Unit Name: | 9th Space Division |
Dates: | 1949–1950, 1954–1958, 1961–1968, 1990–1991 |
Country: | United States |
Role: | Command of aerospace defense units |
Identification Symbol Label: | 9th Space Division emblem (approved c. 4 September 1990)[1] |
Identification Symbol 2 Label: | 9th Aerospace Defense Division emblem |
Identification Symbol 3 Label: | 9th Air Division emblem |
The 9th Space Division (9th SD) is an inactive United States Air Force organization. Its last assignment was with Air Force Space Command, being stationed at Patrick Air Force Base, Florida. It was inactivated on 1 October 1991.
The organization has had several periods of activation over its lifetime. Initially established in April 1949 as the 9th Air Division (Tactical) under Fourteenth Air Force, Continental Air Command at Pope Air Force Base, North Carolina, the command had no units assigned but was to act as a headquarters over tactical units. It was inactivated in August 1950.
It was redesignated 9th Air Division (Defense) and reactivated in October 1954 by Air Defense Command (ADC) and assigned to Western Air Defense Force (WADF) at Geiger Field, Washington, taking over control of air defense units in eastern Washington, Oregon and Idaho from the 25th Air Division (AD), after the 25th AD was realigned over the Washington and Oregon coastal area west of the Cascade Mountains. It participated in the United States Air Force collateral mission of antisubmarine warfare and administered, equipped, and trained for combat. It was inactivated in 1958 when the Spokane Air Defense Sector was established by ADC to take over its responsibilities.[1]
The third incarnation of the organization began in 1961 with its reactivation as the 9th Aerospace Defense Division was associated with the North American Aerospace Defense Command by ADC, assuming responsibility for the Ballistic Missile Early Warning System, the Missile Defense Alarm System, the Space Detection and Tracking System (SPADATS), the NORAD combat operations Center, the Bomb Alarm System, and the Nuclear Detonation System.[1]
During the Cuban Missile Crisis, the division implemented an improvised missile warning system directed toward the missile threat from Cuba called "Falling Leaves." In October 1962, the SPADATS AN/FPS-49 radar at Moorestown Air Force Station, New Jersey was reoriented south and directed toward Cuba. A communication network was established with Moorestown, the AN/FPS-78 radar at Laredo Air Force Base, Texas and the AN/FPS-35 radar site at Thomasville Air Force Station, Alabama. All three stations were in turn tied into the command centers at NORAD and at Strategic Air Command. This missile detection network remained in operation until 28 November and the Moorestown and Laredo sites were returned to their normal SPADATS mission when Soviet missiles were withdrawn from Cuba. The Thomasville station, retained coverage until late December as a precaution.[2]
The division was inactivated in 1968 when its mission was elevated to a Numbered Air Force level, and transferred along with its personnel and equipment to the Fourteenth Aerospace Force on 1 July.[1]
The most recent incarnation the 9th Space Division began in 1990 when Air Force Space Command (AFSPACECOM) reactivated the organization to provide an action mechanism to "operationalize" the space launch capabilities of Eastern Space and Missile Center (ESMC) and Western Space and Missile Center (WSMC) units transferred from Air Force Systems Command to AFSPACECOM during 1990–1991. ESMC and WSMC became respectively the 45th Space Wing and 30th Space Wing within two months of the Division's inactivation in 1991.[1]
Activated on 1 May 1949
Inactivated on 1 August 1950
Activated on 8 October 1954
Inactivated on 15 August 1958
Organized on 15 July 1961
Discontinued and inactivated on 1 July 1968
Activated on 1 October 1990
Inactivated on 1 October 1991[1]
Centers
Patrick Air Force Base, Florida
Vandenberg Air Force Base, California[1]
Wings
Ent Air Force Base, Colorado
Ent Air Force Base, Colorado[1] Groups
Vandenburg Air Force Base, California
Geiger Field, Washington
Geiger Field, Washington
Larson Air Force Base, Washington[1]
Squadrons
Ent Air Force Base, Colorado
Ent Air Force Base, Colorado
Vandenberg Air Force Base, California
Larson Air Force Base, Washington
Larson Air Force Base, Washington
Larson Air Force Base, Washington
Larson Air Force Base, Washington
Geiger Field, Washington[1]
McChord Air Force Base, Washington
Condon Air Force Station, Oregon
Othello Air Force Station, Washington
Curlew Air Force Station, Washington
Colville Air Force Station, Washington
Baker Air Force Station, Oregon
Cottonwood Air Force Station, Idaho
Mica Peak Air Force Station, Washington[1]