my old home town exposed

This was from a blog I found on michigan exposures I lived there for many years

Michigan Exposures
Sunday, April 3, 2011
Wurtsmith Air Force Base
About a month or so ago, I was looking through some of my old pictures and I found some that I had of what was Wurtsmith Air Force Base. I think they are at least 19 years old as the last B-52 flew off the base on December 15, 1992. I don't really remember when I took them but I'm pretty sure that I was either still in college or had just graduated from college. Anyways, here the pictures (these were scanned in).

This is a picture from highway F-41 which is a farm to market road or county highway. I think this was the alert area where planes would be ready to go on a moment's notice. I wish my picture was a little clearer, but this was the best I could get given that it was an active base at the time.

This is another shot from a slightly better spot.

I think we might have stopped the car so that I could get out and take a picture from closer to the outer fence. At the time, the base had B-52G Stratofortresses and KC-135 Stratotankers. These planes were used during Desert Storm. It was pretty cool to come up here to look at the planes, sometimes I could see them flying.
Wurtsmith Air Force Base started in 1923 as Loud-Reames Aviation Field as a soft landing spot for aircraft from Selfridge Field. In 1924, it was renamed Camp Skeel for a pilot from World War I and was used as an aerial gunnery range until the onset of World War II. In 1942, a 5000 foot hard surface runway was built and the Camp was renamed Oscoda Army Air Field (it is just outside of Oscoda). It was used to train Free French pilots and as a transient stopover point.
It became a permanent installation in 1951 when the US Air Force decided to use it as a Fighter-Interceptor training base. It served in this capacity until 1973. In 1958, it first housed B-52 bombers and in 1960, it housed the B-52H model bombers until 1977 when those were changed for the B-52G. They started to retire the G models in the 1980's but there was a brief reprieve when they were used in Desert Storm. The Base was also designated to base the MX missiles on rail cars but that plane was scrapped in 1992 with the demise of the Soviet Union. It was closed as a base in 1993.

Now the base is used as a repair falicity for Kalitta Air which is based out of Ypsilanti. I'm not sure what these planes are being used for as they have Northwest livery. I wonder if they are being converted.

747's are cool but not as cool as B-52's.

Some of the Kalitta Air 747's.

Another shot of one of the 747's.

This would have been the alert area but looking from the inside of the base this time. I would have loved to have this shot with B-52's in it. But oh well, I guess it's better this way because I got to thinking this area would have been incinerated if we had come to blows with the Soviets.

Another 747.

One of the base's watertowers, this is the logo of one of the air wings that was here.
Posted by Mikoyan at 10:01 PM
Labels: airplane
3 comments:

annonmous said...

This is very cool to me as a Rose City Michigan Native now living in Allentown PA. I have been on this base, and my mother always told me stories of it as a kid. Although I never thought there to be icbm's placed here at one point in time. Talk about a wow factor. It is amazing thinking that I have got to check this facility out since it has been deactivated now. I actually did have a friend that used to wrench on the birds your now seeing there. They are no longer doing military work, just simple mechanics of the jet engines themselves to bring them back into spec from everything he has told me. I had another friend of a relative that used to work for the airforce here I beleive he was stationed here, he used to work on jet engines also, and make new parts for them by machine. Thus, they have alot of equipment here that these airliners in need probably can not find elsewhere in the state with as accessible and away from praying eyes and the media that there are issues with engines on aircraft as oscoda mi. This area is highly rural, and no where other than around the Rose city, Mio, grayling area would you find better places to hide your doings. Not many people even know what Oscoda is. Even though it is a beautifull place to visit. You can tell the soldiers here had a lot of fun on their off time too. The local area would have been extremely fun, with pubs, and beach on lake huron alore.
May 11, 2011 at 1:25 PM
Anonymous said...

They never did get the ICBMs or similar weapons but the B52's did carry two nuclear weapons that were launched as a 'smart navigation' weapon which could, once given its coordinates before launch, fly with no external control to its fixed target. The two that I worked on while I was stationed there were the AGM69A SRAM (Short Range Attack Missile) and the AGM86B ALCM (Air Launched Cruise Missile). I was there from 85 to 92.
I worked with a great bunch of people and had fun despite the seriousness of the job and I am glad the weapons were never really used.
The base has a number of other facilities that are using it. There is a motorcycle parts business in which there is a motorcycle museum (this is well done and very cool to see), an Air Force museum, and some other businesses of which I do not know the names.
There was also an access to the Ausable River from the base (in the old base housing area near the back gate I believe). When the salmon are spawning, it is full of fish. Otherwise it might have trout and a few other species.

Anyway it is a nice place to visit, a bit sad and definitely nostalgic for me but at least it is seeing some use. It is hard to look at something knowing you spent years of your life there and it isn't nearly full of the same life as when I left it but that is life isn't it --- change.
Sgt. Frederick. 379th MMS (and others).
July 1, 2012 at 6:24 AM
Jane said...

Hi there!
My name is Jane and I'm with Dwellable.
I was looking for blogs about Oscoda to share on our site and I came across your post...If you're open to it, shoot me an email at jane(at)dwellable(dot)com.
Hope to hear from you soon!
Jane
March 25, 2013 at 10:47 AM

Post a Comment
Newer Post Older Post Home
Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)
What Was Done....

2013 (605)

2012 (894)

2011 (1051)
December (78)
November (126)
October (111)
September (65)
August (108)
July (86)
June (70)
May (66)
April (128)
The Mississagi
Seagulls....Again...
The Ojibway
Even More Shots of the Detroit Skyline
The John G. Munson Again
The Sinking of the M Hat...Part II
The Lake Ontario Ship
A Pair of Ducks
Another Set of Shots of the Livingstone Lighthouse...
A Buoy
Thalassa Desgagnes
The Canadian Olympic
The Pennsylvania Turnpike
Somewhere in Pennsylvania
The Battle of Monocacy
Along the Washington Parkway
The Lincoln Memorial
The Vietnam Memorial
The Smithsonian Castle
Some Shots of D.C.
The Ulysses S. Grant Memorial
James B. Garfield Statue
The United States Capitol Building
The Washington Monument
Harbinger of Spring Flower
Somewhere in Maryland
Battle of Spotsylvania Courthouse
The Battle of the Wilderness
The Battle of Chancellorsville
National Museum of the Marine Corps
George Washington's Boyhood Home
Fredericksburg, Virginia
Cumberland, Maryland
CSX Railroad
Fallingwater
The Capital Building - Teaser
Spotsylvania Battlefield Teaser
The Wilderness Battlefield - Teaser
Chancellorsville Battlefield
The Marine Corps Museum
Fredericksburg - Chatham House
Cumberland, MD
Falling Water Teaser
Michigan Exposures Hits the Road
Some Birds and a Bird of a Different Sort
The Algoma Guardian
The Detroit Skyline with some weather
Some Random Tug
Interstate 696
Michigan State Highway M-14
An Ontario Provincial Police Boat
The Sam Laud
The John J. Carrick
Ships Coming In
The Anna Scripps Conservatory
The Belle Isle Aquarium
The Detroit Skyline
The Algonova
Ship watching......More to follow
Michigan Survival Flight...Again
Nichols Arboretum in April
The Wolverine Passes the Barton Dam
The Barton Dam in April
A Squirrel at the Barton Dam
So This is Spring?
A Canadian Goose
The Eagles
Some Marina Pictures
The Stephen B. Roman
A Railroad Bridge
The Zeus and Barge
The Karen Andrie
The Kurt R Luedtke and Ann-Marie
Cool Video
More Shots of the Detroit Skyline
The McKee Sons
Ya Think?
More Shots from Gallup
Some Waterfowl
The Yankee Air Park...Again
the William Livingstone Lighthouse Again
The Robert S. Pierson
The Lee A. Tregurtha
The Roger Blough
The Lake Guardian
The Algocanada
The New Saginaw Trail
The Saginaw Trail - Everything Else
The Saginaw Trail - The Detroit Portion
The Samuel de Champlain/Innovation
The CSL Laurentien
The People Mover
Downtown Windsor
USCGC Bristol Bay and Barge
Hart Plaza
The Fist
Lunch in Detroit
The Saginaw Trail
A Random Dog
Some Shots of Windsor, Ontario
The MacArthur Bridge
The Detroit Lighthouse Depot
Two Coast Guard Boats in Hot Pursuit
The Herbert C. Jackson
Some Seagulls
Downtown Detroit from Belle Isle
The Renaissance Center
The Oakglen
The Tri-Centennial Light...Again...and Again...
Posting Live From Belle Isle
Hunwick!!!!
Congratulations to the Wolverines
Another Night at Gallup
Michigan Legends
Forest Hill Cemetary
Blah...Snow...Still
Pine River
Goose Flight 99, You are Cleared
Wild Turkeys
He's a Lumberjack....
Sturgeon Point Lighthouse
Wurtsmith Air Force Base
The Tawas Point Lighthouse
Alabaster, MI
The Eagle's Nest
Teaser Post For Stuff From Today
This Looks Safe
Going to Gallup Park Again...
March (110)
February (59)
January (44)

2010 (568)

2009 (364)

About Me
My Photo

Mikoyan
I was born in Bay City, Michigan and for the most part I was raised there. My dad was in the Navy, so I spent my first 5 years in Hawaii, Texas and California. For college, I went to Eastern Michigan where I studied Engineering Physics. I caught the photography bug when my mom had me take a photojournalism class in High School. I dabbled a little after college but it never really took off until a couple years ago. If you would like to get a hold of me...e-mail is kozzie_13 at yahoo dot com. Obviously use the @ and . in that.

View my complete profile
Followers
Ships By Shipping Company

great lakes fleet (126)
algoma central (116)
american steamship (86)
lower lakes (69)
interlake steamship (62)
canadian steamship lines (56)
lakes shipping (22)
desgagnes (6)
essroc (5)

Number of People That Have Stopped By....
StatCounter - Free Web Tracker and Counter

Picture Window template. Powered by Blogger.

Comments

Popular Posts