Details for Harlingen Army Airfield and Harlingen Air Force Base

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5061012951

Data

Marker Number 12951
Atlas Number 5061012951
Marker Title Harlingen Army Airfield and Harlingen Air Force Base
Index Entry Harlingen Army Airfield and Harlingen Air Force Base
Address 2425 Boxwood St.
City Harlingen
County Cameron
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 633148
UTM Northing 2900392
Subject Codes World War II; aviation; military topics
Marker Year 2004
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location Harlingen Arts and Heritage Museum
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text With the depressed economy of the 1930s, Harlingen leaders sought to attract federal funds to the area. In May 1941, in preparation for what would become World War II, the U.S. War Department accepted the city's offer of 960 acres for a military airfield and flexible gunnery school. The area's flat topography, impractical for artillery training, was ideal for aircraft operations. Additional land was procured along the coast to use for combat maneuvers. The Harlingen Army Gunnery School received its first students in August 1941. By 1944, the facility was nearly 1,600 acres in size. Accommodating at peak times up to 9,000 trainees. Among those stationed at the base were Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASP). The field closed in 1946; following the war, numerous buildings were sold to area residents and businesses. In April 1952, with the U.S. involved in Korea, the government reactivated the field as Harlingen Air Force Base, with the primary mission of training navigators. New facilities included a hospital, and base and area residents followed local and national events in the Sun Lines newspaper. In 1961, the U.S. government announced numerous base closures, including the base in Harlingen. By June 1962, when the last class graduated from the school, more than 13,000 navigators had completed their training in Harlingen. The base closure, which removed millions of dollars from the local economy, severely impacted the city. Base facilities eventually served as a regional airport, which became the Valley International Airport in 1970. Portions of the base have also been used for an industrial air park, the Texas State Technical Institute (now College), the Marine Military Academy and the Rio Grande Valley Museum. (2004)

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