Biancur Field
Biancur Field,,, is a satellite airfield located northwest of the Main Base, 5.9 miles north-northeast of Valparaiso, Florida. It is also known as site "Test Site B6".
Overview
The U.S. Army Ranger facility Camp Rudder is located here. It is designated Site B-6. The airfield remains under the ownership of the United States Air Force, and is under the jurisdiction of the 96th Test Wing at Eglin AFB.History
Auxiliary Field 6 is named Biancur Field for 1st Lieutenant Andrew Biancur, a test pilot of the Medium Bombardment Section of the 1st Proving Ground Group, killed 8 January 1944 in the crash of a prototype YP-61-NO Black Widow night fighter aircraft, AAF Ser. No. 41-18883, c/n 711, at Eglin Field.The history of Biancur Field is largely unknown, and the exact date of construction of Biancur Field is undetermined. It was opened in 1943 and was constructed in a similar manner to a fully equipped base with three runways, a large parking ramp, at least one hangar and numerous support buildings. The airfield was expanded sometime after the war, with an jet-capable runway laid down over the north/south runway, Runway 18/36. The airfield was incorporated into Eglin AFB on 9 October 1959 and was subsequently inactivated. During the early 1960s, Field 6 was used for "touch & goes" by the Navy's Training Squadron FOUR, at the time when VT-4 was a Student Naval Aviator strike jet pipeline training squadron based at Sherman Field, at nearby NAS Pensacola. As there was no mess hall, food was brought in from the Army Rangers at nearby Field 7.
Biancur was reactivated in 1970 as an Army Special Forces group facility, led by Col Arthur D. "Bull" Simons, for training select Army Special Forces and USAF Air Commando forces before deploying to Thailand for the attempted rescue on 20-21 Nov 1970 of US prisoners of war at the Son Tay prison camp in North Vietnam.
Afterwards, the United States Army Ranger training camp at Epler Field moved to Biancur Field to provide realistic jungle/swamp training. Today, the ground station has numerous modern buildings and the north-south airfield runway has been updated for use by helicopters with several hangars. Several UH-60 Black Hawk helicopters are parked on the ramp in recent aerial imagery of the airfield.
The airfield also supports other USAF, DoD and other U.S. government agency requirements as necessary, one example being the NASA X-43 low-speed demonstrator that underwent testing out of Auxiliary Field 6 in November 2003.