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Category : Army Air Forces
Tags: 1-AAF, 10-AAF, 12-AAF, 14-AAF, 15-AAF, 1st Aero Squadron, 1st Corps Observation Group, 1st Pursuit Group, 1st Wing, 2-AAF, 20-AAF, 2nd Aero Squadron, 2nd Pursuit Group, 2nd Wing, 3-AAF, 3rd Aero Squadron, 3rd Pursuit Group, 3rd Wing, 4-AAF, 4th Aero Squadron, 5-AAF, 5th Aero Squadron, 6th Aero Squadron, 7-AAF, 7th Aero Squadron, 8-AAF, 8-AAF9-AAF, 94th Pursuit Squadron, Adolf Hitler, AEF, Aeronautical Division, Air Corps, Air Service, Aisne, American Expeditionary Forces, Argonne, Armistice Day, Army Squadron, Artists, Aviation Section Signal Corps, Barksdale Field, Bombardiers, Bombardment Squadron, Brig Gen A. L. Dade, Brig Gen John J. Pershing, Capt A. S. Cowan, Capt Charles DeF Chandler, Capt Eddie Rickenbacker, Clerks, Col Laurence Brown, Colombus, Engineers, Europe, Flautists, France, Gen Carl Spaatz, Gen George C. Pershing, GHQ, GHQAF, Gunners, Hawaii, Japan, Langley Field, Le Havre, Lt Col George O Squier, Lt Col J B Bennett, Lt Col Samuel Reber, Lt Gen Delos C. Emmons, Lt Henry H Arnold, Maj Benjamin D Foulois, Maj Edgar Russell, Maj Gen Charles T Menoher, Maj Gen Frank M Andrews, Maj Gen George H Brett, Maj Gen Henry H. Arnold, Maj Gen J E Fechet, Maj Gen Mason M Patrick, Maj Gen Oscar Westover, March Field, Marne St Mihiel, Meuse, Mr John D Ryan, Navigators, New Mexico, Observation Squadron, Operational Training Unit, OTU, Panama, Pancho Villa, Pearl Harbor, Philippines, Pilots, Poland, Pursuit Squadron, Radio Operators, Replacment Training Unit, San Diego, Selfridge Field, Signal Corps, Signal Corps Photo, Statisticians, Teachers, Typists, USAAF, War Department, William Mitchell

At the peak of its strength in World War II, the United States Army Air Forces (AAF) had more than 2.400.000 men and women in uniform. There were pilots, navigators, bombardiers, gunners, and radio operators, clerks and typists, artists and flautists, teachers, mechanics, statisticians, and engineers-for it took many talents and skills to conduct and support the war in the air. All these persons, from privates to generals, had to be welded into an organization capable of giving direction and coordination to their diverse activities. For combat the men were formed into squadrons, and squadrons into groups. Above the groups were wings, and wings were organized into commands, and commands into the 16 air forces of the AAF. The upper part of the structure had to be built while the war was on, but the foundation WAS old. Some of the squadrons, two of the groups, and one wing had combat records from the First World War. One squadron, the oldest in the Air Force, could trace its history back to 1913.
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