Photos: Davis-Monthan Air Force Base history
- Rick Wiley / Arizona Daily Star
Rick Wiley
Photo editor
- Updated
Davis-Monthan Field was dedicated in 1927 as Tucson's municipal air field, named in honor of two pilots who died in WWI. It was transitioned to full military service in 1941, during WWII.
It expanded rapidly during the Cold War, adding jet fighters in 1953, B-47 bombers of the Strategic Air Command, and eventually a Strategic Missile Wing to control 18 Titan ICBM's in silos around Tucson.
In the mid-1970s, it became the home of the tough Fairchild A-10 Thunderbolt II, a well-armored tank killer and infantry-support fighter.
Davis-Monthan AFB, 1927
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1927: Col. Charles A. Lindbergh dedicating Davis Monthan Field in 1927. At that time it was the largest municipal airport in the U.S.
Davis-Monthan AFBDavis-Monthan AFB history
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1927: Charles Lindbergh dedicated Davis-Monthan Air FieldΒ field on Sept. 27, 1927, for 2nd Lts. Samuel H. Davis and Oscar Monthan, Tucsonans killed in separate aerial accidents while serving in the U.S. Army. Arizona Daily Star file
Arizona Daily Star filesDavis-Monthan AFB history
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1941: Douglas B-18 bombers and crews arrive at Davis-Monthan AFB on Jan. 15, 1941. The Bolo remained the Air Corps' primary bomber into 1941, and the Japanese destroyed some B-18s during the surprise attacks on Dec. 7. Davis-Monthan AFB
Davis-Monthan AFBDavis-Monthan AFB history
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1942: A color guard review outside soldiers' barracks at Davis-Monthan Field, Tucson, in April, 1942 during WWII. Bomber crews for the 39th Bombardment Group were trained at D-M during the war. U.S. Army Air Force
U.S. Army Air ForceDavis-Monthan AFB 1943-45
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1943-45: The B-24 Liberator at Davis-Monthan. Pilots were trained to fly the bomber at D-M during World War II.
Davis-Monthan AFBDavis-Monthan AFB history
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WWII: SSgt Art Barko with the B-24 bomber, "Johnny Dough Boy," and 308th Bomb Group in China. The crew trained at Davis-Monthan during World War II. Davis-Monthan AFB
Davis-Monthan AFBDavis-Monthan AFB history
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WWII: A Boeing B-17 bomber (pictured in 1960) at Davis-Monthan AFB, TucsonD-M was training base to about 20 bomber groups flying Consolidated B-24 Liberator and Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress heavy bombers. Tucson Citizen
Tucson Citizen fileDavis-Monthan AFB history
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1942: Davis-Monthan AFB, Tucson, in 1942. Davis-Monthan AFB
Davis-Monthan AFBDavis-Monthan AFB 1945
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1945: Davis-Monthan Band on Tinian Island during World War II.
Davis-Monthan AFBDavis-Monthan AFB history
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1948: Maintenance crew of the City of Tucson, first armed B-50 to land at Davis-Monthan Air Force Base and dedicated Sept. 19, 1948 in Air Force day ceremonies. It was the first B-50 to exceed the 500-hour mark in flying time in spring 1949. Tucson Citizen
Tucson CitizenDavis-Monthan AFB history
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1949: A B-29 tanker plane, top, refuels the B-50 bomber "Lucky Lady II" in the air on a practice flight over Arizona, March 2, 1949. U.S. Air Force
U.S. Air ForceDavis-Monthan AFB history
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1954: Boeing B-29 bombers of the 19th Bomb Wing arrive at Davis-Monthan AFB, Tucson, during a ceremony marking their retirement from service in 1954. Tucson Citizen file
Tucson Citizen fileDavis-Monthan AFB history
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1955: "Bockscar," the Boeing B-29 bomber that dropped the atomic bomb on Nagasaki, Japan, in 1945, shown in storage at Davis-Monthan AFB, Tucson, in 1955. It was transferred to the National Museum of the U.S. Air Force in 1961. Tucson Citizen
Tucson CitizenDavis-Monthan AFB history
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1953: Davis-Monthan AFB in 1953. Tucson Citizen
Tucson CitizenDavis-Monthan AFB history
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1953:Β Three squadrons of B-47 bombers of the Strategic Air Command at Davis-Monthan AFB in the 1950s. Davis-Monthan AFB
Davis-Monthan AFBDavis-Monthan AFB history
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1955: The stratophere chamber at Davis-Monthan AFB in 1955, where Air Force personnel on flying status make a two-hour simulated high-altitude 'flight' without leaving the ground. Tucson Citizen
Tucson CitizenDavis-Monthan AFB history
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1955: A SAC B-47 bomber from Davis-Monthan AFB slides underneath a KC-97 tanker 15,000 feet above Southern Arizona in 1955. The jets slow to 210-250 mph to fly with the slower prop-driven tanker. The tanker transfers thousands of pounds of aviation fuel in a few minutes. Tucson Citizen
Tucson CitizenDavis-Monthan AFB history
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1953-59: F-86 Sabre fighters (shown over S. Korea during the Korean War) fly at Davis-Monthan AFB. U.S. Air Force
U.S. Air ForceDavis-Monthan AFB history
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1953-59: McDonnell F-101A (S/N 53-2425) from Bergstrom Air Force Base, Texas. Davis-Monthan AFB pilots flew the F-101B version. Davis-Monthan AFB
U.S. Air ForceDavis-Monthan AFB history
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1963: An Atlas SM-65 intercontinental ballistic missile on display at Davis-Monthan AFB, Tucson, during Aerospace Days in 1963. The Strategic Air Command's 390th Strategic Missile Wing and its 18 Titan II ICBM sites around Tucson were activated a year earlier. Arizona Daily Star file
Arizona Daily StarDavis-Monthan AFB history
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1962: Artist rendering of the underground Titan II missile site. The Strategic Air Command's 390th Strategic Missile Wing and its 18 Titan II ICBM sites around Tucson were activated. Titan Missile Museum
Titan Missile MuseumDavis-Monthan AFB history
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1963: The 4028th Strategic Reconnaissance Weather Wing, equipped with Lockheed U-2 Dragon Lady strategic reconnaissance aircraft, began flying global missions from Davis-Monthan. Pictured: A U2 from at Davis-Monthan AFB in flight over Tucson area in July, 1966. Mark Godfrey / Tucson Citizen
Mark Godfrey/ Tucson CitizenDavis-Monthan AFB history
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1963: A U.S. Air Force Lockheed DC-130A Hercules drone control aircraft takes off from Davis-Monthan Air Force Base with four BQM-34 Firebee drones attached to the wing pylons. The Firebee drones were dropped for reconnaissance missions during the Vietnam War. Davis-Monthan AFB
Davis-Monthan AFBDavis-Monthan AFB history
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1964: The 4453d Combat Crew Training Wing is equipped with the McDonnell Douglas F-4 Phantom II. Pictured:Β F4C Phantom fighter jet at Davis-Monthan AFB in 1965. Mark Godfrey / Tucson Citizen
Mark Godfrey / Tucson CitizenRadar Approach Control at Davis-Monthan AFB, 1970
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1970: Radar Approach Control at Davis-Monthan AFB in 1970. It was staffed 24-hours-a-day by 35 airmen. Operators could see objects on their screen for 57 miles in all directions.
Art Grasberger / Tucson CitizenRadar Approach Control at Davis-Monthan AFB, 1970
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1970: The computers behind the scene at Radar Approach Control at Davis-Monthan AFB in 1970. It was staffed 24-hours-a-day by 35 airmen. Technicians ran tape on all radio traffic and kept the system running around the clock.
Art Grasberger / Tucson CitizenDavis-Monthan AFB history
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1971: A-7D Corsair fighters are activated at Davis-Monthan AFB, Tucson, in 1971. The previously-assigned F-4 Phantoms are moved to Luke AFB west of Phoenix. Jack Sheaffer / Arizona Daily Star
Jack Sheaffer / Arizona Daily StarLt. Col. Jack Van Loan 1973
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1973: Lt. Col. Jack Van Loan and family greet a crowd of nearly 2,000 people at Davis-Monthan AFB, Tucson, on March 24, 1973, after he was released from captivity in North Vietnam.
Dan Tortorell / Tucson CitizenF-106, D-M, 1977
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Two pilots with the 5th fighter Interceptor Squadron from Minot AFB on deployment at Davis-Monthan AFB, scramble for their Convair F-106 fighter jets during an alert by Luke AFB's 26th NORAD Regional Control Center in 1977. Two pilots were on-duty for 24 hours a day.
Bill Hopkins / Tucson CitizenF-106, D-M, 1977
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A Convair F-106 Delta Dart emerges from its bunker after pilots scrambled two intercept an unknown threat in 1977. "The Six," as pilots called it, broke the world speed record in 1959, exceeding 1,500 mph. However, the aircraft never saw combat in Vietnam.
Bill Hopkins / Tucson CitizenF-106 Delta Darts
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Two Convair F-106 Delta Dart interceptors (pilots called them "The Six") take off from Davis-Monthan AFB after being scrambled by the 26th NORAD Regional Control Center at Luke AFB in 1977.
Bill Hopkins / Tucson CitizenDavis-Monthan AFB history 1976
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1976:Β Officers check out the first A-10 Thunderbolt II ground-attack jet in June, as D-M is transferred to Tactical Air Command (now the Air Combat Command) after 30 years under SAC.
Bruce Hopkins / Tucson CitizenDavis-Monthan AFB history
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1978: Davis-Monthan AFB base housing and AMARG in the background in 1978. Tucson Citizen
Tucson CitizenDavis-Monthan AFB history
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1980: Arrival of the 41st Electronic Combat Squadron, equipped with the EC-130H Compass Call jamming aircraft. Pictured: An EC-130H Compass Call on the flightline at Davis-Monthan Air Force Base in 2014. U.S. Air Force
Chris Massey / U.S. Air ForceDavis-Monthan AFB history
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1981:Β The 868th Tactical Missile Training Group stands up at D-M as the only U.S.-based ground-launched cruise missile unit, training airmen to operate the BGM-109G Gryphon. U.S. Air Force
U.S. Air ForceDavis-Monthan AFB history
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1982: The 602nd Tactical Air Control Wing and its subordinate 23rd Tactical Air Support Squadron (TASS), brings the Cessna OA-37B Dragonfly and its forward air control mission to D-M. U.S. Air Force
U.S. Air ForceDavis-Monthan AFB 1996
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1996: NASA's Space Shuttle Atlantis touches down at Davis-Monthan Air Force Base on the back of a modified Boeing 747 in 1996. D-M was a frequent stopover for the shuttle on its journey from Edwards AFB in California by the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.
A.E. Araiza / Arizona Daily StarDavis-Monthan AFB 1998
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1998: A member of the 354th Fighter Squadron takes his gear to his A-10 Thunderbolt to begin the journey to Kuwait to will help enforce a "no-fly zone" over Iraq. Photo by Chris Richards.
Chris Richards / Arizona Daily StarDavis-Monthan AFB history
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2001:Β The Air National Guard 162nd Fighter Wing begins flying F-16 Fighting Falcons from D-M as part of an Air Sovereignty Alert detachment on 24-hour alert for homeland-security missions under Operation Noble Eagle. Pictured: ANG pilots at D-M flew air cover over Phoenix during the 2015 Super Bowl.
A.E. Araiza / Arizona Daily StarDavis-Monthan AFB history
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2002:Β The 48th, 55th, and the 79th Rescue Squadron's (RQS) transferred under control of the 355 WG, equipped with HC-130 Combat King fixed-wing aircraft and HH-60 Pave Hawk helicopters. Pictured: HH-60's during CSAR training in 2013.
A.E. Araiza / Arizona Daily StarDavis-Monthan AFB history
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2002: Between 150 and 160 U.S. Air Force personnel board a charter airliner at Davis-Monthan Air Force Base for deployment to the Middle East in 2002, prior to the invasion of Iraq. Aaron Latham / Arizona Daily Star
Aaron Latham / Arizona Daily StarDavis-Monthan AFB history
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2007: The 214th Reconnaissance Group, operator of the MQ-1 Predator drone, is established as a unit of the Air National Guard 162nd Fighter Wing based at D-M. Pictured: AnΒ MQ-1 Predator in aΒ 162nd Fighter Wing hangar at Ft. Huachuca in 2014.
A.E. Araiza / Arizona Daily StarRick Wiley
Photo editor
As featured on
2007 column by Bonnie Henry on Davis-Monthan's history.Β
D-M, key to Tucson's economy, needs a new long-term role. This special report examines how its assets fit into possible new or expanded missions, and what other military communities can teach us.
A smaller base wouldn't destroy Tucson's economy, but it sure would hurt
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