The unit was again active as the 497th Air Refueling Wing, which was an element of Strategic Air Command. It absorbed the personnel equipment, and mission of the 4108th Air Refueling Wing at Plattsburgh Air Force Base, New York in January 1963 and was inactivated in September 1964.
In 1985 the 497th Bombardment Group and the 497th Air Refueling Wing were consolidated into a single unit. The unit was converted to provisional status and assigned to Pacific Air Forces which activated it to control exercises at Paya Lebar Airfield, Singapore various times between 2000 and 2006.
In April 1944, the group air and ground echelons united at Pratt. Here the 497th finally received newly manufactured Boeing B-29 Superfortresses the following month, although it continued to fly B-17s as well due to continuing engine problems with the B-29s.[8] In May the United States Army Air Forces reorganized its very heavy bombardment units. The 872d Bombardment Squadron and the bombardment maintenance squadrons were inactivated and their personnel absorbed into the remaining three squadrons.[5][9][10]
The 497th deployed to Pacific Theater of Operations, with the ground echelon sailing on 30 July on the SS Fairisle, passing through Honolulu and Eniwetok before arriving at Saipan on 20 September.[11] Upon arrival, the group's personnel were engaged in construction. By mid-October most personnel were able to move into Quonset huts from the tents which they were assigned on arrival. The aircrews began departing Kansas on 6 October, ferrying their aircraft to Saipan via a 6500 nautical mile route, with the last B-29 arriving on 30 October. The headquarters and staff elements flew to Saipan aboard Air Transport CommandDouglas C-54 Skymaster aircraft.[12] At Saipan, the group became part of the XXI Bomber Command at Isely Field.[13]
The group began operations on 28 October 1944, with a night attack against the submarine pens at Truk Island and attacks against Iwo Jima in early November.[14] The group took part in the first attack on Japan by AAF planes based in the Marianas.[13] On 24 November 1944 Major Robert Morgan led the first mission of the XXI Bomber Command to bomb Japan, with wing commander Brigadier Gen. Emmett O'Donnell, Jr. as co-pilot. 110 aircraft of the 73rd Bombardment Wing bombed Tokyo on this mission. The group also suffered its first combat loss on this mission, when a B-29 of the 870th squadron was shot down over the target area. However, this was not the first flight by a 497th aircraft to Japan. Major Morgan and his crew had flown a solo mission on 10 November using radio countermeasures equipment to obtain information on the disposition of Japanese early warning and gun controlradars.[15] During December four group aircraft were destroyed in Japanese bombing raids against Isely Field.[16] The 497th flew missions against strategic objectives in Japan, originally in daylight and from high altitude.[13] It was also tasked with "Weather Strike" missions which were single-ship flights flown nightly to obtain weather information for target areas in Japan while also making incendiary attacks on various targets.[17]
The group received a Distinguished Unit Citation (DUC) for a mission on 27 January 1945. Although weather conditions prevented the group from bombing its primary objective, the unescorted B-29s withstood severe enemy attacks to strike an alternate target, the industrial area of Hamamatsu. It was awarded a second DUC for attacking strategic centers in Japan during July and August 1945. The group assisted the assault on Okinawa in April 1945 by bombing enemy airfields to cut down air attacks against the invasion force. Beginning on 19 March and continuing until the end of the war the group made incendiary raids against Japan, flying at night and at low altitudes to bomb area targets.[13] The group released propaganda leaflets over the Japanese home islands,[18] continuing strategic bombing raids and incendiary attacks until the Japanese surrender in August 1945.[13]
After V-J Day, the 497th dropped supplies to Allied prisoners.[19] In November 1945 the unit returned to the United States[13] where it was initially assigned to Continental Air Forces's (CAF) Fourth Air Force at March Field, California. In March, the 513th Bombardment Squadron, a former Fifteenth Air ForceB-24 Liberator squadron, joined the group. The 513th was undergoing B-29 very heavy bomber upgrade training. In January 1945, the 497th was reassigned to the CAF Third Air Force at MacDill Field, Florida. In March 1946 CAF became Strategic Air Command (SAC), and the group was one of SAC's first bombardment groups. Demobilization, however, was in full swing and the group turned in its aircraft and was inactivated on 31 March.[13]
However, SAC Major Command controlled (MAJCON) could not carry a permanent history or lineage.[22] and SAC looked for a way to make these wings permanent.
In 1962, in order to perpetuate the lineage of many currently inactive bombardment units with illustrious World War II records, SAC received authority from the USAF to discontinue its MAJCON wings that were equipped with combat aircraft and to activate Air Force-controlled (AFCON) units, most of which were inactive at the time which could carry a lineage and history.[23]
As a result, the 4108th was replaced by the newly constituted 497th Air Refueling Wing,[1] which assumed its mission, personnel, and equipment on 1 January 1963.[note 4] The 26th and 380th Air Refueling Squadrons were reassigned to the 497th. Component support units were replaced by units with the numerical designation of the newly established wing.[20]
The wing supported global air refueling missions of SAC and other USAF needs, as required, earning an Air Force Outstanding Unit Award for its performance of the mission. In June 1964 the 380th Air Refueling Squadron became non-operational[1] while it began to convert to newer Boeing KC-135 Stratotankers. The 497th was discontinued and inactivated on 15 September 1964. Its subordinate units were also inactivated with the exception of the 380th Air Refueling Squadron, which was reassigned to the 380th Bombardment Wing.[24]
Provisional Unit
In 1984 the 497th Bombardment Group and the 497th Air Refueling Wing were consolidated into a single unit,[25]
In 2000, the consolidated unit was converted to provisional status and assigned to Pacific Air Forces to activate or inactivate as needed. It was redesignated as the 497th Air Expeditionary Group. Between 2000 and 2006 the group was periodically activated for Commando Sling exercises, using the 497th Combat Training Squadron as its cadre, augmented by deployed personnel and equipment from Pacific Air Forces fighter squadrons.[26]
Lineage
497th Bombardment Group
Constituted as the 497th Bombardment Group, Very Heavy on 19 November 1943
^Emblem in Stewart, et al. Maurer, Combat Units does not show this was ever officially approved
^One officer and three enlisted men moved to Clovis. Stewart et al., p. 26
^B-29 Superfortress 42-24598. This aircraft was lost 9 January 1945.
^Although the 497th Wing was a new organization, it continued, through temporary bestowal, the history, and honors of the World War II 497th Bombardment Group. It was also entitled to retain the honors (but not the history or lineage) of the 4108th. This temporary bestowal ended in January 1984, when the wing and group were consolidated into a single unit. See Ravenstein, Combat Wings, Appendix V, USAF Bestowed History.
^Also received by the 4108th Air Refueling Wing for the period 1 April 1961 to 31 December 1962. AF Pamphlet 900-2, p. 536
Stewart, Harry A.; Power, John E. (1947). Goforth, Pat E. (ed.). The Long Haul: The Story of the 497th Bomb Group (VH). Bangor Public Library World War Regimental Histories. San Angelo, TX: Newsfoto Publishing Co. Retrieved 18 August 2013.
Thomas, Captain Rowan T. (1983) [1944]. Born in Battle: Round The World Adventures of the 513th Bombardment Squadron (Reprint ed.). Philadelphia, PA: Zenger Publishing Company. ISBN0-89201-078-9.