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Classic Wings Magazine WWII Naval Aviation Research Pacific Luftwaffe Resource Center
When Hollywood Ruled The Skies - Volumes 1 through 4 by Bruce Oriss


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PostPosted: Sat Nov 13, 2021 2:31 pm 
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Gotta be some Navy planes somewhere out there. :wink:

Clinton-Sherman Air Force Base (AFB), located seventeen miles southwest of Clinton, was established in October 1943 during World War II as Clinton Naval Air Station and served as a Strategic Air Command (SAC) base from September 1954 through December 1969 during the Cold War. The installation subsequently housed the Clinton-Sherman Industrial Airport, the Midwestern Oklahoma Development Authority, the South Western Oklahoma Development Authority, and the Western Vocational-Technology School.

The beginnings of Clinton-Sherman came in 1942 when the War Department acquired approximately five thousand acres of sugar County farmland by condemnation for a naval air station. Four six-thousand-foot-long runways, three hangars, twenty-four barracks, and numerous temporary facilities soon appeared next to the town of Burns Flat. More than thirty-five hundred officers and enlisted men served with the Special Task Air Groups in the operation of aircraft drones and glider bombs.

After World War II the station closed, and all facilities transferred to the War Assets Administration. On January 27, 1949, the federal agency conveyed ownership of the entire installation to the city of Clinton, with a recapture clause in case of national emergency. Soon thereafter, the Sherman Iron Works rented space for the salvaging of more than nine thousand surplus aircraft.

On September 15, 1954, the federal government leased the site from the city of Clinton and began extending one runway that eventually reached a length of 13,502 feet, constructing new facilities, and building nine hundred military family housing units. Reactivated as Clinton-Sherman AFB, the mission of the new SAC airfield was pilot training and developing of specialized aircraft equipment. During the next ten years the Air Force acquired 528 more acres and an additional 3,580 acres of easements.

In March 1959, with a new assignment of B-52s, the 4123d Strategic Wing and its Ninety-eighth Bombardment Squadron arrived at Clinton-Sherman to conduct a nine-month test of the SAC airborne alert program. The Seventieth Bombardment Wing, along with its Sixth Bombardment Squadron and 902d Air Refueling Squadron replaced the 4123d on February 1, 1963. With B-52s and KC-135s, the new units conducted strategic bombardment training and air refueling to meet air force global commitments. For several months in both 1968 and 1969, all wing aircraft, most aircrew and maintenance personnel, and some support personnel were loaned to other SAC units engaged in combat operations in the Far East and Southeast Asia. The Seventieth Bomb Wing and its components ceased operations and inactivated on December 31, 1969.

Between July 1971 and October 1989 the City of Clinton granted the Midwestern Oklahoma Development Authority leasehold interest in the facility. In 1993 the South Western Oklahoma Development Authority gained control of the Clinton-Sherman Industrial Air Park, and transient training aircraft from Altus and Vance AFBs were still using the airfield ten years later. As its 13,502-foot runway was one of the longest in the world, the airpark was considered an alternate landing site for the Space Shuttle program. Boosters touted it as a future spaceport for the United States.

Below is a Collection of photographs taken at the Surplus Aircraft Storage Facility at NAS Clinton, OK, circa 1946. Eleventh of the photographs are aerial views showing the entire NAS base with thousands of aircraft in storage. Six of the photographs are surface views of storage areas for particular kinds of planes, including: PBJ, F4U, OS2U, SBD, and TBM. TBMs seen have been partially dismantled, with engines cut off firewalls and lying in front of the planes. April 9, 1946.

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PostPosted: Sat Nov 13, 2021 2:34 pm 
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PostPosted: Sat Nov 13, 2021 2:38 pm 
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PostPosted: Sat Nov 13, 2021 2:41 pm 
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PostPosted: Sat Nov 13, 2021 2:44 pm 
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PostPosted: Sat Nov 13, 2021 8:04 pm 
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Well, if someone says, “PBJ,” you know that’ll usually illicit a response from me!

In this photo of what appear to be training PBJ-1D’s, two of them, buzz numbers 049 and 008, still have their “hose nose,” APS-3 search radar housings intact on the glass noses. I can only assume these were “war wearies” returned to the states as only two PBJ squadrons operated with this radar arrangement, VMB-413 and VMB-611. My Dad flew a D model from the Philippines to Hawaii to pick up a new J model in late 1945. It’s also interesting to me that the aircraft appear to have been finished in overall light blue or gray

Mark Allen M wrote:
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This PBJ-1J, nose number 211, has the same search radar located on the right wingtip and appears to be in natural metal finish. PBJ squadron nose numbers were rarely, if ever, associated with the Bureau Number but, I can’t help to wonder if this is BuNo35211 and perhaps came straight from the factory to storage at Clinton.

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This final PBJ-1J image shows glass nose J models in the tri-color camouflage more common to the later PBJ’s. To the left can be seen PBJ’s painted in what appears to be midnight blue which means they were probably operated by VMB-612 which conducted many night missions.

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PostPosted: Sat Nov 13, 2021 9:13 pm 
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Being in Oklahoma that airfield has to be the ultimate tornado magnet.


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PostPosted: Sun Nov 14, 2021 3:41 pm 
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In the lower left corner of 4th picture it appears they rubbed out some of the planes. Any idea why they would do that?


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PostPosted: Mon Nov 15, 2021 7:54 am 
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Any chance the weary PBJ's are actually stripped to NMF and not a pale gray?

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PostPosted: Mon Nov 15, 2021 8:39 am 
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Ken wrote:
Any chance the weary PBJ's are actually stripped to NMF and not a pale gray?


Entirely possible. I just didn’t see any difference between the finish of the aluminum skin vertical stabilizers and the fabric covered rudders. Therefore, I “best guessed” it as painted.

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PostPosted: Mon Nov 15, 2021 9:34 am 
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Good stuff on the PBJ’s. Thx

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PostPosted: Mon Nov 15, 2021 9:34 am 
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It seems like a lot of work to strip a B-25 of paint during the war(or just after) for any reason. I remember a WWII pilot telling me that after the war he would ferry brand new B-25's (and other aircraft) from the factory to the boneyard/storage.

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