Tonopah
Army Air Field
"A Fond Remembrance
From a Grateful Nation"

Listed left are the names of 110 Army Air Force men who
lost their lives in accidents related to the operation
of the Tonopah Army Air Field (TAAF) between 1942 and
1945.
The majority were killed in P-39 and B-24 crashes and
the list, compiled by Allen Metscher, is the result of
an extensive search of newspapers and death records of
the era. There are undoubtedly other names which were
not listed in these sources.
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A Busy Air Field
Reprinted from "Central Nevada's
Glorious Past" Vol. 2, No. 1, May, 1979
By Kurt Ballantyne
The Army Air Force expanded
rapidly after the beginning of World War II in Europe.
Less than a month after the German attack on Poland in
September 1939, General Headquarters Air Force at
Langley Field, Virginia, was considering the
desirability of improving the airdrome at Tonopah and of
obtaining a large tract of land in that area for bombing
and gunnery practice.
On October 29, 1940, more than 3,000,000
acres of land (approximately 5,000 square miles) in the
public domain were transferred from the Department of
Interior to the War Department. Final land problems were
resolved in August, 1941, when condemnation proceedings
were instituted.
The Fourth Air Force, which was to use
the range in training combat units, planned to conduct
its operations from Tonopah. In early 1940 construction
was started on a new airfield located seven miles east
of Tonopah.

This work was sponsored by the Civil
Aeronautics Administration (CAA) and was financed, at
least in part, with funds supplied by the Works Progress
Administration (WPA). Since the Fourth Air Force would
train at the field during the war, construction was
coordinated between the CAA and the Army. The Fourth Air
Force hoped to begin operations at Tonopah by the end of
1941, but the new base was not ready for occupancy until
July, 1942.
When the base was finally occupied, it
was complete with runways, barracks, mess halls and a
hospital, as well as other facilities. Support units
were moved in including ordinance, guard, quartermaster,
supply, signal, weather, communications and finance
organizations.
In
the months that followed, the number of personnel
increased, as the first planes to occupy the base
arrived. These were Bell P-39 Airacobras, a fighter used
by the Air Force in the Pacific. By the beginning of
1943 there were 227 officers and 1,779 enlisted men at
the field. They included the first tactical
organizations trained at the Tonopah base, the 75th and
390th Bombardment Squadrons of the 42nd Bombardment
Group. They were followed by three squadrons (the 255th,
353rd and 356th) of the 354th Fighter Group, who arrived
on January 18, 1943. When they left at the beginning of
March, their place was taken by squadrons of the 357th
Fighter Group. By the end of November, 1943, eight
bombardment and twelve fighter squadrons had used the
base to train for combat overseas.
It soon became apparent, however, that
the range could not be used successfully as a fighter
training area. Possibly due to Tonopah's 6,000-foot
elevation and design problems with the Airacobras, the
plans and pilots were being lost in crashes at an
unacceptable rate. It was decided to change the
operation to a high altitude bomber training base to
train crews of the B-24 Liberators.

In September, 1943, about half of the personnel moved
temporarily to Bishop Army Air Field, California, in
order to provide housing at Tonopah for contractors
engaged in an extensive construction program at the
base. The project, which cost $3,000,000, included
extensions of runways, new aprons, new water storage
tanks, additional quarters and barracks, a new post
exchange, supply buildings, day rooms, crash stations,
warehouses, operations buildings, a hangar, a school
building, -and other additions to the airfield as well
as additional facilities on the range. By the beginning
of November, 1943, most of the construction had been
completed.
The
training equipment and areas included a rifle range,
pistol range, skeet ranges, turret trainers, bomb
trainers equipped with Norden or Sperry sights, flexible
gunnery trainers, navigation trainers, and schools for
gunners and radio operators, with the range being
available for practicing bombing and aerial gunnery. On
November 1, 1943, the men who had been sent to Bishop
returned, and the 458th Bombardment Group arrived for
training.
Upon the departure of the 458th at the
beginning of January, 1944, the 470th Bombardment Group
arrived at Tonopah to serve as a replacement training
unit to prepare B-24 crews for service with heavy bomber
units overseas. In a reorganization on March 31, 1944,
the 470th was disbanded, its training functions being
taken over by the 442nd Army Air Force Base Unit. In the
summer of 1944, a Field Test Unit, a branch of the
special weapons test organization of Wright Field, Ohio,
was engaged in testing glide bombs and other devices at
Tonopah.
The
major activity, however, continued to be the training of
replacement crews for B-24 operations. This B-24 program
continued until the end of the war. During this time the
Tonopah base was one of the largest military operations
in Nevada and had one of the largest post exchanges in
the 4th Air Force. This exchange, opened in August of
1942, paid many dividends which were used for the
benefit of the enlisted men. On Nov. 13th, 1943, it paid
a dividend of $10,741.48, one of the largest recorded.
The base also had a large bakery with a related doughnut
shop. This shop. during 1943 and 1944, sold an average
of 400 dozen doughnuts a day. In October, 1944, there
were 66 B-24 aircraft available for the training
program.
At that time there were 1,264 officers
and 5,273 enlisted men, in addition to a large number of
civilians, assigned to the base. But by March 1945,
pressure from the War Department to cut manpower at Army
installations resulted in reduction of the number of
persons stationed at Tonopah to 437 officers, 3,707
enlisted men, and 184 civilians. On August 23, 1945, a
little over a week after fighting ended in the Pacific,
the Fourth Air Force placed the Tonopah Army Air Field
on inactive status. Personnel and aircraft began leaving
almost immediately.
On October 15, the 442nd AAF Base Unit
was discontinued and the field was made a sub-base of
Hamilton Field, California. In 1948, while under the
jurisdiction of the 15th Air Force, Denver Colorado the
base was deactivated and sold for scrap. Today, all that
remains of what was one of the Army Air Force's largest
World War II training bases are four hangars in various
stages of disrepair and the runway, maintained by Nye
County and used as
Tonopah's
airport.