-6 was used as the single-engine advanced trainer
- The Cessna AT-17 Bobcat was the standard two-engine advanced trainer, along with the Cessna UC-78 variant of the AT-17; Curtiss-Wright AT-9s were used at Mather and Stockton Fields for high performance two-engine training in perpetration for Lockheed P-38 Lightning training by IV Fighter Command.
- Specialized two-engine bomber trainers at Mather Field were the Lockheed AT-18 Hudsons along with North American B-25 Mitchells. The Beechcraft AT-7 was used for two-engine pilot training and also navigator training at Mather
Assigned Pilot Schools
; Chico Army Airfield. Chico, California; Dos Palos Airport, Firebaugh/Dos Palos, California
; Gardner Army Airfield, Taft, California
; Santa Maria Army Airfield, Santa Maria, California
; Lemoore Army Airfield, Lemoore, California
; Mather Field, Sacramento, California
; Merced Army Airfield, Merced, California
; Minter Field, Shafter, California
; Palo Alto Airport, King City, California
; Rankin Field, Tulare, California
; Sequoia Field, Visalia, California
; Stockton Field, Stockton, California
; Victorville Army Airfield, Victoville, California
Stations
- Merced Army Airfield California, 8 January 1943
- Minter Field, California, 11 September 1943 – 16 June 1946