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Hurlburt Field Airport



Hurlburt Field


Home of Air Force Special Operations Command (AFSOC)

Aerial image - 15 February 1999
red dot indicates location of Hurlburt Field
IATA: none – ICAO: KHRT – FAA LID: HRT
Summary
Airport type Military
Operator United States Air Force
Serves Eglin Air Force Base
Location Okaloosa County, near Mary Esther, Florida
Commander Col Brad Webb
Occupants 1st Special Operations Wing
Elevation AMSL 38 ft / 12 m
Coordinates 30°25′40″N 086°41′22″W / 30.42778°N 86.68944°W / 30.42778; -86.68944Coordinates: 30°25′40″N 086°41′22″W / 30.42778°N 86.68944°W / 30.42778; -86.68944
Website www.hurlburt.af.mil
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
18/36 9,600 2,926 Concrete
Source: Federal Aviation Administration

Main Gate (about 1967)


Air Commandos in training
Air Commandos in training

First Lieutenant Donald Wilson Hurlburt
First Lieutenant Donald Wilson Hurlburt

U.S. Air Force MSgt Tanya Breed demonstrates a Barrett .50 caliber rifle during a special operations training course at Hurlburt Field.
U.S. Air Force MSgt Tanya Breed demonstrates a Barrett .50 caliber rifle during a special operations training course at Hurlburt Field.

Hurlburt Field (ICAO: KHRT, FAA LID: HRT) is a U.S. Air Force installation located in Okaloosa County, Florida, immediately west of the Town of Mary Esther. It is part of the greater Eglin Air Force Base reservation, and is home to Headquarters Air Force Special Operations Command (AFSOC), the 1st Special Operations Wing (1 SOW), the USAF Special Operations School (USAFSOS) and the Air Combat Command's (ACC) 505th Command and Control Wing. It was named for First Lieutenant Donald Wilson Hurlburt, who died in a crash at Eglin. The installation is nearly 6,700 acres (27 km), and employs nearly 8,000 military personnel.

Although most U.S. airports use the same three-letter location identifier for the FAA and IATA, Hurlburt Field is assigned HRT by the FAA but has no designation from the IATA (which assigned HRT to RAF Linton-on-Ouse in Yorkshire, England).

History

Hurlburt began as a small training field for the much larger Eglin Field. It was initially designated Eglin Auxiliary Field No. 9, and later as Eglin AFB Auxiliary Field 9/Hurlburt Field, before being administratively separated from the rest of the Eglin AFB complex in the 1950s. However, once separated, the facility retained its history and kept all building numbers the same; i.e., all start with a "9". The installation was named by then-Eglin base commander Brigadier General Grandison Gardner for First Lieutenant Donald Wilson Hurlburt (1919–1943), who was killed in an aircraft crash at the main base, then known as Eglin Field, in 1943.

The facility had previously been named the Eglin-Hurlburt Airdrome until 1943; Hurlburt Field, March 1944; Eglin Auxiliary Field #9, October 1944; with the current name official on 13 January 1948. The base commander of Eglin Main was also responsible for Hurlburt, 1942–1946, but when the base reactivated on 1 February 1955, it gained a separate commander.

Donald Wilson Hurlburt

After flying combat missions from Great Britain and receiving the Distinguished Flying Cross (DFC), Lieutenant Hurlburt was assigned in mid-1943 to the First Proving Ground Electronics Test Unit at Eglin Field. He died on either 1 October 1943, or 2 October 1943 when his Lockheed AT-18 Hudson gunnery trainer, 42-55591, crashed during take-off at Eglin. An official history of Eglin AFB's early years book cites the 2 October 1943 date for this accident, and also notes that Capt. Barclay H. Dillon, test pilot of the Fighter Section of the 1st Proving Ground Group, died in another accident the same date. Auxiliary Field No. 10 was later named Eglin Dillon Airdrome, now known primarily as Outlying Field Choctaw. Hurlburt's nephew was Captain Craig D. Button (noted for his mysterious flight and crash of an A-10 Thunderbolt on 2 April 1997).

Doolittle Raiders

Under the tutelage of Naval Aviators from nearby NAS Pensacola in 1942, Lieutenant Colonel Jimmy Doolittle and his Raiders practiced taking off with their B-25 Mitchell bombers on a short runway using the short cross-field runway near the southern end of Hurlburt Field's main runway. This complex is now named the Doolittle Runway. It should be noted that other Eglin fields, including Wagner Field/Eglin Auxiliary Field #1, and Duke Field/Eglin Auxiliary Field #3, were also used during this training.

For the 2008 gathering of Doolittle mission survivors, six crew were present for recognition in Fort Walton Beach, Florida, culminating in a reenactment of the training sessions by three civilian-owned B-25 Mitchells at Duke Field on 31 May. Navy personnel from NAS Pensacola, as flight deck "shirt" crew, represented that service's contribution to the Tokyo mission. Thought had been given to using Wagner Field for the ceremonies, but investigation showed the taxiways at the disused field were in better shape than the runways.

Drones and missiles

Gulf-facing launch sites for drones (cruise missiles, in modern parlance) beginning with Republic-Ford JB-2 Loons, American copies of the V-1 "buzz bombs", were operated on Santa Rosa Island, from Site A-15, directly south of Field 9 from the fall of 1944 in anticipation of operations against Japan from captured Pacific island bases. The atomic missions put paid to this operation. This launch site is now on the National Register of Historic Places.

The 4751st Air Defense Squadron (15 January 1958 - 30 November 1979) operated IM-99/CIM-10 Bomarcs and CGM-13/TGM-13 Mace missiles from this site. On 18 August 1960, a Bomarc missile from the Santa Rosa launch facility made a direct hit on its target, a QB-47E drone of the 3205th Drone Director Group, marking the first shoot-down of a multi-jet medium bomber by a surface-to-air missile. On 5 January 1967 an international incident was narrowly avoided when a TGM-13 Mace, launched from Santa Rosa Island, which was supposed to circle over the Gulf for shoot-down by a pair of Eglin F-4 Phantoms, instead, headed south for Cuba. A third F-4 overtook the drone, firing two test AAMs with no effect, and damaged it with cannonfire, but the unarmed Mace actually overflew the western tip of Cuba before crashing in open water some 100 miles (160 km) further south. The final Mace launches from Hurlburt Site A-15 took place in June 1974. Other launches in the 1960s included six high-altitude releases of vaporized barium from 2-stage Nike Iroquois sounding rockets in January 1967 to measure wind speeds and directions in the upper atmosphere, conducted under the auspices of the Air Force Cambridge Research Laboratory (AFCRL) in conjunction with the Space Systems Branch of the Aircraft and Missile Test Division, Air Proving Ground Center, Eglin AFB.

Special Operations

Hurlburt Field fell into disrepair following World War II, but was reactivated in 1955. On 14 April 1961 the Air Force Tactical Air Command (TAC) activated the 4400th Combat Crew Training Squadron at Hurlburt, to fly operations against guerrillas, either as an overt Air Force operation or in an undefined covert capacity. Known by its nickname "Jungle Jim", the unit was commanded by Colonel Benjamin H. King. The squadron was authorised 16 C-47s, eight B-26s and eight T-28 Trojans, plus the same number of aircraft in temporary storage. The T-28s were armed with .50 calibre mg, 2.75-in. rockets and a small quantity of bombs. These specialists flew missions in Africa, Southeast Asia, Central America and other places throughout the world. In early 1962, plans for the never executed Operation Northwoods called for decoy aircraft to land at this base.

From the 1960s into the early 1970s, the base hosted a wide variety of aircraft types, including A-1E Skyraiders, AC-119G Shadow and AC-119K Stinger gunships, AC-47 Spooky gunships, AC-130A Spectre gunships, B-26K Counter-Invaders (including those deployed to the Congo), UC-123Ks with underwing jet pods, OV-10A Forward Air Control Broncos, Cessna O-2A Skymaster FAC and O-2B PSYOPS aircraft, and other long-serving C-47s in various support roles. Following the conclusion of the war in Southeast Asia, most reciprocating engine types were retired by the USAF.

In the early 1960s, Hurlburt was utilized as a Strategic Air Command dispersal base for B-47s of the 306th Bomb Wing at MacDill AFB, Florida.

Most facilities were located west of the runway, including hangars, through the 1980s. With the growth and importance of special operation capabilities, Lockheed AC-130 Spectre/Spooky gunship and MC-130 Combat Talon/Combat Spear operations have remained on the western flight line, while additional hangars and ramps have been constructed northeast of the intersection of the main runway and the Doolittle runway. These newer facilities are home to CV-22 Osprey operations, and the recently retired MH-53J Pave Low III and MH-53M Pave Low IV helicopter. The Air Force Special Operations Command continues to fly sensitive operations missions from Hurlburt Field worldwide.

The USAF Special Operations School (USAFSOS) trains US Air Force, Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Coast Guard and US government civilian personnel in a variety of courses. Among the most popular courses are the Dynamics of International Terrorism, and the Middle East Orientation Course.

The Joint Special Operations University (JSOU) is also located at Hurlburt Field. JSOU's lecturers include specialists from all branches of the US military, the US Department of State, Central Intelligence Agency, civilian universities, and nongovernmental organizations. USAF Major Warren A. Speller was an integral part of this idea to promote frank discussion, JSOU follows a policy of non-attribution of comments by faculty, staff and students.

Facilities

Hurlburt Field has one concrete paved runway (18/36) measuring 9,600 x 150 ft (2,926 x 46 m).

Although an Air Commando Air Park was established at the field in the 1970s to honor the history of the Air Commandos, security in the post 9-11 era means that it is off-limits to non-military personnel. Visitors must be sponsored onto the installation.

Hurlburt Field in pop culture

The Transformers 3 movie, in production in September 2010, and featuring the CV-22 Osprey and AC-130U Spooky, is being filmed in part at Hurlburt Field.

The NBA Miami Heat run a week-long preseason training camp at the Aderholt Fitness Center on Hurlburt Field, Sept. 28, 2010.



The above content comes from Wikipedia and is published under free licenses – click here to read more.

Hurlburt Field Airport picture

Location & QuickFacts

FAA Information Effective:

2007-01-18

Airport Identifier:

HRT

Airport Status:

Operational

Longitude/Latitude:

086-41-21.6000W/30-25-40.2000N
-86.689333/30.427833 (Estimated)

Elevation:

38 ft / 11.58 m (Surveyed)

Land:

0 acres

From nearest city:

2 nautical miles E of Mary Esther, FL

Location:

Okaloosa County, FL

Magnetic Variation:

01E (1985)

Owner & Manager

Ownership:

Air Force owned

Owner:

Usaf

Address:

Dept Of The Af, Hdqrtrs Adtc
Eglin Afb, FL 32544

Manager:

Chief Of Afld Management

Address:

Dept Of The Af, Hdqrtrs Adtc
Eglin Afb, FL 32544

Phone number:

904-882-2013

Airport Operations and Facilities

Airport Use:

Private

Wind indicator:

Yes

Segmented Circle:

No

Control Tower:

Yes

Lighting Schedule:

DUSK-DAWN

Beacon Color:

Clear-Green (lighted land airport)

Landing fee charge:

No

Sectional chart:

New Orleans

Region:

ASO - Southern

Boundary ARTCC:

ZJX - Jacksonville

Tie-in FSS:

GNV - Gainesville
FSS-GAINESVILLE GNV-NOTAM CEW

FSS on Airport:

No

FSS Phone:

850-377-3291

FSS Toll Free:

1-800-WX-BRIEF

NOTAMs Facility:

CEW (NOTAM-d service avaliable)

Certification type/date:

I L U 08/1990

Airport Services

Fuel available:

B+

Airframe Repair:

NONE

Power Plant Repair:

NONE

Bottled Oxygen:

NONE

Bulk Oxygen:

LOW

Runway Information

Runway 18/36

Dimension:

9600 x 150 ft / 2926.1 x 45.7 m

Surface:

CONC,

Pavement Class:

31 /R/C/W/T

Weight Limit:

Dual dual tandem wheel: 818000 lbs.
ST186 TT352 TRT495 TDT794

Edge Lights:

High

 

Runway 18

Runway 36

Longitude:

086-41-23.5400W

086-41-15.8300W

Latitude:

30-26-31.5000N

30-24-56.7100N

Elevation:

33.00 ft

35.00 ft

Alignment:

127

127

ILS Type:

 

LOC/GS

Traffic Pattern:

Left

Right

Markings:

Precision instrument, Good Condition

Precision instrument, Good Condition

Arresting:

MA1A-M

MA1A-M

VASI:

nonstandard system

4-light PAPI on left side
RWY 36 PAPI GS AND ILS GS NOT COINCIDENTAL..

RVR Equipment:

 

touchdown

Approach lights:

SALS

ALSF1

Runway End Identifier:

No

No

Centerline Lights:

No

No

Touchdown Lights:

No

No

 

Radio Navigation Aids

ID

Type

Name

Ch

Freq

Var

Dist

DTS

NDB

Destin

 

254.00

01W

11.3 nm

PKZ

NDB

Pickens

 

326.00

01E

25.4 nm

DWG

TACAN

Warrington

002X

 

00E

9.2 nm

NGS

TACAN

Santa Rosa

063X

 

01E

17.1 nm

NSE

TACAN

Whiting

070X

 

01E

24.6 nm

NPA

TACAN

Pensacola

119X

 

01E

32.8 nm

NUN

VOR

Saufley

 

108.80

01E

33.6 nm

CEW

VORTAC

Crestview

106X

115.90

03E

23.9 nm

Remarks

  • BEARING STRENGTH RWY 18-36: ST174 TT352 TRT495 TDT 794
  • CAUTION: VFR CORRIDOR 1.2 NM S OF RWY. 80' CRANE (INTMT) LCTD 3000' S AND 1000' W OF EXTN RWY CNTRLINE. UNLGTD OBST ON AFLD.
  • NS ABTMT: TRAN AIRCREWS PLANNING TO FLY LCL SORTIES WHILE AT HURLBURT FLD MUST CTC AFLD MANAGEMENT DSN 579-4491, C850-884-4491 FOR BRIEFING.
  • MISC: WINDS ARE EST DUE TO FMQ-13 WIND SENSORS BEING ACCURATE TO WITHIN ONLY +/- 4 KT. ATC/WX WILL NOT INCL/RELAY WIND CORR INTO FCST/PHRASEOLOGY. THEREFORE, AIRCREWS WILL INCORPORATE A +/- 4 KT ACCURACY INTO THEIR DECISION MAKING PROCESS FOR FLYING OPR.
  • MISC: ACFT WITH DV7 OR ABV CTC COMD POST 30 MIN PRIOR TO ETA. ALL TRAN AIRCREWS WILL CHECK IN WITH BASE OPSBEFORE DEP FLT LINE. NO CLASSIFIED MATERIALS AVBL FOR TRAN ISSUE. LTD STOR FOR CLASSIFIED MATERIAL AT BASE OPS.
  • MISC: TOP SECRET AND ADDN STOR AVBL AT COMD POST. TRAN AIRCREWS PLANNING TO FLY LCL SORTIES MUST BRING A CELLULAR TO PROVIDE COMD POST A 24 HR CTC.
  • LGT: RWY 36 SFL'S INOP.
  • CUSTOMS/AG/IMG-ITD SVC: AVBL FOR BASE ASGN ACFT AND THEIR DEPLOYMENT ONLY. 24 HR PN RQR. ALL OTHER ACFT MUST CLEAR CSTMS PRIOR TO ARR TO HURLBURT FLD.
  • RSTD: DSPLCD THLD MAY BE USED BY BASE ASSIGNED ACFT FOR TKOF & ROLLOUT. CTC TWR WITH REQ TO BACK TAXI.
  • CAUTION: UNLIT HELIPADS 1000 FT E OF RY.
  • LGT: RWY 36 PAPI GS AND ILS GS NOT COINCIDENTAL.
  • MISC: FLEET SVC AVBL WITH A MIN 24 HRS NOTICE DSN 579-5781/3901.
  • MISC: PSGR PROCESSING REQ 24 HRS NOTICE DSN 579-5781/3901.
  • REMARKS - C5 AND C17 ACFT ARE NOT AUTH TO PARK EAST RAMP.
  • SERVICE - TRAN ALERT - NO F16 SUPPORT AVAILABLE.
  • RSTD: TAXIING ACFT ENGINE RUN-UPS AT THE FOLLOWING LOCATIONS PROVIDED THE AIRCREW HAS CLEARED THE AREA AND APPLIED ANY SPECIFIC MDS RESTRICTIONS. TWY ALPHA, DELTA WEST, FOXTROT, GOLF ABEAM BRAVO TWY AND GOLF ABEAM DELTA TWY (FLARE RAMP MUST BE CLEAR OF ACFT/PERSONNEL).
  • RSTD: TAXIING ACFT ENGINE RUN-UPS AT THE FOLLOWING LOCATIONS PRVDD THE AIRCREW HAS CLEARED THE AREA AND APPLIED ANY SPECIFIC MDS RESTRICTIONS. TWY ALPHA, DELTA WEST, FOXTROT, GOLF ABEAM BRAVO AND GOLF ABEAM DELTA TWY (FLARE RAMP MUST BE CLEAR OF ACFT/PERSONNEL).
  • TRANSIENT ACFT W/ WEAPONS LARGER THAN 30MM ARE LIMITED TO 5 ACFT W/ PARKING ON ALPHA TAXIWAY.
  • RSTD: HOT CARGO RAMP LIMITED TO WING ASSIGNED ACFT.
  • CAUTION: HELIPADS 2 AND 3 USE STANDARD SHIPBOARD MARKINGS.
  • JASU: (A/M32A-86D) (A/M32A-95) (MEP-360A)
  • RSTD: HELIPADS 1, 2 AND 3 LIMITED TO AFSOC AIRCRAFT ONLY.
  • FUEL: J8 - WITH 24 HR PN
  • FLUID: PRESAIR LOX LPOX. LOX NA FOR F-16, F-15, F-18, A-10, & T-38 ACFT.
  • OIL: O-148-156 SOAP
  • TRAN ALERT: TRANS ACFT MUST HAVE PPR AND USE FLW-ME TO PRK SVC AVBL 1300-0430Z++. TRAN ALERT WILL NOT SUPPORT LCL, ROUND ROBINS IN OR OUT AND BACK TRAN ACFT.
  • RSTD: PPR INCL SKED AMC MSN DUE LTD RAMP SPACE, TRAN ACFT PRK LTD, 24 HR PN RQR BASE OPS DSN 579-7806/7, C850-884-7806/7, FAX DSN 579-5358; PPR GOOD FOR +/-1 HR PPR TIME. COORD OF PPR OUTSIDE OF BLOCK TIME BY FONE IS RQR, OR PPR NR WILL BE CNL. AFLD SUBJ TO NO-NTC CLOSURE.C5 & C17 NOT AUTH TO PRK E
  • RSTD: ALL TRAN ACFT FLYING LCL AREA MSN, CTC COMD POST PRIOR TO TKOF OR ASAP AFT TKOF. ALL TRAN ACFT SUPTNG SPCL OPR CTC SEMINOLE OPS 30 MIN PRIOR ETA. COMPASS ROSE LTD TO TOW IN & OUT ONLY. RY 18 DISPL THLD MAY BE USED BY BASE ASSIGNED ACFT FOR TKOF & ROLLOUT, CTC TWR WITH REQ TO BACK TAXI.

 

Operational Statistics

Aircraft Operations:

181/Day

Military:

100.0%

 

Hurlburt Field Airport   

Address: Okaloosa County, FL

Tel: 904-882-2013


Images and information placed above are from
http://www.airport-data.com/airport/HRT/

We thank them for the data!

 


General Info
Country United States
State FLORIDA
FAA ID HRT
Latitude 30-25-43.715N
Longitude 086-41-19.837W
Elevation 38 feet
Near City MARY ESTHER



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