rkski wrote:
It breaks my heart to see an empty field with grass growing through the cracks in once were runways and trees growing through foundations that once were buildings that were busy with the business of training crews for war and not even a marker to tell the story. It's really sad that we have got to this point.
Absolutely. I feel so much ink has been devoted to combat units, and so very little has been devoted to the fields they trained on. Growing up, I was near the remains of Dale Mabry AAF in Tallahassee:
http://members.tripod.com/airfields_fre ... hassee.htm We always heard it referred to as, "the old airport," and I was about 12 when I first heard it was an AAF training field. It was one of the main advanced training fields for the 3rd Air Force, and was the municipal airport in town until the early 1960s, when they closed it and relocated to a field far outside of town. It's now almost totally unrecognizable, as Tallahassee Community College is sitting on top of most of it. I've spent almost 20 years now, researching what little info is out there and collecting items when I find them. The USAF has VERY little on some training fields, as Maxwell's file on Mabry only takes up two large boxes. I've been trying to get info for a eventual book, but after all these years, I have a lot of souvenirs and photos, but not a lot of info to write. It's amazing how the info comes out of left field sometimes. Last month, I found won an ebay item that was two ground training newsletters for 3rd AF, and they mentioned a bivouac site at Silver Lake, and that was almost within walking distance of my childhood home! All these years, I'd heard rumors of it, but nothing in print. And now I have a firm reference to it, including a photo of the drop tank they turned into a ditching simulator at the lake. But at least the city decided to put a historical marker there, mostly from the efforts of Nick Fallier, a fine old man who used to be stationed there and lives nearby.
rkski wrote:
I have read all 3 of Lou Thole's Forgotton Fields and they are extremely well written. Freeman's work on the Internet with Abandoned and Little Known Airports is another excellent resource. Has anyone come across anything else?
NO. I really like Lou's books, really I do, and I have them all, but they're only cursory histories. But they are good if you're going to the locations to look around. I've even offered to fly back to Tallahassee to show him around Mabry Field's remains if he puts a chapter in his next book. I'm not waiting by the phone for his call, though.
Cadillac_of_the_Sky wrote:
I know there were a bunch in Florida during the war. I believe the majority were for fighter pilots. If anyone has more info on these I'd love to know. I'm in Florida for 6 more months, and really want to go visit some before I leave.
PM me on this, it largely depends on what part of the state you're in, but I've been years researching the airfields in Florida, especially Northern part of the state.