United States Army Air Forces
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United States Army Air Forces

USAAF Shoulder Sleeve Insignia ("Hap Arnold Emblem")
Military unit
Unit nameUnited States Army Air Forces (USAAF)
FoundedJune 20, 1941 � September 17, 1947
CountryUnited States of America
BranchUnited States Army
Size2.4 million members (March 1944)
79,908 aircraft (July 1944)
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Gen. Henry H. Arnold, 1941-1946
Gen. Carl Spaatz, 1946-1947

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The United States Army Air Forces (USAAF) was the military aviation arm of the United States of America during and immediately after World War II. It was a component of the United States Army, divided functionally by executive order in 1942 into three autonomous forces: the Army Ground Forces, the Services of Supply (which in 1943 became the Army Service Forces), and the AAF. Each of these forces had a commanding general who reported directly to the Chief of Staff of the United States Army.

The AAF controlled all parts of military aviation formerly distributed among the Air Corps, General Headquarters Air Force, and ground forces corps area commanders, and thus became the first air organization of the U.S. Army to control its own installations.

The direct precursor to the United States Air Force, its peak size was over 2.4 million men and women in service and nearly 80,000 aircraft in 1944, and 783 domestic bases in December 1943. By VE Day it had 1.25 million men stationed overseas and operated from more than 1,600 airfields worldwide.

The Air Corps became the Army Air Forces in June 1941 to provide the air arm a greater autonomy in which to expand more efficiently, and to provide a structure for the additional command echelons required by a vastly increased force. Although other nations already had separate air forces independent of the army or navy (such as the British Royal Air Force and the German Luftwaffe), the USAAF remained a part of the United States Army.

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Preceded by
United States Army Air Corps
United States Army Air Forces
1941-1947
Succeeded by
United States Air Force

Growth of the USAAF, aircraft :
Type of aircraft 31 December 1941 31 December 1942 31 December 1943 31 December 1944 31 August 1945 Date of maximum size
Grand total 12,297 33,304 64,232 72,726 63,715 July 1944 (79,908)
Combat aircraft 4,477 11,607 27,448 41,961 41,163 May 1945 (43,248)
Very heavy bombers   - 3 91 977 2,865 August 1945 (2,865)
Heavy bombers 288 2,076 8,027 12,813 11,065 April 1945 (12,919)
Medium bombers 745 2,556 4,370 6,189 5,384 October 1944 (6,262)
Light bombers 799 1,201 2,371 2,980 3,079 September 1944 (3,338)
Fighters 2,170 5,303 11,875 17,198 16,799 May 1945 (17,725)
Reconnaissance 475 468 714 1,804 1,971 May 1945 (2,009)
Support aircraft 7,820 21,697 36,784 30,765 22,552 July 1944 (41,667)
Transports 254 1,857 6,466 10,456 9,561 December 1944 (10,456)
Trainers 7,340 17,044 26,051 17,060 9,558 May 1944 (27,923)
Communications 226 2,796 4,267 3,249 3,433 December 1943 (4,267)

Growth of the USAAF, personnel :
Date Total USAAF Tot Officers Tot Enlisted # overseas Officers o/s Enlisted o/s
31 July 1939 24,724 2,636 22,088 3,991 272 3,719
31 December 1939 43,118 3,006 40,112 7,007 351 6,656
31 December 1940 101,227 6,437 94,790 16,070 612 15,458
31 December 1941 354,161 24,521 329,640 25,884 2,479 23,405
31 December 1942 1,597,049 127,267 1,469,782 242,021 26,792 215,229
31 December 1943 2,373,882 274,347 2,099,535 735,666 81,072 654,594
31 March 1944 (Peak size) 2,411,294 306,889 2,104,405 906,335 104,864 801,471
31 December 1944 2,359,456 375,973 1,983,483 1,164,136 153,545 1,010,591
30 April 1945 (Peak overseas) 2,329,534 388,278 1,941,256 1,224,006 163,886 1,060,120
31 August 1945 2,253,182 368,344 1,884,838 999,609 122,833 876,776

Growth of the USAAF, installations : Installations
Type of facility 7 December 1941 31 December 1941 31 December 1942 31 December 1943 31 December 1944 VE Day VJ Day
Total all installations 181 197 1,270 1,419 1,506 1,473 1,377
Main bases 114 151 345 345 377 356 344
Satellite bases   -   - 71 116 37 56 57
Auxiliary fields   -   - 198 322 309 291 269
Total CONUS airfields 114 151 614 783 723 703 670
Bombing & gunnery ranges   -   - unk   - 480 473 433
Hospitals & other owned facilities 67 46 29 32 44 30 30
Contract pilot schools unk unk 69 66 14 14 6
Rented office space   -   - unk unk 79 109 103
Leased hotels & apartment bldgs   -   - 464 216 75 75 75
Civilian & factory tech schools   -   - 66 47 21 17 16
College training detchs   -   - 16 234 2 1 1
Specialized storage depots   -   - 12 41 68 51 43

Growth of the USAAF, installations : Installations
Location 31 December 1941 31 December 1942 31 December 1943 31 December 1944 VE Day VJ Day
US possessions 19 60 70 89 130 128
North America 7 74 83 67 66 62
Atlantic islands 5 27   - 20 21 21
South America   - 27 28 22 32 32
Africa   - 73 94 45 31 21
Europe   - 33 119 302 392 196
Australia   - 20 35 10 7 3
Pacific islands   - 21 65 100 57 56
Asia   - 23 65 96 175 115
Total overseas 31 358 559 751 911 634


Lists relating to aviation

GeneralTimeline of aviation * Aircraft (manufacturers) * Aircraft engines (manufacturers) * Rotorcraft (manufacturers) * Airports * Airlines (defunct) * Civil authorities * Museums
MilitaryAir forces * Aircraft weapons * Missiles * Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) * Experimental aircraft
Accidents/incidentsGeneral * Military * Commercial (airliners) * Deaths
RecordsAirspeed * Distance * Altitude * Endurance * Most-produced aircraft

RAF strategic bombing during the Second World War

OverviewsRAF strategic bombing 1942 - 1945 * Butt Report (1941) * Area bombing directive (1942) * Dehousing paper (1942) * Casablanca directive (1943)
LeadersArthur "Bomber" Harris * "Prof" Lindemann * Sir Charles Portal * Sir Archibald Sinclair * Arthur W. Tedder
CampaignsOil targets * Area bombing of cities (1942 - 1943) * U-boat pens (1943 - 1944) * Battle of the Ruhr (1943) * Combined Bomber Offensive (1943 - 1944) * Battle of Berlin (1943 - 1944) * Hamburg * Heilbronn * Kassel * Pforzheim
OperationsBellicose (Friedrichshafen) * Chastise ("Dambusters" raid) * Hurricane (1944) * Hydra (Peenemünde)
AircraftBlenheim * Boston (Douglas DB-7) * Halifax * Hampden * Lancaster * Mosquito * Stirling * Ventura * Wellington * Whitley
Technology"Window" * H2S * GEE * "Oboe" * G-H * "Monica" * Blockbuster bomb * Earth quake bomb (Tallboy * Grand Slam) * Bouncing bomb
See alsoAerial defence of the United Kingdom * United States Army Air Forces (USAAF) * List of Battle of Europe air operations * Defense of the Reich

United States Air Force

Leadership
Secretary of the Air Force * Under Secretary of the Air Force * Chief of Staff * Vice Chief of Staff * Chief Master Sergeant of the Air Force * 4-star generals * United States Congress (House Subcommittee on Air and Land Forces * Senate Subcommittee on Airland)
Organization
Commands Reserve * Air National Guard * Field operating agencies * Installations
Personnel &
Training
People * Rank: Officers / Enlisted * Air Force Specialty Code * Pararescue * Judge Advocate General's Corps * RED HORSE * Office of Special Investigations * Security Forces * Medical Service
Training: USAF Academy * Reserve Officer Training Corps * Officer Training School * Basic Training * SERE * Fitness Test
Uniforms &
Equipment
Uniforms * Awards * Badges * Equipment
History &
Traditions
History * Army Air Service/Corps/Forces * "The U.S. Air Force" * Air Force Band * The Airmen of Note * Tops In Blue * Flag * Symbol * Airman's Creed * Mottos * National Museum * Memorial * Air Force One * Thunderbirds * Air Force service numbers * Honor Guard




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