Saturday, October 20, 2012

Retired 93rd ARS/CC gifts Fairchild a book full of heritage

by Airman 1st Class Earlandez Young
92nd Air Refueling Wing Public Affairs


10/18/2012 - FAIRCHILD AIR FORCE BASE, Wash. -- A previous 93rd Air Refueling Squadron commander visited his old unit Oct. 15 with a gift from his time as a Pegasus in the '70s.

Retired Lt. Col. Al Kessler presented the current commander of the 93rd ARS, Lt. Col. Patrick O'Brien, with a scrapbook full of historic photos and news articles collected from when the KC-135 Stratotanker Combat Crew Training School closed down at Castle Air Force Base, Calif., in 1995.

Articles and photos in the heritage book date back as far as 1963.

"It's awesome to see the heritage book and it even has our squadron's patch on the front," said Capt. Chris Smith, 93rd ARS executive officer. "We see the patch around the squadron every day, but it's a lot easier to understand when you see the history behind it - especially for a lot of the young Airmen in the squadron."

The book had been sitting in the garage of a former boom operator, who told Kessler he was traveling north but wasn't going past Mountain Home Air Force Base, Idaho. Kessler offered to deliver it to Fairchild.

O'Brien and Smith gave the former squadron commander a tour where they visited mission planning, readiness, flight scheduling and more.

"The facilities now are much nicer than when I was in," said Kessler. "We had a small platform, we put a podium on it, got issued a projector and had one of the boom operators to draw some artwork on the walls - that was our squadron," he said.

Kessler also toured a Stratotaker similar to the A-Model KC-135 he flew.

Kessler and O'Brien reminisced about the T-6 Texan, a single-engine advance trainer aircraft used to train pilots during World War II. A newer model, the T-6 Texan II, sits inside the same hangar as the KC-135 they toured.

Kessler flew the original T-6 while O'Brien taught pilot training in the Texan II.

O'Brien told Kessler the newer models even have air conditioning.

"They also had air conditioning when I flew them -- all you had to do was open the back window and you'd get plenty of air," Kessler chuckled.

O'Brien and Smith expressed their sincere gratitude for all he had shared with them, from the stories and camaraderie to the important piece of 93rd ARS heritage.

The scrapbook now sits inside the auditorium of the squadron for future Airmen to enjoy.

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