The 91st Cyberspace Operations Squadron is an active
United States Air Force unit, currently assigned to the
67th Cyberspace Wing
The 67th Cyberspace Wing is a United States Air Force wing stationed at Lackland Air Force Base, Texas. It was activated in October 1993 as a military intelligence unit and is assigned to the Sixteenth Air Force.
The wing was first activated ...
at
Kelly Annex, part of
Lackland Air Force Base, Texas.
The 91st delivers
cyber warfare capabilities to
combatant commanders. It provides the Air Force with manpower.
History
World War I

Established as 91st Aero Squadron in the summer of 1917 at
Kelly Field
Kelly Field (formerly Kelly Air Force Base) is a Joint-Use facility located in San Antonio, Texas. It was originally named after George E. M. Kelly, the first member of the U.S. military killed in the crash of an airplane he was piloting.
In ...
, near
San Antonio, Texas, the unit was sent to France during
World War I as one of the initial
American Expeditionary Force
The American Expeditionary Forces (A. E. F.) was a formation of the United States Army on the Western Front of World War I. The A. E. F. was established on July 5, 1917, in France under the command of General John J. Pershing. It fought alon ...
aero squadrons. The 91st served on the
Western Front Western Front or West Front may refer to:
Military frontiers
*Western Front (World War I), a military frontier to the west of Germany
*Western Front (World War II), a military frontier to the west of Germany
*Western Front (Russian Empire), a majo ...
in France as an observation squadron with the
French Eighth Army and
United States First Army, 3 June – 10 November 1918. The primary mission of the 91st Squadron was to gather information and immediately return to base to report it. After the November 1918
Armistice with Germany, the 91st Aero Squadron remained in Europe, as part of the occupation forces in Germany with the
Third Army (United States) until April 1919.
Intra-War period
: ''see also:
United States Army Border Air Patrol
With the end of World War I in 1918, the Air Service, United States Army was largely demobilized. During the demobilization period of 1919, the Regular Army and its air arm answered a call to defend the southern border against raids from Mexico, ...
''
After returning to the United States, the squadron was reorganized and assigned to
Rockwell Field, near
San Diego in September 1919. In California, its duties consisted of patrolling the southwestern U.S./Mexican border between California and Arizona, performing forest fire patrols and flying training flights over forested areas along the coast of California while assigned to
Crissy Field, near
San Francisco. Between 1919 and 1922 the squadron frequently moved between bases in California and Oregon with detachments deployed locally to meet operational needs.
When Crissy Field closed in 1936 for the construction of the
Golden Gate Bridge
The Golden Gate Bridge is a suspension bridge spanning the Golden Gate, the strait connecting San Francisco Bay and the Pacific Ocean. The structure links the U.S. city of San Francisco, California—the northern tip of the San Francisco Pen ...
, the 91st moved to
Gray Field, near
Fort Lewis Fort Lewis may refer to:
*Fort Lewis (Colorado), a former United States Army post (1878–1891) in the U.S. State of Colorado
**Fort Lewis College, a college in the Durango, Colorado, United States
**Fort Lewis Skyhawks, athletic teams of Fort Lewi ...
, Washington. At Fort Lewis, the squadron continued flying forest fire patrols over the forests of the
Pacific Northwest until the late 1930s.
The 91st was reassigned to
Wheeler-Sack Army Airfield
Wheeler-Sack Army Airfield is a military use airport located at Fort Drum, in Jefferson County, New York, United States. It is owned by the U.S. Army.
Although most U.S. airports use the same three-letter location identifier for the FAA and IAT ...
in upstate New York in September 1941, where it became an observation squadron for the
4th Armored Division. It engaged in overvaluation duties during various maneuvers in New York and Tennessee during buildup of American forces prior to their engagement in
World War II.
World War II

U.S. civilian and military leaders were concerned with Nazi Germany's preoccupation with South and Central America. In order to prepare for possible hostilities in its own backyard, the military planners needed accurate charts and maps of all of these regions. Millions of square miles were virtually unexplored and uncharted. The 91st was given the tremendous task of getting this job done through aerial photography.
Elements of the 91st Photographic Mapping Squadron were deployed to the
Antilles Air Command in April 1943 until June 1945. Flight "B" of the 91st flew throughout South and Central America and the Caribbean. Staging from
Borinquen Field,
Puerto Rico, aircraft and crews were deployed throughout the area.
Aircraft of Flight "B" saw extensive flight activity over and around such places as
Talara, Peru
Talara is a city in the Talara Province of the Piura Region, in northwestern Peru. It is a port city on the Pacific Ocean with a population of 91,444 as of 2017. Its climate is hot and dry. Due to its oil reserves, and ability to produce aviatio ...
(between 1943 and 1944),
Atkinson Field Atkinson may refer to:
Places
*Atkinson, Nova Scotia, Canada
* Atkinson, Dominica, a village in Dominica
*Atkinson, Illinois, U.S.
*Atkinson, Indiana, U.S.
* Atkinson, Maine, U.S.
*Atkinson Lake, a lake in Minnesota, U.S.
*Atkinson, Nebraska, U. ...
, British Guiana (1944–1945),
Recife, Brazil (1944–1945),
Howard Field and
Albrook Field, Canal Zone (1944–1945) and
Natal, Brazil (1945). These operations, mainly aerial mapping, also included intelligence work, providing the United States with a storehouse of cartographic data on these regions that is still in use today.
The 91st was formally attached to the
311th Photographic Wing (later known as the 311th Reconnaissance Wing), and Flight "B" was available to the
Sixth Air Force's commander for other duties. The unit flew a variety of North American
F-10 "Mitchells" (the photo recon variant of the B-25D) as well as several Boeing
F-9s (photo version of the B-17).
Flight "B" was seemingly "everywhere" in the Caribbean region during the war. After the war ended, the squadron was based at
MacDill Field, Florida, and later with the
24th Composite Wing
Fourth or the fourth may refer to:
* the ordinal form of the number 4
* ''Fourth'' (album), by Soft Machine, 1971
* Fourth (angle), an ancient astronomical subdivision
* Fourth (music), a musical interval
* ''The Fourth'' (1972 film), a Sovie ...
at Howard Field, Panama, carrying out photo-mapping and charting missions in Central and South America. The squadron was assigned to the new
Strategic Air Command
Strategic Air Command (SAC) was both a United States Department of Defense Specified Command and a United States Air Force (USAF) Major Command responsible for command and control of the strategic bomber and intercontinental ballistic missile ...
in 1949 and moved to
McGuire Air Force Base
McGuire AFB/McGuire, the common name of the McGuire unit of Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst, is a United States Air Force base in Burlington County, New Jersey, United States, approximately south-southeast of Trenton. McGuire is under the j ...
, New Jersey where it engaged in long-distance photo mapping as part of SAC's global strategic reconnaissance mission.
Korean War

With the invasion of
South Korea by communist forces from the north in June 1950, the
United Nations (UN) responded by sending military forces, primarily from the United States, to the aid of the South Koreans. A major deficiency in
MacArthur's forces was a lack of accurate battlefield maps of the peninsula. As one of the best equipped photo reconnaissance units in the USAF, General MacArthur quickly called on the 91st to join the
Far East Air Forces (FEAF) fighting on the Korean peninsula. The 91st Strategic Reconnaissance Squadron moved from McGuire Air Force Base, NJ to
Johnson Air Base
is a Japan Air Self-Defense Force (JASDF) base located in the city of Sayama, Saitama Prefecture, north of western Tokyo, Japan.
It was the airfield for the Imperial Japanese Army Air Force Academy until 1945, when it became Johnson Air Forc ...
and
Yokota Air Base, Japan to begin supporting UN troops in Korea. It was assigned directly to SAC's
Fifteenth Air Force
The Fifteenth Air Force (15 AF) is a numbered air force of the United States Air Force's Air Combat Command (ACC). It is headquartered at Shaw Air Force Base. It was reactivated on 20 August 2020, merging the previous units of the Ninth Air Force ...
, attached to
Fifth Air Force.
The 91st eventually flew the largest number of different airframes in the Korean War and had more assigned personnel than any other flying unit in the Korean War. With over 800 assigned personnel, the squadron had six different types of aircraft assigned, to include the
Boeing RB-29 Superfortress and
Boeing RB-50 Superfortress,
North American RB-45 Tornado,
WB-26 Invader, KB-29 tankers and
Convair RB-36 Peacemaker
The Convair B-36 "Peacemaker" is a strategic bomber that was built by Convair and operated by the United States Air Force (USAF) from 1949 to 1959. The B-36 is the largest mass-produced piston-engined aircraft ever built. It had the longest wing ...
. Throughout the conflict, the RB-29 and RB-50s were the workhorses of the unit.
The RB-29 flew throughout the Korean peninsula in the early part of the war, but was soon in trouble with Soviet
MiG-15 aircraft added to the air war by the communist forces. The propeller-driven aircraft of the 91st were attacked and suffered extreme damage and battle losses. In response, jet-enhanced RB-50J and jet-powered RB-45C reconnaissance aircraft were deployed from
RAF Sculthorpe, England. Other aircraft working from England were detachments of RB-45s temporarily stationed at
RAF Manston, Kent an RB-29 unit at
RAF Lakenheath and an RB-36 detachment stationed at
RAF Brize Norton.
While RB-45 reconnaissance aircraft managed to outrun and outmaneuver MiGs on numerous occasions, they too eventually became targets. Although they were allowed to fly missions to heavily defended northwestern North Korea, after April 1951 they were required to be escorted by
Lockheed F-80 Shooting Star and
Republic F-84 Thunderjet jet fighter escort aircraft. By January 1952 they were restricted to night operations using flash bombs to illuminate photographic targets. This proved unproductive, however, because when the RB-45 forward bomb bay was open to drop flash bombs, the planes buffeted too badly for accurate photography.
The squadron was also called upon to conduct psychological leaflet drops with its assigned RB-29 aircraft. Not only did the 91st drop Korean "Psyops" leaflets throughout the Korean peninsula and into Manchuria and China, but Russian language leaflets were also dropped as it was suspected that advisers from the Soviet Union were assisting the communist forces.
In addition to bomb damage assessment, targeting and aerial photography for the Bomber Command and FEAF, the 91st conducted Electronic Intelligence (ELINT) and "ferret" missions in theater mapping
radar emissions of air defense sites. It conducted the first ferret missions ever by the USAF. Overflights of Soviet-controlled Far East islands began in 1951. An example of this type of work was reconnaissance missions which were conducted over
Karafuto following reports that the Soviets had built extensive underground installations and missile-launching facilities on the island. In Project 51, 91st SRW RB-45s took off from Yokotato conduct reconnaissance over the southern portions of
Sakhalin Island
Sakhalin ( rus, Сахали́н, r=Sakhalín, p=səxɐˈlʲin; ja, 樺太 ''Karafuto''; zh, c=, p=Kùyèdǎo, s=库页岛, t=庫頁島; Manchu: ᠰᠠᡥᠠᠯᡳᠶᠠᠨ, ''Sahaliyan''; Orok: Бугата на̄, ''Bugata nā''; Nivkh: ...
. Photographic and radar reconnaissance overflight missions were also flown over the
Murmansk-
Kola Peninsula and Siberia. In late 1952, six RB-36s were sent to Yakota to fly with the 91st and fly high altitude reconnaissance over Manchurian targets.
Shortly after the
Korean Armistice Agreement, On 29 July 1953 a
343d Reconnaissance Squadron
The 343d Reconnaissance Squadron is a United States Air Force unit part of the 55th Wing at Offutt Air Force Base, Nebraska. It operates the RC-135V/W Rivet Joint aircraft conducting reconnaissance missions.
History World War II
Constituted ...
RB-50 temporarily attached to the 91st was shot down by Soviet fighters about ninety miles south of
Vladivostok. The Soviet Union did not deny the plane's location was over water, but claimed that the bomber had twice flown over Soviet territory and fired on their MiGs, who then returned fire defensively. On 7 November 1954, two Soviet fighters attacked a squadron RB-29 over
Hokkaido. Nine of the ten crew members were able to bale out of the bomber, which crashed near the town of
Kenebetsu. In response to a
State Department
The United States Department of State (DOS), or State Department, is an United States federal executive departments, executive department of the Federal government of the United States, U.S. federal government responsible for the country's fore ...
protest, the Soviets claimed the Superfortress had been intercepted over the
Kurile Islands and opened fire on intercepting Soviet fighters, which were compelled to retaliate, then departing "in a southerly direction.''
[Farquhar, pp. 46–48]
the 91st was withdrawn from the Pacific and returned to the United States and to
Great Falls Air Force Base
Malmstrom Air Force Base is a United States Air Force base and census-designated place (CDP) in Cascade County, Montana, United States, adjacent to the city of Great Falls, Montana, Great Falls. It was named in honor of World War II POW Colonel Ei ...
, Montana on 20 December 1954. Elements of the squadron remained with the Fifth Air Force in Japan to provide FEAF with a strategic reconnaissance and intelligence gathering capability. Elements of the 91st were reassigned to the
6091st Reconnaissance Squadron
The 6091st Reconnaissance Squadron is an inactive United States Air Force unit. Its last was assigned to the 41st Air Division, stationed at Yokota Air Base, Japan. It was inactivated on 1 July 1968.
History
The 6091st participated in overt an ...
, as part of the newly formed FEAF
6007th Reconnaissance Group
The 6007th Reconnaissance Group is an inactive United States Air Force unit. Its last was assigned to the 6007th Reconnaissance Wing, stationed at Yokota Air Base, Japan. It was discontinued on 9 August 1957.
History
Performed highly classifie ...
that was organized to consolidate many Korean War combat units in Japan after the armistice. The 6007th was a composite group with RB-29, RB-50B, RB-50G,
Douglas C-47 Skytrain and
Fairchild C-119 Flying Boxcar aircraft assigned to it.
FICON project
Returning to the United States in late 1954, the 91st was tasked with experimenting with parasite fighters to provide long-range escort for
B-36 Peacemaker strategic bombers on intercontinental missions. A lesson learned from the Korean War was that American aircraft were often not able to outrun enemy fighters sent up to shoot or force them down. The U.S. needed a faster platform which also had the range of the larger, slower reconnaissance aircraft being used for reconnaissance work.
The 91st conducted an operational procedure called the
Fighter-Conveyance (FICON) system. FICON used two aircraft: a B-36 to function as the "mother" ship, providing the range needed, and a modified
Republic RF-84F Thunderflash jet aircraft to function as the high-speed reconnaissance aircraft. The specially designed RF-84K would be ferried close to the projected target location, launched in flight, make a high speed pass over the target, then be retrieved and ferried back to its home base of operations. The jet reconnaissance pilots would enter and exit their RF-84 through the B-36's bomb bay to fly away on their reconnaissance missions.
Beginning in 1955, as the 91st SRS tested two F-84 FICON prototypes, the USAF ordered 25 RF-84Ks and began modifying 10 B-36s into GRB-36 FICON carriers. The RF-84K design was a modification of the RF-84F, the USAF's most numerous and advanced tactical reconnaissance aircraft at the time. The only major differences were the RF-84K's retractable hook in the upper part of the nose, rods on either side behind the cockpit, and downward angled horizontal stabilizers (to fit inside the GRB-36's bomb bay).
The RF-84K entered service with the 91st in 1955. For the next year, pilots of the 91st successfully flew their RF-84Ks, but they experienced many near disasters while separating or hooking back up to the GRB-36 carrier aircraft.
Technology soon made this mission obsolete, as the development of the
Lockheed U-2 made the need for more vulnerable propeller-driven reconnaissance aircraft obsolete. No longer needed for a long-range, strategic reconnaissance mission, the 91st was inactivated on 1 July 1957.
Tactical Air Command

The squadron was reactivated as a
McDonnell RF-4C Phantom II
The McDonnell Douglas F-4 Phantom II is an American Tandem#Aviation, tandem two-seat, twinjet, twin-engine, all-weather, long-range supersonic aircraft, supersonic jet interceptor aircraft, interceptor and fighter-bomber originally developed ...
Tactical Reconnaissance Squadron, performing replacement pilot training in February 1967 and flying tactical reconnaissance missions beginning in July 1971. It conducted reconnaissance training of USAF, US Marine Corps, and allied RF-4 reconnaissance aircrews between 1982 and 1989; acted as adviser to
Air National Guard
The Air National Guard (ANG), also known as the Air Guard, is a federal military reserve force of the United States Air Force, as well as the air militia of each U.S. state, the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, and the ter ...
reconnaissance units until 1992; performed reconnaissance missions supporting the US Customs Service beginning in 1983. As part of the closure of
Bergstrom AFB and retirement of the RF-4C on 30 August 1991, the 91st was inactivated.
Lineage
* Organized as the 91st Aero Squadron (Observation) on 21 August 1917
: Redesignated 91st Squadron (Observation) on 14 March 1921
: Redesignated 91st Observation Squadron on 25 January 1923
: Redesignated 91st Observation Squadron (Medium) on 13 January 1942
: Redesignated 91st Observation Squadron on 4 July 1942
: Redesignated 91st Reconnaissance Squadron (Bomber) on 2 April 1943
: Redesignated 91st Tactical Reconnaissance Squadron on 11 August 1943
: Redesignated 91st Photographic Mapping Squadron on 9 October 1943
: Redesignated 91st Photographic Charting Squadron on 17 October 1944
: Redesignated 91st Reconnaissance Squadron, Long Range, Photographic on 15 June 1945
: Redesignated 91st Strategic Reconnaissance Squadron, Photographic on 25 March 1949
: Redesignated 91st Strategic Reconnaissance Squadron, Medium, Photographic on 6 July 1950
: Redesignated 91st Strategic Reconnaissance Squadron, Fighter on 20 December 1954
: Inactivated on 1 July 1957
* Redesignated 91st Tactical Reconnaissance Squadron on 12 April 1967 and activated (not organized)
: Organized on 1 July 1967
: Inactivated 30 August 1991
: Redesignated 91st Intelligence Squadron and activated on 1 October 1993
: Inactivated on 5 May 2005
* Redesignated 91st Network Warfare Squadron on 28 June 2007
: Activated on 26 July 2007
: Redesignated 91st Cyberspace Operations Squadron on 1 July 2015
[
]
Assignments
* Post Headquarters, Kelly Field, 21 August 1917
* Aviation Concentration Center, 5 October 1917
* American Expeditionary Forces, 10 November 1917
* First Army Observation Group, 13 December 1917
* United States Third Army, 21 November 1918
* 1st Air Depot, American Expeditionary Forces, 17 April 1919
* American Expeditionary Forces, 6 May 1919
* Post Headquarters, Mitchell Field, 17 June 1919
* Southeastern Department, July 1919
* Western Department
The Department of the West, later known as the Western Department, was a major command (Department) of the United States Army during the 19th century. It oversaw the military affairs in the country west of the Mississippi River to the borders of Ca ...
, September 1919
* Ninth Corps Area, 20 August 1920
* 12th Observation Group
The 12th Reconnaissance Group is a disbanded United States Army unit. It was last active as the 12th Observation Group, United States Army Air Corps, assigned to the Eighth Corps Area at Brooks Field, Texas. It was inactivated on 30 June 1937.
T ...
(attached to Ninth Corps Area after 1 October 1930)
* Ninth Corps Area, 23 March 1931
* Fourth Army, 3 October 1940
* IX Corps, 9 November 1940
* 73d Observation (later Reconnaissance) Group, 1 September 1941
* 26th Reconnaissance Group
6 (six) is the natural number following 5 and preceding 7. It is a composite number and the smallest perfect number.
In mathematics
Six is the smallest positive integer which is neither a square number nor a prime number; it is the second small ...
, June 1943
* 76th Tactical Reconnaissance Group
The 76th Tactical Reconnaissance Group is a disbanded United States Army Air Forces organization. It was last active in 1944 as part of the Desert Training Center at Thermal Army Air Field, California.
History
The group was constituted and activa ...
, 11 August 1943
* 26th Tactical Reconnaissance Group, 23 August 1943
* 1st Photographic Group
The 1st Photographic Group is an inactive United States Army Air Forces unit. It was organized in the spring of 1941, and was the Army Air Force's only non combat mapping unit until December 1943, when a second group was formed. From early 1944 ...
, 9 October 1943
* 311th Photographic Wing (later Reconnaissance Wing), 5 October 1944
* Caribbean Air Command, 26 August 1946
: Flight attached to Joint Brazil-US Military Commission to 30 June 1947
* 24th Composite Wing
Fourth or the fourth may refer to:
* the ordinal form of the number 4
* ''Fourth'' (album), by Soft Machine, 1971
* Fourth (angle), an ancient astronomical subdivision
* Fourth (music), a musical interval
* ''The Fourth'' (1972 film), a Sovie ...
, 12 January 1948
* 5920th Group (later 5920th Composite Wing), 26 July 1948 (attached to Antilles Air Division
The Antilles (; gcf, label=Antillean Creole, Antiy; es, Antillas; french: Antilles; nl, Antillen; ht, Antiy; pap, Antias; Jamaican Patois: ''Antiliiz'') is an archipelago bordered by the Caribbean Sea to the south and west, the Gulf of Mex ...
)
* Antilles Air Division, 21 October 1948
* Strategic Air Command
Strategic Air Command (SAC) was both a United States Department of Defense Specified Command and a United States Air Force (USAF) Major Command responsible for command and control of the strategic bomber and intercontinental ballistic missile ...
, 22 January 1949 (attached to 91st Strategic Reconnaissance Wing)
* 91st Strategic Reconnaissance Group, 25 March 1949
* Fifteenth Air Force
The Fifteenth Air Force (15 AF) is a numbered air force of the United States Air Force's Air Combat Command (ACC). It is headquartered at Shaw Air Force Base. It was reactivated on 20 August 2020, merging the previous units of the Ninth Air Force ...
, 16 November 1950 (attached to Far East Air Forces)
* Far East Air Forces, 1 September 1954
* 6007th Reconnaissance Group, 5 October 1954
* Strategic Air Command, 20 December 1954 (attached to 407th Strategic Fighter Wing
4 (four) is a number, numeral and digit. It is the natural number following 3 and preceding 5. It is the smallest semiprime and composite number, and is considered unlucky in many East Asian cultures.
In mathematics
Four is the smallest c ...
) to 15 July 1955
* 71st Strategic Reconnaissance Wing
020 is the national dialling code for London in the United Kingdom. All subscriber numbers within the area code consist of eight digits and it has capacity for approaching 100 million telephone numbers. The code is used at 170 telephone exch ...
, 24 January 1955 – 1 July 1957
* 75th Tactical Reconnaissance Wing 75th may refer to:
*75th Academy Awards honored the best films of 2002, held on March 23, 2003
* 75th Avenue–61st Street Historic District, a national historic district in Ridgewood, Queens, New York
*75th Grey Cup, the 1987 Canadian Football Lea ...
, 1 July 1967 – 15 July 1971
* 67th Tactical Reconnaissance Wing, 15 July 1971 – 30 September 1993
* 694th Intelligence Group
The United States Air Force's 694th Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance Group (694 ISRG) is an intelligence unit located at Osan AB, Korea.
Mission
The mission of the 694th ISRG is to provide continuous armistice indications and warni ...
, 1 October 1993 – 5 May 2005
* 67th Network Warfare Group (later 67th Cyberspace Operations Group
The 67th Cyberspace Operations Group is a unit of the 67th Cyberspace Wing. Headquartered on Kelly Field Annex's Security Hill, the group is an Air Force information operations unit.
The group was first organized during World War II as the 67th ...
), 26 July 2007 – present[
]
Stations
World War I
* Kelly Field
Kelly Field (formerly Kelly Air Force Base) is a Joint-Use facility located in San Antonio, Texas. It was originally named after George E. M. Kelly, the first member of the U.S. military killed in the crash of an airplane he was piloting.
In ...
, Texas, 21 August 1917
* Aviation Concentration Center, Garden City, New York, 5–27 October 1917
* Chaumont Aerodrome
: ''see also: Organization of the Air Service of the American Expeditionary Force''
When the United States entered World War I on 6 April 1917, the Air Service of the United States Army existed only as a branch of the Signal Corps, and was kno ...
, France, 15 November 1917
* Amanty Airdrome
Amanty Airdrome was a temporary World War I airfield in France. It was located northwest of Amanty, in the Meuse department in the Lorraine region in northeastern France (48.527383,5.598371).
History
The airfield was set up early 1917, with Fr ...
, France, 14 December 1917
* Gondreville-sur-Moselle Aerodrome, France, 24 May 1918
* Vavincourt Aerodrome, France, 21 September 1918
: Detachment operated from Souilly Aerodrome, 16 October – November 1918
* Preutin-Higny Aerodrome
: ''see also: Organization of the Air Service of the American Expeditionary Force''
When the United States entered World War I on 6 April 1917, the Air Service of the United States Army existed only as a branch of the Signal Corps, and was kno ...
, France, 21 November 1918
* Trier Airfield, Germany, 4 December 1918
* Coblenz Airfield, Germany, 3 January 1919
* Colombey-les-Belles Airdrome, France, 17 April 1919
* Le Mans
Le Mans (, ) is a city in northwestern France on the Sarthe River where it meets the Huisne. Traditionally the capital of the province of Maine, it is now the capital of the Sarthe department and the seat of the Roman Catholic diocese of Le Man ...
, France, 6 May 1919
* Brest, France, 19 May – 3 June 1919[
]
Inter-War period
* Mitchel Field, New York, 17 June 1919
* Park Field, Tennessee, 4 July 1919
* Rockwell Field, California, 29 September 1919
* Mather Field, California, 3 November 1919
* Ream Field, California, 24 January 1920
: Flight, or detachment thereof, operated from El Centro and Calexico, California, 17 March – 30 July 1920
* Rockwell Field, California, 30 April 1920
: Flight operated from Eugene, Oregon
Eugene ( ) is a city in the U.S. state of Oregon. It is located at the southern end of the Willamette Valley, near the confluence of the McKenzie and Willamette rivers, about east of the Oregon Coast.
As of the 2020 United States Census, Eu ...
, and detachment thereof from Medford, Oregon, June-c. September 1920
* Mather Field, California, 3 November 1920
: Detachment at Rockwell Field, California, to January 1921
* Eugene, Oregon, May 1921
: Detachment operated from Medford, Oregon, and flight from Fort Lewis Fort Lewis may refer to:
*Fort Lewis (Colorado), a former United States Army post (1878–1891) in the U.S. State of Colorado
**Fort Lewis College, a college in the Durango, Colorado, United States
**Fort Lewis Skyhawks, athletic teams of Fort Lewi ...
, Washington, to c. September 1921
* Crissy Field, California, 12 October 1921
: Detachment operated from Eugene, Oregon, August–September 1922
* Fort Lewis, Washington, 30 June 1936[
]
World War II
* Wheeler-Sack Field, New York, 26 September 1941
* William Northern Field, Tennessee, 9 September 1942
* Godman Field, Kentucky, 7 November 1942
* Reading Army Air Field
Reading Regional Airport (also known as Carl A. Spaatz Field) is a public airport three miles (5 km) northwest of Reading, in Berks County, Pennsylvania. It is owned by the Reading Regional Airport Authority.
Federal Aviation Administr ...
, Pennsylvania, 22 September 1943
: Flights at various points in South and Central America during period November 1943 – August 1946, especially at Talara, Peru, 1943–1944, Atkinson Field, British Guiana, 1944–1945, Recife, Brazil, 1944–1945, Howard Field, Panama Canal Zone, 1944–1946, and Natal, Brazil, 1945–1946
* Peterson Field, Colorado, 25 December 1943
* Buckley Field, Colorado, 2 July 1944[
]
United States Air Force
* MacDill Field, Florida, 21 April 1946
* Howard Field, Panama Canal Zone, 26 August 1946
: Flight at Natal, Brazil, to 31 October 1946, and at Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Rio de Janeiro ( , , ; literally 'River of January'), or simply Rio, is the capital of the state of the same name, Brazil's third-most populous state, and the second-most populous city in Brazil, after São Paulo. Listed by the GaWC as a b ...
, 31 October 1946 – 23 September 1947; flight at Santiago, Chile
Santiago (, ; ), also known as Santiago de Chile, is the capital (political), capital and largest city of Chile as well as one of the largest cities in the Americas. It is the center of Chile's most densely populated Regions of Chile, region, t ...
, 18 April-c. July 1947
* France Field, Panama Canal Zone, 1 December 1947
* Waller Field, Trinidad, 12 January 1948
* McGuire Air Force Base, New Jersey, 22 January 1949
* Barksdale Air Force Base
Barksdale Air Force Base (Barksdale AFB) is a United States Air Force (USAF) base in northwest Louisiana, United States, in Bossier Parish. It is contiguous to Bossier City, Louisiana, along the base's western and northwestern edge. Barksdale AFB ...
, Louisiana, 1 October 1949
* Johnson Air Base, Japan, 16 November 1950
* Yokota Air Base, Japan, 19 December 1950
* Great Falls Air Force Base
Malmstrom Air Force Base is a United States Air Force base and census-designated place (CDP) in Cascade County, Montana, United States, adjacent to the city of Great Falls, Montana, Great Falls. It was named in honor of World War II POW Colonel Ei ...
, Montana, 20 December 1954
* Larson Air Force Base, Washington, 17 July 1955 – 1 July 1957
* Bergstrom Air Force Base, Texas, 1 July 1967 – 30 September 1993
* Fort George G. Meade, Maryland, 1 October 1993 – 5 May 2005
* Kelly Annex, Joint Base Lackland-San Antonio, Texas, 26 July 2007 – present[
]
Aircraft
* Curtiss JN-4, 1917
* Avion de Reconnaissance 1 and 2 (AR 1 AR 2), 1918
* Salmson 2A2
The Salmson 2 A.2, (often shortened to Salmson 2) was a French biplane reconnaissance aircraft developed and produced by Salmson to a 1916 requirement. Along with the Breguet 14, it was the main reconnaissance aircraft of the French army in 19 ...
1918–1919
* Breguet 14, 1918–1919
* De Havilland DH-4, 1918–1919, 1919–1928
* Spad XIII, 1918–1919
* O-2, c. 1926–1930
* OA-1 and C-1 during period 1925–1930
* O-25, 1930–1936
* OA-2, C-6, and C-8 during period 1930–1936
* O-46, 1936–1942
* O-47 and O-52, 1941–1942
* O-49, 1941-c.1943
* A-20, 1942–1943
* L-4, 1942–1943
* B-25, 1943
* DB-7, L-5, O-47, and P-40 during period 1942–1943
* B-25/F-10, 1943–1945
* B-17/F-9, 1945–1950
* F-2, 1945–1948
* B-50, 1949–1950
* RB-50, 1950
* RB-29, 1950–1954
* RB-45 and RB-50, 1951–1954
* RBF-84, 1955–1957
* RF-84, 1956–1957
* RF-4, 1967–1991[
]
See also
* List of American Aero Squadrons
* Kingman Douglass
Kingman Douglass (April 16, 1896 – October 8, 1971) was an American investment banker and a leading member of the United States intelligence community. He was a deputy director of Central Intelligence from March 1946 to July 1946.
Kingman Dougl ...
* List of cyber warfare forces
References
; Notes
; Citations
Bibliography
* Endicott, Judy G., ''USAF Active Flying, Space, and Missile Squadrons as of 1 October 1995''. Office of Air Force History
* (web access limited to members)
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External links
History of the 91st Strategic Reconnaissance Squadron
91st Aero Squadron Returns Home to Kelly Field
91st Observation Squadron Photographs (WWI), Special Collections and Archives, Wright State University
{{DEFAULTSORT:91 Network Warfare Squadron
Network Warfare 0091
Military units and formations in British Guiana in World War II
Military units and formations established in 1917
Military units and formations established in 1993