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1st Marine Aircraft Wing

1st Marine Aircraft Wing

FieldValue
unit_name1st Marine Aircraft Wing
imageUSMC - 1MAW.png
caption1st MAW insignia
dates7 July 1941 - present
countryUnited States
branchUnited States Marine Corps
typeMarine Aircraft Wing
roleConduct air operations in support of the Fleet Marine Forces
command_structureIII Marine Expeditionary Force
garrisonCamp Foster
nickname1st MAW
battles**World War II**
* Battle of Guadalcanal
* Philippines campaign (1944–45)
**Korean War**
**Vietnam War**
commander1MajGen Marcus B. Annibale
commander1_labelCommanding General
commander2BGen Kelvin W. Gallman
commander2_labelAssistant Wing Commander
notable_commandersLtGen Louis E. Woods
Gen Roy S. Geiger
LtGen John F. Goodman
LtGen Albert D. Cooley
identification_symbol[[File: 1MAW OLD.png150px]]
identification_symbol_labelEarly WWII 1st MAW Insignia
identification_symbol_2[[File:1MAWLogo.png150px]]
identification_symbol_2_labelLate WWII 1st MAW Insignia
  • Battle of Guadalcanal
  • Philippines campaign (1944–45) Korean War Vietnam War Gen Roy S. Geiger LtGen John F. Goodman LtGen Albert D. Cooley

The 1st Marine Aircraft Wing is an aviation unit of the United States Marine Corps that serves as the Aviation Combat Element of the III Marine Expeditionary Force. The wing is headquartered at Camp Foster on the island of Okinawa, Japan. Activated in 1940, the wing has seen heavy combat operations during World War II, the Korean War, and the Vietnam War.

Mission

Conduct air operations in support of the Fleet Marine Forces to include offensive air support, antiair warfare, assault support, aerial reconnaissance including active and passive electronic countermeasures (ECM), and control of aircraft and missiles. As a collateral function, the Wing may participate as an integral component of Naval Aviation in the execution of such other Navy functions as the Fleet Commander may direct.

Organization

As of January 2025 the 1st Marine Aircraft Wing consists of four subordinate groups, a headquarters squadron and a liaison unit:

  • 1st Marine Aircraft Wing, at Camp Foster (Japan)
    • Marine Wing Headquarters Squadron 1 (MWHS-1), at Camp Foster
    • Marine Wing Liaison Kadena (MWLK), at Kadena Air Base (Japan)
    • Marine Aircraft Group 12 (MAG-12), at Marine Corps Air Station Iwakuni (Japan)
    • Marine Aircraft Group 24 (MAG-24), at Marine Corps Air Station Kaneohe Bay (Hawaii)
    • Marine Aircraft Group 36 (MAG-36), at Marine Corps Air Station Futenma (Japan)
    • Marine Air Control Group 18 (MACG-18), at Marine Corps Air Station Futenma (Japan)
1st Marine Aircraft Wing organization January 2025 (click to enlarge)

History

World War II

Marine F4U

In late 1940, Congress authorized a naval air fleet of fifteen thousand aircraft. The Marine Corps was allotted a percentage of these planes to be formed into 2 air wings with 32 operational squadrons. On the advice of Navy and Marine advisors returning from observing the war in Europe these numbers were doubled very soon after. It was under this expansion program that the 1st Marine Aircraft Wing was activated at Marine Corps Base Quantico, Virginia, on 7 July 1941. The First Marine Aircraft Group which was the largest east coast aviation unit in the Marines at the time, became its first component. Although a new wing, it is considered an unofficial descendant of the Northern Bombing Group of World War I.

Following the attacks on Pearl Harbor, the wing transferred to Naval Air Station San Diego, California, on 10 December 1941, and then to Camp Kearny on 31 December. The first deployment for 1st MAW came in August 1942 when forward elements of the Wing arrived on Guadalcanal and made up the Cactus Air Force supporting the 1st Marine Division during the Battle of Guadalcanal.

Korean War

At the beginning of the Korean War, the initial deployment of Marines was a provisional brigade activated on 7 July 1950 — the 1st Provisional Marine Brigade — formed from the 1st Marine Division and the 1st Marine Aircraft Wing. Its core consisted of two units — a regimental combat team from the 5th Marine Regiment and Marine Aircraft Group 33 (MAG-33). Their job was to provide close air support, resupply, and Medevac for Marine ground forces.

In late-June 1952, 75 aircraft from 1st MAW participated in the attack on the Sui-ho Dam which were strikes aimed at the hydroelectric plants in North Korea. The Wing's Chief of Staff Frank Schwable was shot down in July 1952 and while a prisoner of war confessed to having participated in germ warfare. He was eventually cleared of all charges, but his case prompted a review of training and expectations of prisoners-of-war.

Two 1st MAW aircraft groups, MAG-33 and MAG-12, and the 1st Antiaircraft Artillery Gun Battalion served during the course of the war. The wing flew 127,496 sorties of which over 40,000 were close air support and Marine helicopters evacuated more than 9,800 wounded personnel

Taiwan

From 6 March – 30 April 1963. The VMF-114, VMA-542 and VMF-235 of the 1st Marine Aircraft Wing from Okinawa deployed to Pingtung Air Base, Taiwan and with ROC Air Force participated in "BLUE EAGLE" exercise. While on Taiwan these units were under the control of United States Taiwan Defense Command.

Vietnam

From April 1962, when HMM-362 flew into the Mekong Delta to set up operations at the Sóc Trăng Airfield, through April 1975, when helicopters of HMM-164 evacuated the last Americans from the US Embassy, Saigon. While early missions involved Marine helicopters providing logistical support for South Vietnam, this role quickly expanded when 1st MAW pilots and crewmen were called upon to perform their traditional role of providing close air support for Marine combat units as American involvement in the war escalated.

Helicopters played an extensive role in air operations in Vietnam, as Marine pilots flew CH-34s and later CH-46s and CH-53s to transport Marines into landing zones near suspected enemy concentrations, and to evacuate the wounded following combat engagements. Helicopters, supplemented by C-130 transports where there were landing strips, were also used to re-supply Marines in the field at remote outposts. Other Marine pilots flew UH-1E Hueys and AH-1 Cobras. Many of these choppers provided reconnaissance and armed air cover for combat air operations.

The buildup of American troops resulted in the deployment of the Marine Corps' attack and fighter aircraft including the Douglas A-4 and the McDonnell F4B, as well as the maintenance, ordnance, and other support personnel necessary.

Global war on terror

HMH 463 has deployed to support the Operation Enduring Freedom Mission in Afghanistan in 2009.

Current aircraft

Fixed-wing aircraft

  • F/A-18D Hornet
  • F-35B Lightning II
  • KC-130J Super Hercules

Rotary-wing aircraft

  • AH-1Z Viper
  • UH-1Y Venom
  • CH-53E Super Stallion

Tiltrotor Aircraft

  • MV-22B Osprey

UAVs

  • MQ-9A Reaper

Unit awards

A unit citation or commendation is an award bestowed upon an organization for the action cited. Members of the unit who participated in said actions are allowed to wear on their uniforms the awarded unit citation. The 1st Marine Aircraft Wing has been presented with the following awards:

StreamerAwardYear(s)Additional Info
[[File:U.S. Navy Unit Commendation streamer.svgalt=A streamer with red, gold, and blue horizontal stripes with a bronze star in the center200px]]Presidential Unit Citation Streamer (Navy) with three Bronze Stars1942, 1950, 1951, 1965-1967Guadalcanal, Korea, Vietnam
[[File:Streamer PUC Army.PNG200px]]Presidential Unit Citation Streamer (Army) Streamer1950Korea
[[File:Navy Unit Commendation streamer (USMC).svgalt=A green streamer with red, gold, and blue horizontal stripes along the top and bottom with one silver star in the center200px]]Navy Unit Commendation Streamer1952-1953Korea
[[File:Meritorious Unit Commendation (Navy-Marine) Streamer.jpgalt=A green streamer with red, gold, and blue horizontal stripes and four stars in the center200px]]Meritorious Unit Commendation Streamer2000-2002
[[File:Streamer ADS.PNG200px]]American Defense Service Streamer1941-1945World War II
[[File:Streamer APC.PNG200px]]Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Streamer with one Silver Star
[[File:Streamer WWII V.PNG200px]]World War II Victory Streamer1941–1945Pacific War
[[File:Streamer CS.PNG200px]]China Service Streamer
[[File:Korean Service Medal - Streamer.png200px]]Korean Service Streamer with two Silver Stars1950-1953Korea
[[File:NDS 3B.PNGalt=A red streamer with a horizontal gold stripe and three bronze stars in the center200px]]National Defense Service Streamer with three Bronze Stars1951–1954, 1961–1974, 1990–1995, 2001–presentKorean War, Vietnam War, Gulf War, war on terrorism
[[File:Streamer AFE.PNG200px]]Armed Forces Expeditionary Streamer
[[File:VSS 2S.PNGalt=A yellow streamer with two green horizontal stripes on the outside and three horizontal red stripes and two silver stars and one bronze star in the center200px]]Vietnam Service Streamer with two Silver Stars and three Bronze Star
[[File:Streamer gwotS.PNGalt=A blue streamer with yellow, red, and white horizontal stripes200px]]Global War on Terrorism Service Streamer2001–present
[[File:Streamer PL.PNG200px]]Philippine Liberation Streamer1945
[[File:Presidential Unit Citation (Philippines) Streamer.png200px]]Philippine Republic Presidential Unit Streamer1945
[[File:Streamer KPUC.PNG200px]]Korean Presidential Unit Citation Streamer1950
[[File:VMUA PALM.PNGalt=A gold streamer with red horizontal stripes on the outer portions and a green palm in the center200px]]Vietnam Gallantry Cross with Palm Streamer1965–1971
[[File:Streamer RVMUCCA.PNGalt=A green streamer with red horizontal stripes200px]]Vietnam Meritorious Unit Citation Civil Actions Streamer1965–1971

References

Bibliography

: ;Print:

References

  1. "1st Marine Aircraft Wing". 1st Marine Aircraft Wing.
  2. DeChant
  3. Rottman ''USMC WWII OOB'', p. 430.
  4. Sherrod ''History of Marine Corps Aviation'', p. 438.
  5. Field Jr., James A.. (2000-06-21). "Part 2. March 1952—February 1953: Stalemate". Department of the Navy - Naval Historical Center.
  6. ''New York Times'': [https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1954/08/23/83776017.pdf "Officers to Study 'Brainwash' Issue," 23 August 1954], accessed 16 February 2012
  7. Mersky ''USMC Aviation'', p. 191.
  8. "Brief History of the Marine Corps in the Korean War". Marine Corps History and Museums Division.
  9. "Lineage and Honors of 1st MAW".
Info: Wikipedia Source

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