The 61st Balloon Company became the first air unit to command the post in 1918. In 1920, the 260 acre flying field was built and in 1924 was named Offutt Field, in memory of Omaha's first casualty in World War I, Lt. Jarvis J. Offutt, who was killed in France while flying with the Royal Air Force. In December of 1939, the Nebraska Bomber Assembly Plant, better known as the Glenn L. Martin Bomber plant began making the first of many B-26 Marauders and B-29 Stratofortresses. The infamous "Enola Gay" and the not as well known "Bockscar", the planes that dropped the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan, were built at the Martin plant. In 1948, Fort Crook and Offutt Field were renamed Offutt Air Force Base, and today it is home to the largest military meteorological facility in the world. The Air Force's largest combat command unit is also based out of Offutt.
Visit the Offutt Air Force Base website.
History of Offutt Air Force Base
Check out the Government Printing Office Website for Air Force press releases.
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