Ontario Air National Guard Station


Ontario Air National Guard Station is a former California Air National Guard facility located alongside Ontario International Airport in Ontario, California.

Airfield origins

Ontario Army Air Field was established before World War II. It is located in San Bernardino County, California, in the city of Ontario. This airport was most known for being the hub for the Los Angeles Basin. Its routes consisted mostly between San Bernardino and Riverside. In 1921, local pilots created a club called the Ontario Aircraft corporation to start flying the Jennie Bi-plane aircraft. This same organization classified a landing strip made from just dirt near the corner of Mission Boulevard and Grove Ave, people can see this today at the southwest corner.

Ontario Army Air Field

The start of World War II meant that the airport was required for use by the United States Army Air Corps. This however helped the Airport expand by over 845 acres. This airport went from having pure dirt fields to concrete runways, a control tower for air traffic, and high tech landing gear. The cost was covered by the Works Progress Administration. They covered the east and west expansion of 6,200 feet and the northeast/southwest expansion 4,700 feet which was originally planned to last for 39 years. The final cost for two runways in the year 1942 as $350,000.
On 27 February 1942, an Army Air Corps plane made the first landing at the new airport. By 1943, the airport was an Army Air Corps Lockheed P-38 Lightning training base and North American P-51 Mustang operating base.
After the war, it was one of five large storage, sales, and scrapping centers for Army Air Forces aircraft established by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation.
The scene where Dana Andrews visits the aircraft boneyard in the movie The Best Years of Our Lives was filmed at the Ontario Army Airfield.

Units during World War II

Source:
Date EstablishedUnit-
June–November 1942Army Air Forces:

69th Reconnaissance Group

1 June 1943Army Air Forces:
Detachment 6, Fourth Air Force Replacement Depot
Army Air Forces Weather Station
Medical Detachment
Detachment, 1st Airways Communications Squadron, Regional
Detachment, 1st Weather Squadron, Regional
11th Tow Target Squadron
123rd Reconnaissance Squadron
311th Base Headquarters and Air Base Squadron
Detachment 10, 854th Signal Service Company, Aviation
Detachment 6, 904th Quartermaster Service Company, Aviation
1024th Guard Squadron
Detachment 9, 2066th Ordnance Service Company, Aviation
-
11 October-7 December 1943Army Air Forces:
364th Fighter Group:
27 February-31 March 1944 Army Air Forces:
329th Fighter Group:
7 April 1945Army Air Forces:
Third Echelon Repair Shop
Section, 68th Army Air Forces Base Unit
Detachment, Section D, 85th Army Air Forces Base Unit
443rd Army Air Forces Base Unit
Women's Army Corps Squadron

Air National Guard Station

In 1949, an Air National Guard training station was established at the former Ontario Army Air Field
In April 1949, the City of Ontario granted a lease for certain airport property to the U.S. Air Force, the site to be used by the California Air National Guard. An armory for the 149th Aircraft Control and Warning Squadron was constructed and later CA ANG activities had a major impact on the airport. In 1952, in response to the desire of the Air National Guard to base fighter aircraft there, the city initiated the first of the three runway extensions. After two additional runway extensions, the airport had a 10,000 foot runway to service both commercial and military traffic.

The 1950s and onwards

The 1950s saw dynamic growth at Ontario International Airport, with three major aircraft plants, including Lockheed, Douglas an, Northrop, having facilities at the airport.
A second runway extension of 1,200 feet was completed in 1956 and permitted the Guard's speedy North American F-86 Sabres to land and take off at Ontario. The first extension came in 1952, and the third in 1962, each time to accommodate the faster aircraft being flown by what was by now the 163d Fighter Group of the California Air National Guard. All three runway extensions were funded by the Air National Guard as military construction. The 163 FG flew F-86F aircraft from Ontario from 1956 to 1959, and F-86H aircraft from 1959 to 1965. In 1965, the unit transitioned to the F-102 Delta Dagger and in 1968 was renamed the 163d Fighter-Interceptor Group. Operationally-gained by the Aerospace Defense Command, the 163d continued to fill what was primarily a coastal air defense role for southern California, Nevada and Arizona. In 1975, the unit transitioned to the O-2 Skymaster forward air control aircraft and was re-designated as the 163d Tactical Air Support Group, with operational claimancy transferred from ADC to Tactical Air Command.
In 1982, in preparation for transition to the McDonnell Douglas F-4 Phantom II and return to its earlier designation as the 163d Fighter Group, the 163 TASG transferred to March AFB in nearby Riverside. Non-flying CA ANG operations continued at the site with the 148th Combat Communications Squadron until 1997, when Ontario ANGS was closed due to BRAC action and the 148th transferred to the renamed March ARB.

Closure in 1995

The Ontario Air National Guard Station closed as a result of the 1995 Base Realignment and Closure Commission.
The Ontario International Airport, a commercial facility which grew up around it, remains in active use in 2024.