12th Reconnaissance Squadron

It earned seven Campaign Streamers in World War I flying the French Salmson 2A2 aircraft as a Corps Observation squadron.The squadron again flew tactical reconnaissance missions in France and Northern Europe during World War II as part of Ninth Air Force.Arriving at Mitchell Field, New York in June 1919, most squadron members were separated from the Air Service and returned to civilian life.A small cadre of members remained on duty, and on 8 October, Lt Alexander Pearson in a 12th Squadron De Havilland DH-4 took off from Roosevelt Field on Long Island in the first transcontinental air race, a round trip to Crissy Field, San Francisco, California, which he won with a flying time of 48 hours, 37 minutes, and 16 seconds, or an average speed of 111.3 mph.[3] In February 1921, the same Lt Pearson and the 12th were again involved in a record-setting attempt, this time a planned transcontinental flight with only two stops to be completed in less than 24 hours.[3] In June, the Border Patrol operation ended, with all airfields except Biggs Field being closed and most units returning to their permanent stations.[3] In 1934, the 12th took part when the Army was given responsibility for flying the mail after President Franklin Roosevelt cancelled all civilian contracts because of alleged rate-fixing by the airlines.On 1 June 1937, the 12th Observation Squadron left Texas to operate with the 7th Cavalry Brigade, the mechanized forerunner of the First Armored Division, at Fort Knox, Kentucky.After those maneuvers, the 12th returned to the recently completed Godman Field, where the unit supplied a cadre to organize the Headquarters Squadron of the 73d Observation Group.On that day it left by train for Fort Dix, where it sailed aboard the Dutch Troop Ship Marnix van St. Aldegonde on 26 September, arriving at Gurock on 7 October to join the rest of the squadron at Membury.The 12th shared a Distinguished Unit Citation with the 67th Tactical Reconnaissance Group for the "most extensive low altitude oblique photographic assignment ever undertaken over enemy territory."However, about 5 July 1944, the squadron moved with the 67th Tactical Reconnaissance Group to ALG A-9 Le Molay-Littry – the first of five airfields from which it would operate in France – and began supporting the United States First Army, which was massing for a breakthrough near Saint-Lô.During November and December, missions were flown over the Ruhr and Rhine valleys and over such cities as Frankfurt, Mannheim, Wiesbaden, Koblenz, and Ludwigshafen, many of which were heavily defended.Then the 12th moved south to Munich, Regensburg, and Nuremberg, and it finished the month by making long flights (with wing tanks) into Austria and Czechoslovakia, reconnoitering Prague, Pilsen, Linz, and Vienna.Although hostilities in general ceased in Europe on 7 May 1945, the 12th Squadron continued to fly photographic missions in support of Allied forces in Czechoslovakia, where the fighting did not stop until 10 May.Extensive aerial photography was performed by the 12th, including maps and layouts for the United States Department of Agriculture, the Army Corps of Engineers, and many other agencies.On 25 February, eight months after the Korean War started, it was activated at Komaki Air Base, Japan, and assigned to the 67th Group once more.On 15 March 1951, the unit moved to Taegu Air Base (K-2), South Korea, where the operations section had been located since the first part of the month.The primary mission of the squadron during the Korean War was to provide the night reconnaissance capability for the wing, both photographic and visual.[3] Following the end of the Korean War, the 12th TRS continued to operate from Kimpo until 8 November 1954, when it moved to Itami Air Base, Japan.[3] On 14 August 1956, the squadron moved from Itami to Yokota Air Base, which could accommodate the twin jet Douglas RB-66B Destroyers with which the 12th was soon to be equipped.[3] Reactivated at Beale Air Force Base, California in 2001 operating RQ-4 Global Hawk remotely piloted aerial reconnaissance aircraft after the September 11 terrorist attacks.In March 2013, the squadron was reassigned to the reactivated 69th Reconnaissance Group as part of the consolidation of the USAF Global Hawk mission.Explanatory notes Footnotes This article incorporates public domain material from the Air Force Historical Research Agency
12th Aero Squadron at Camp Little near Nogales, Arizona on Mexican Border patrol duty, 1920
12th Tactical Reconnaissance Squadron being trained by the RAF at Membury Airfield England during World War II
12th Tactical Reconnaissance Squadron F-6 Mustang, taking off from Conflans Airfield (Y-94), France, late 1944/early 1945
12th Reconnaissance Squadron RF-80Cs, March AFB, California, 1948. [ note 2 ]
12th Tactical Reconnaissance Squadron, Night Photographic RB-26 Invader Kimpo AB (K-14), South Korea. [ note 3 ]
12th Tactical Reconnaissance Squadron McDonnell RF-4C Phantom Tan Son Nhut Air Base, South Vietnam, 1968 [ note 4 ]
RF-4C Phantom 67-436 at Bergstrom AFB , about 1972
12th Reconnaissance Squadron (disambiguation)RQ-4 Global HawkUnited StatesUnited States Air ForceAerial reconnaissanceAir Combat CommandBeale Air Force BaseBattle honoursLewis H. BreretonRobert Merrill LeeReconnaissance319th Operations GroupGrand Forks Air Force BaseUnited States Army Air ServiceKelly FieldWorld War ISalmson 2A2World War IINinth Air ForceKorean WarVietnam WarOperation Desert StormWar on Terrorism12th Aero SquadronsquadronWilbur Wright FieldWestern FrontArmistice with GermanyUnited States Army Border Air PatrolMitchell FieldDe Havilland DH-4Roosevelt FieldCrissy FieldScott Field, IllinoisDouglas FieldBiggs FieldColumbus AirfieldNogales, ArizonaPablo Beach, FloridaRockwell FieldFort WorthEl PasoMarfa, TexasClaire ChennaultFlying TigerCharlotte, TexasFranklin RooseveltSalt Lake CityOaklandElko, NevadaSacramentoDouglas Y1B-7First Armored DivisionFort KnoxFort OglethorpeFort RileyPlattsburgh, New YorkGoodman FieldCarolinaLouisiana Maneuvers73d Observation GroupPearl Harbor Attack67th Observation GroupEsler FieldThird Air ForceFort DixRMS Queen ElizabethGourockRAF MemburyRoyal Air ForceSpitfire PR Mk XIsA-20 HavocNorth American P-51 MustangsIX Fighter CommandIX Tactical Air CommandOperation OverlordDistinguished Unit CitationLe HavreLuxembourgLiègeLorientSeine RiverPas-de-Calais10th Photographic Reconnaissance GroupA-9 Le Molay-LittryUnited States First ArmySaint-LôGeorge S. PattonThird ArmyXIX Tactical Air CommandRennes AirfieldSiegfried LineFrankfurtMannheimWiesbadenKoblenzLudwigshafenBattle of the BulgeP-47 ThunderboltVogelsang Airfield (Y-61)DarmstadtWürzburgKasselErfurtLeipzigChemnitzMunichRegensburgNurembergPraguePilsenViennaFürth AirfieldXII Tactical Air CommandBolling FieldMarch Field363d Reconnaissance GroupBrooks FieldLangley FieldTwelfth Air ForceFP-80 Shooting StarUnited States Department of AgricultureArmy Corps of EngineersKomaki Air Base67th Tactical Reconnaissance WingFifth Air Force162d Tactical Reconnaissance SquadronTaegu Air BaseKimpo Air BaseItami Air BaseYokota Air BaseDouglas RB-66B DestroyersPacific Air ForcesBangkokSoutheast Asia Treaty OrganizationTactical Air CommandMountain Home Air Force BaseMcDonnell RF-4C Phantom IITan Son Nhut Air Base460th Tactical Reconnaissance WingNorth VietnamBergstrom AFBSeptember 11 terrorist attacks69th Reconnaissance GroupSS NorthlandI Corps Observation GroupUnited States Third ArmyAmerican Expeditionary ForcesFirst Army Observation Group1st Surveillance Group12th Observation Group10 Photographic GroupStrategic Air Command26th Tactical Reconnaissance Wing9th Operations GroupAviation Concentration CenterLiverpoolSt. Maixent Replacement BarracksChaumont AerodromeAmanty AirdromeOurches AerodromeFlin AerodromeSaints AerodromeFrancheville AerodromeFerme de Moras AerodromeMay-en-Multien AerodromeCoincy AerodromeChailly-en-Brie AerodromeGengault AerodromeRemicourt AerodromeJulvecourt AirdromeTrier AirfieldColombey-les-BellesLe MansBrest, FranceMitchel FieldFort BlissNogales FieldFort Sam HoustonPost FieldFort HuachucaGodman FieldRAF Greenham CommonRAF AldermastonRAF ChilboltonRAF Middle WallopLe Molay AirfieldChâteaudun AirfieldSaint-Dizier AirfieldConflans AirfieldOber Olm AirfieldBergstrom Air Force BaseRamstein Air BaseZweibrücken Air BaseSheik Isa Air BaseBahrainDorand ARSalmson 2Airco DH.4Douglas O-2JN-6 JennyCurtis O-11Thomas-Morse O-19Fokker O-27Douglas O-43North American O-47Stinson YO-54O-52 OwlO-57 GrasshopperO-59 GrasshopperDouglas O-31Curtiss O-40 RavenRyan YO-51 DragonflyDouglas O-38P-51/F-6C MustangSpitfire PR Mk XIL-4 GrasshopperDB-7 and A-20 HavocP-51/F-6D MustangFP-80A Shooting StarRB-26B InvaderRB-66B DestroyerRF-4C Phantom IIPresidential Unit CitationAir Force Outstanding Unit AwardOrder of the DayRepublic of Korea Presidential Unit CitationRepublic of Vietnam Gallantry CrossList of American aero squadronspublic domain material