47th Bombardment Group
Constituted as 47th Bombardment Group (Light) on 20 Nov 1940. Activated
on 15 Jan 1941. Patrolled the west coast for several weeks after Japan
attacked Pearl Harbor, then trained for duty overseas. Moved to North
Africa, Oct-Nov 1942. Assigned to Twelfth AF. Served in the Mediterranean
theater until the end of the war, using A-20's and (after Jan 1945) some
A-26's for support and interdictory operations in which the group attacked
such targets as tanks, convoys, bivouac areas, troop concentrations,
supply dumps, roads, pontoon bridges, rail lines, and airfields. Also flew
numerous night intruder missions after Jun 1944. Began operations by
flying low-level missions against the enemy in North Africa during the
period Dec 1942-May 1943. When Axis forces broke through at Kasserine Pass
in Feb 1943, the 47th Group, though undermanned and undersupplied, flew
eleven missions on 22 Feb to attack the advancing armored columns and thus
to help stop the enemy's offensive - an action for which the group was
awarded a DUC. Remained active in combat during Mar and Apr 1943 while
training for medium-level bombardment. Participated in the reduction of
Pantelleria and Lampedusa in Jun 1943 and the invasion of Sicily in Jul.
Bombed German evacuation beaches near Messina in Aug. Supported British
Eighth Army during the invasion of Italy in Sep. Assisted the Allied
advance toward Rome, Sep 1943-Jun 1944. Supported the invasion of Southern
France, Aug-Sep 1944. Attacked German communications in northern Italy,
Sep 1944-Apr 1945. Received second DUC for performance from 21 to 24 Apr
1945 when, in bad weather and over rugged terrain, the group maintained
operations for 60 consecutive hours, destroying enemy transportation in
the Po Valley to prevent the organized withdrawal of German forces.
Returned to the US in July 1945. Trained and participated in maneuvers.
Equipped with B-45's in 1948. Inactivated on 2 Oct 1949.
Activated on 12 Mar 1951. Assigned to Tactical Air Command and equipped
with B-45's. Moved to England, May-Jun 1952, and assigned to United States
Air Forces in Europe. Inactivated on 8 Feb 1955.
Squadrons. 84th: 1941-1949; 1951-1955. 85th: 1941-1949; 1951-1955.
86th: 1941-1949; 1954-1955. 97th: 1941-1946. 422d: 1953-1954.
Stations. McChord Field, Wash, 15 Jan 1941; Fresno, Calif, 14 Aug 1941;
Will Rogers Field, Okla, c. 16 Feb 1942; Greensboro, NC, c. 16 Jul-18 Oct
1942; Mediouna, French Morocco, 18 Nov 1942; Youks-les-Bains, Algeria, 7
Jan 1943; Canrobert, Algeria, 6 Mar 1943; Thelepte, Tunisia, 30 Mar 1943;
Souk-el-Arba, Tunisia, 13 Apr 1943; Soliman, Tunisia, c. 1 Jul 1943;
Malta, 21 Jul 1943; Torrente Comunelli, Sicily, 9 Aug 1943; Gerbini,
Sicily, 20 Aug 1943; Grottaglie, Italy, 24 Sep 1943; Vincenzo Airfield,
Italy, 15 Oct 1943; Vesuvius Airfield, Italy, c. 10 Jan 1944; Capodichino,
Italy, 22 Mar 1944; Vesuvius Airfield, Italy, 25 Apr 1944; Ponte Galeria,
Italy, c. 10 Jun 1944; Ombrone Airfield, Italy, 27 Jun 1944; Corsica, 11
Jul 1944; Salon, France, 7 Sep 1944; Follonica, Italy, 18 Sep 1944;
Rosignano Airfield, Italy, Oct 1944; Grosseto, Italy, 11 Dec 1944; Pisa,
Italy, Jun-24 Jun 1945; Seymour Johnson Field, NC, 11 Jul 1945; Lake
Charles AAFld, La, Sep 1945; Biggs Field, Tex, 20 Oct 1946; Barksdale AFB,
La, 19 Nov 1948-2 Oct 1949. Langley AFB, Va, 12 Mar 1951-12 May 1952;
Sculthorpe, England, 1 Jun 1952-8 Feb 1955.
Commanders. Maj William A Schulgen, 15 Jan 1941; Lt Col Hilbert M
Wittkop, unkn; Col Frederick R Terrell, Jan 1942; Col Malcolm Green Jr, 17
May 1943; Lt Col Kenneth S Wade, 1 Apr 1945; Col Marvin S Zipp, 28 Aug
1945; Col Robert Hughey, 23 Nov 1945; Lt Col Broadus B Taylor, 27 Aug
1946; Col Gerald E Williams, 30 Aug 1946; Lt Col Stebbins W Griffith, 5
Jun 1947; Lt Col Frederick E Price, Aug 1947; Col Willis F Chapman, 10 Oct
1947-2 Oct 1949. Col Benjamin C Willis, 12 Mar 1951; Col David M Jones,
Sep 1951; Col Galen B Price, 20 Feb 1952; Lt Col Hubert M Blair, unkn; Col
Galen B Price, 1954-c. Feb 1955.
Campaigns. American Theater; Algeria-French Morocco; Tunisia; Sicily;
Naples-Foggia; Anzio; Rome-Arno; Southern France; North Apennines; Po
Valley.
Decorations. Distinguished Unit Citations: North Africa, 22 Feb 1943;
Po Valley, 21-24 Apr 1945.
Insigne. Shield: Or, in chief, a bomb sable, point downward, winged
gules, surmounting an arc, reversed and couped, azure, all above a
stylized cloud indication, of the second, emitting four lightning flashes
gules toward base. (Approved 26 Oct 1951.) Data from Air Force Combat Units of World War II By Maurer, Maurer, Published 1986
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