List of American military locations in southern Germany
The list of American military locations in southern Germany lists all military facilities of US units in southern Germany ( CENTAG / 4ATAF area ), both closed and existing. In order to preserve originality, the place names - as far as it seemed reasonable - follow the names used by the US armed forces (i.e. later community reforms are not taken into account).
The US armed forces were initially stationed as an occupation force (see United States Constabulary ) in their own zone from 1945 onwards . With the development of the East-West conflict, which from 1948 intensified into the “ Cold War ”, the number of troops and the mandate of the army were fundamentally changed. The maxim was no longer to control the defeated Germans, but to protect the Germans who had become partners since the Berlin blockade . The southern German stationing area in the states of Bavaria, Hesse and Württemberg-Baden was no longer sufficient after the troop reinforcement as a result of the "Korea shock" (1950): At the end of 1950, the 7th US Army was reactivated. In 1951 three infantry divisions (including two of the National Guard ) and one armored division were relocated from the USA to West Germany. An agreement with France made the deployment in Rhineland-Palatinate possible ; in return, French and Belgian troops were stationed in northern Hesse. The formation of the Bundeswehr from 1956 again led to a shift in American troops. With a few exceptions, northern Hesse and southern Bavaria were evacuated and the properties there were handed over to the German armed forces. The end of the Cold War, accelerated by the relocation of troops in connection with the Second Gulf War in 1990/91, led to the extensive withdrawal of American troops.
Basics
see also:
Baden-Württemberg
US armed forces locations in Baden-Württemberg (in brackets: closure before 1990) |
Family Housing Areas of the US Armed Forces in Baden-Württemberg in 1990 |
Location | property | Previous user | Troops | Year of dissolution | Reuse | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bad Mergentheim | German order barracks | US Constabulary | 1946 | USAREUR | ||
German order barracks | US Constabulary | USAREUR | 1992 | |||
Roggenberg Ammunition Area | USAREUR | 1992 | PSP 27 J. | |||
FlaRak position Hawk | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
Boeblingen | Panzer barracks | Wehrmacht | US Constabulary | 1948 | USAREUR | Keep German name |
Panzer barracks | US Constabulary | 7th Support Command (USAREUR) | 1993 | US Marines | ||
Panzer barracks | US Constabulary | Advanced Weapons Storage Facility | 1991 | 1957 Corporal 156 missiles, PSP 25 | ||
Panzer barracks | USAREUR | HQ USMARFOREUR (US Marines) | still existing | |||
Böblingen Family Housing | still existing | |||||
Stuttgart American High School | Rebuilt in 2015 in the Panzer barracks | DODEA (DoDDS) | still existing | Replacement for Patch High School, which closed in 2015 | ||
Boeblingen Terminal Station (BBG) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | still existing | ||||
Boettingen | US Custodial Team (357th USAAD) | 1966 | Nuclear custody for French Nike (BEN 520, 1961–1966), provisional Stetten am kalten Markt, Quartier de Reboul | |||
Bremgarten | Bremgarten Air Base | US Custodial Team (MUNSS Detachment) | 1966 | Nuclear custody for Base Aérienne 136 (1961–1966) | ||
Bremgarten Air Base | COB (USAFE) | 1994 | Advanced deployment base | |||
Bruchsal | Bruchsal Ordnance Area, Advanced Weapons Storage Facility | USAFE | 1993 | 1957 Hawk 576 missiles. RASP 971 | ||
Crailsheim | McKee Barracks | Air Force (Wehrmacht) Crailsheim Air Base, 43 pilot school | Artillery (USAREUR) | 1994 | PSP 82 | |
Crailsheim Family Housing | 1993 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 463 residential units | ||||
Crailsheim Dependents School | DoDDS | 1994 | ||||
Crailsheim Terminal Station (CLM) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1994 | ||||
Dallau | Dallau Tactical Defense Station | 1/67, 1st Nike HE Missile | 1971 | Nuclear warheads, 1961–1971 | ||
Dallau Tactical Defense Station | 3/71, 3rd Nike HE Missile | 1991 | Nuclear warheads, 1971–1991 | |||
Donaueschingen | Donaueschingen Contingency Hospital | USAFE | 1991 | Annex Ramstein | ||
Real things | Echterdingen Army Airfield, Stuttgart Army Airfield | Army Aviation (USAREUR) | 1995 | |||
Echterdingen Terminal Station (ECN) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1995 | ||||
Ellwangen | Ellwangen barracks | Mühlberg or SS barracks | Pioneers (USAREUR) | 1956 | Reinhardt barracks (Bundeswehr) | |
Ellwangen Dependents School | DoDDS | 1956 | ||||
Esslingen am Neckar | Becelaere barracks | Wehrmacht | HQ Logistics Kdo (USAREUR) | 1956 | Keep German name | |
Radio operator barracks | Wehrmacht | USAREUR | 1957/1991 | armed forces | Keep German name | |
Ettlingen | Rhineland barracks | Wehrmacht | Pioneers (USAREUR) | 1995 | Keep German name. Civil Support Center | |
Ettlingen Terminal Station (ETN) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1995 | ||||
Feldberg | Feldberg Communications Facility (FEL) | USAFE | 1992 | EAME Main Control Station | ||
ACE HIGH troposcatter terminal (AFEZ) | USAFE | 1995 | Forward scatter connection for SHAPE to Dosso di Galli (IDGZ) on Lake Garda (Italy) 1962–1995. | |||
Feldberg DEBS station | USAFE | 1992 | DEBS collocated with ACE HIGH. European Tropospheric Scatter - Army (ET-A), Nodal Site 11.1. | |||
Friedrichsdorf | POMCUS depot | USAREUR | 1992 | USAREUR | ||
Friolzheim | Friolzheim Communications Facility | USAFE | 1991 | |||
Friolzheim Relay Station (FZM) | 102nd signal Bn (USAREUR) | 1995 | DEBS station (FRI) | |||
Regency Net Communications Facility Friolzheim | 801st Telecommunications "R", C&C Sqn | 1997 | ||||
Goeppingen | Cooke Barracks | Göppingen Air Base of the Air Force (Wehrmacht), AG 13, 1st Aviation School Division, pilot school 116 | HQ Division (USAREUR) | 1992 | ||
Goeppingen Family Housing | 1992 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 471 residential units | ||||
Göppingen Dependents School | DoDDS | 1992 | ||||
Göppingen Terminal Station (GPN) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1992 | ||||
Grossengstingen | Eberhard-Finckh-Kaserne (special weapons store Camp Golf Trochtelfingen) | US Custodial Team (84th USAFAD) | 1992 | Nuclear custody for RakArtBtl 250 (Lance) | ||
Hardheim | Hardheim Missile Station | 1/67, 1st Nike HE Missile | 1971 | Nuclear warheads, 1961–1971 | ||
Hardheim Missile Station | 3/71, 3rd Nike HE Missile | 1992 | Nuclear warheads, relocated from Kleingartach in 1977 | |||
Heidelberg | Campbell Barracks | Greater Germany Barracks (Wehrmacht) | HQ USAREUR | 2013 | Also HQ CENTAG (NATO) | |
Patrick Henry Village Family Housing | 2013 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 2284 residential units in Heidelberg | ||||
Patrick Henry Elementary School | Erected in Patrick Henry Village | DODEA (DoDDS) | 2013 | |||
Heidelberg Middle School | Erected in Patrick Henry Village | DODEA (DoDDS) | 2013 | Founded in 1976 | ||
Mark Twain Village Family Housing | 2013 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 2284 residential units in Heidelberg | ||||
Heidelberg American High School | Erected in Mark Twain Village | DODEA (DoDDS) | 2013 | Julius Springer School | Accredited as a high school in 1947, with boarding school | |
Patton Barracks | Grenadier barracks (Wehrmacht) | HQ US Constabulary | 1948 | USAREUR | February 1948 Relocation to Stuttgart-Vaihingen, Patch Barracks | |
Patton Barracks | HQ US Constabulary | Heidelberg Military Post (USAREUR) | 2014 | Area Command North Baden 1965 | ||
News barracks | Wehrmacht | USAREUR | 2013 | Keep German name | ||
Heidelberg Terminal Station (HDG) | Co E / 102nd Signal Bn (USAREUR) | 2014 | European Tropospheric Scatter - Army (ET-A), Mainline Site 44th DEBS Station (HBG) | |||
Military Hospital ( News Barracks ) | Wehrmacht | 130th Station Hosp (USAREUR) | 2014 | |||
Army Hospital Heidelberg Terminal Station (AHH) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 2014 | ||||
Heidelberg Army Heliport | USAREUR | 2014 | ||||
Heilbronn | Badenerhof barracks | Wehrmacht | USAREUR | 1992 | Keep German name | |
Wharton Barracks | Priesterwald or Hessenhof and Schwabenhof barracks as well as Schlieffen barracks (Wehrmacht) | Pershing II (USAREUR) | 1992 | |||
Kennedy Village Family Housing | 1992 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 967 residential units | ||||
Heilbronn Dependents School | DoDDS | 1992 | ||||
Heilbronn Terminal Station (HBN) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1992 | ||||
Fort Redleg | Forest heather | Pershing II medium-range missile position (USAREUR) | 1991 | INF object of the USA | ||
Waldstetten ammunition depot | USAREUR | 1992 | PSP 28 | |||
Hochstetten | Hochstetten Ordnance Facility | USAREUR | 1992 | PSP 78 | ||
Hohenstadt | Hohenstadt Relay Station (HST) | Co B / 102nd Signal Bn (USAREUR) | 1995 | European Tropospheric Scatter - Army (ET-A), Nodal Site 50.1. | ||
Hohenstadt Radio Relay Station | USAFE | 1995 | ||||
Hohenstadt DEBS Station (HST) | USAFE | 1992 | DEBS connection to Coltano (Italy) | |||
Inneringen | US Custodial Team (u / i USAAD) | 1966 | US medium-range missile position | Nuclear custody for French Nike (BEN 521, 1961–1966), provisional Friedrichshafen, Quartier Durand de Villars | ||
Karlsruhe | Gerszewski Barracks | Rhine barracks (Wehrmacht) | HQ Engineer Brigade (USAREUR) | 1995 | ||
Phillips Barracks | Mackensen barracks (Wehrmacht) | USAREUR | 2013 | |||
Black Hawk Barracks | Mudra or pioneer barracks (Wehrmacht) | USAREUR | 1947 | |||
Karlsruhe Army Airfield | USAREUR | 1994 | ||||
Dragoon barracks | Wehrmacht | Labor service | 1995 | Keep German name | ||
Paul Revere Village Family Housing | 1995 | Built from 1950 to 1957, a total of 1462 residential units in Karlsruhe | ||||
Karlsruhe Dependents School | DoDDS | 1995 | ||||
Karlsruhe-Knielingen | Smiley Barracks | Barracks von Forstner Barracks (Wehrmacht) | US Constabulary | 1949 | USAREUR | |
Smiley Barracks | US Constabulary | Karlsruhe Military Post, HQ Munitions Brigade (USAREUR) | 1995 | |||
Smiley Barracks | US Constabulary | Historical Division (USEUCOM) | 1959 | Takeover of the task by G-3 USEUCOM | ||
POMCUS Depot Knielingen | USAREUR | 1995 | ||||
Karlsruhe-Neureut | Neureut barracks | HQ Telecommunications Brigade (USAREUR) | 1995 | Keep German name. | ||
Karlsruhe Terminal Station (KRE) | Co E / 102nd Signal Bn (USAREUR) | 1995 | ||||
POMCUS Depot Neureut | USAREUR | 1995 | Controlled Humidity Storage Facility, Prepositioned War Reserve Munitions 1985–1990 | |||
Neureut Labor Service barracks | Labor service | 1993 | ||||
Kleingartach | Kleingartach Missile Station | 3/71, 3rd Nike HE Missile | 1977 | Nuclear warheads, moved to Hardheim in 1977 | ||
Königstuhl | Königstuhl Relay Station (KSL) | Co E / 102nd Signal Bn (USAREUR) | 1995 | DEBS Main Control Station (KSL) | ||
Kornwestheim | Ludendorff barracks | (Wehrmacht) | USAREUR | 1993 | Keep German name. | |
Wilkin Barracks | Hindenburg barracks (Wehrmacht) | USAREUR | 1993 | |||
Wilkin Barracks | Hindenburg barracks (Wehrmacht) | HQ 3/71, 3rd Nike HE Missile | 1984 | Nuclear warheads, 1961–1984 | ||
Ludendorff barracks | Wehrmacht | USAREUR | 1993 | Keep German name | ||
copper | Muna Copper Ammo Facility | USAREUR | 1992 | PSP 26 | ||
Lahr | RCAF Base Lahr | COB (USAFE) | 1994 | Advanced deployment base | ||
Lassbach | Forward Storage Site | USAREUR | 1993 | |||
Ludwigsburg | Coffey Barracks | Fromann barracks (Wehrmacht) | Greater Stuttgart Military Post (USAREUR) | 1992 | ||
Murphy Barracks | Mathilden barracks (Wehrmacht) | HQ Telecommunications Brigade (USAREUR) | 1990 | |||
Valdez Barracks | Reinhardt barracks (Wehrmacht) | HQ Engineer Brigade (USAREUR) | 1991 | |||
Flak barracks | Wehrmacht | USAREUR | 1993 | Keep German name. | ||
Crab Hole Barracks | Wehrmacht | HQ MP Brigade (USAREUR) | 1992 | Keep German name. | ||
Karl's barracks | Wehrmacht | USAREUR | 1991 | Keep German name. | ||
Pattonville Barracks | USAREUR | 1993 | ||||
Stuttgart American High School (1961 - 1968 Ludwigsburg American High School) | Erected in 1955 in Pattonville (1953 - 1955 in Robinson Barracks) | DODEA (DoDDS) | 1992 | Erich Bracher School | Accredited as a high school in 1954. Patch High School served as a replacement for the dissolved Stuttgart High School from 1992 to 2015 | |
Ludwigsburg Army Airfield | USAREUR | 1993 | ||||
Pattonville Family Housing | 1993 | Built from 1950 to 1957, a total of 368 residential units in Ludwigsburg | ||||
Aldingerstrasse Family Housing | 1993 | Built from 1950 to 1957, a total of 368 residential units in Ludwigsburg | ||||
Stuttgarter Strasse Family Housing | 1993 | Built from 1950 to 1957, a total of 368 residential units in Ludwigsburg | ||||
Ludwigsburg Terminal Station (LUD) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1993 | ||||
POMCUS depot | USAREUR | 1990 | ||||
Mannheim | Turley Barracks | Kaiser Wilhelm or Landwehr barracks (Wehrmacht) | USAREUR | 2007 | ||
University of Maryland (Turley Campus) | 2007 | |||||
Taylor Barracks | Headlight barracks (Wehrmacht) | USAREUR | 2011 | Bird rod | ||
Gendarmerie barracks | Wehrmacht | USAREUR | 1991 | Keep German name. | ||
Mannheim Terminal Station (MHN) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 2007 | DEBS station (MHN) | |||
Rheinau barracks | Wehrmacht | USAREUR | 1994 | Keep German name. | ||
Benjamin Franklin Village Family Housing | 2011 | Built from 1950 to 1957, a total of 2303 residential units in Mannheim | ||||
Mannheim Elementary School | DODEA (DoDDS) | 2013 | ||||
Mannheim Middle School | DODEA (DoDDS) | 2013 | ||||
Mannheim American High School | DODEA (DoDDS) | 2013 | Accredited as a high school in 1957 | |||
Friedrichsfeld Storage Area | USAREUR | 1991 | ||||
Mannheim-Feudenheim | Spinelli Barracks (FDM) | Pioneer or Reinhardt barracks (Wehrmacht) | HQ 102nd signal Bn (USAREUR) | 2014 | HQ directional radio network Feudenheim (FDM). War HQ CENTAG in the underground bunker. | |
Mannheim-Käfertal | Sullivan Barracks | Flak barracks (Wehrmacht) | USAREUR | 2013 | ||
Funari Barracks | Gallwitz barracks (Wehrmacht) | USAREUR | 2014 | |||
Mannheim-Sandhofen | Coleman Barracks | Air Force (Wehrmacht) Air Base Sandhofen, JG 53 | HQ Brigade (USAREUR) | still existing | Use as material depot since 1992; the closure planned for February 2016 was initially suspended in 2015. | |
Coleman Barracks | Mannheim Confinement Facility | 1992 | Military prison | |||
Coleman Terminal Station (COL) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1992 | ||||
Mannheim-Seckenheim | Hammond's Barracks | Loretto barracks (Wehrmacht) | US Constabulary | 1948 | USAREUR | |
Hammond's Barracks | US Constabulary | USAREUR | 2010 | HQ ACE Mobile Force (NATO) 1961–1980 | ||
Cawley Barracks | Stem barracks (Wehrmacht) | USAREUR | 2010 | |||
Seckenheim Relay Station (SKM) | Co E / 102nd Signal Bn (USAREUR) | 1962 | LANDCENT Microwave System (Terminal B) 1952–1962, AIRCENT Microwave System (Terminal B) 1952–1958. | |||
Merklingen | Ammunition depot | USAREUR | 1991 | PSP 81 | ||
Courageous | Mutlanger Heath | Pershing II medium-range missile position (USAREUR) | 1991 | INF object of the USA | ||
Mutlangen Army Airfield | USAREUR | 1991 | ||||
Neckarsulm | Artillery barracks | Artillery barracks (Wehrmacht) | Pershing II (USAREUR) | 1992 | Keep German name. | |
Neckarsulm Terminal Station (NCM) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1992 | ||||
Nellingen | Nellingen Barracks | Supply Command (USAREUR) | 1992 | Civilian Support Group | ||
Nellingen Family Housing | 1993 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 224 residential units | ||||
Nellingen Dependents School | DoDDS | 1992 | ||||
Nellingen Terminal Station (NEL) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1992 | ||||
Pforzheim | Black Hawk Barracks | Buckenberg barracks (Wehrmacht) | USAREUR | 1951 | Quartier Burnol, Quartier Joffre (FFA) until 1999 | |
Pforzheim Family Housing | 1992 | Built after 1957 | ||||
Pforzheim Dependents School | DoDDS | 1992 | ||||
Pfullendorf | Colonel General von Fritsch Barracks | US Custodial Team (2nd USAFAD) | 1992 | Renamed to Staufer barracks in 2013 | Nuclear custody for RakArtBtl 102, ArtRgt 10 | |
Regency Net Communications Facility Pfullendorf | 801st Telecommunications "R", C&C Sqn | 1997 | ||||
Philippsburg | Salm barracks | US Custodial Team (3rd USAFAD) | 1992 | Nuclear custody for RakArtBtl 122 | ||
Radolfzell | Vauban district | US Custodial Team (9th USAFAD) | 1966 | Nuclear custody for French armed forces (302e GA, 1961–1966) | ||
Reisenbach | Reisenbach Communications Annex | USAFE | 1992 | |||
Sachsenheim | Sachsenheim Missile Station | Großsachsenheim Air Base | 3/71, 3rd Nike HE Missile | 1990 | Nuclear warheads | |
POMCUS depot | USAREUR | 1992 | Eichwald Business Park | |||
Schwäbisch Gmünd | Bismarck barracks | Wehrmacht | HQ Pershing II Medium Range Missile Brigade (USAREUR) | 1991 | Keep German name. | |
Hardt barracks | Wehrmacht | Pershing II (USAREUR) | 1991 | Keep German name. | ||
University of Maryland (Schwäbisch Gmünd Campus) | 2007 | Founded in 1992 to replace the closed McGraw Campus | ||||
Schwäbisch Gmünd Family Housing | 1991 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 381 residential units | ||||
Schwäbisch Gmünd Dependents School | DoDDS | 1991 | ||||
Schwäbisch Gmünd Terminal Station (SGD) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1991 | ||||
Schwäbisch Hall | Camp Dolan | Hessental Air Base | US Constabulary | 1948 | USAREUR | |
Dolan Barracks (until 1949 Camp Dolan) | US Constabulary | Army Aviation (USAREUR) | 1993 | |||
Hessental Family Housing | 1993 | Built from 1950 to 1957, a total of 199 residential units | ||||
Schwäbisch Hall Dependents School | DoDDS | 1993 | ||||
Schwäbisch Hall Relay Station (SCL) (SHL) | 102nd signal Bn (USAREUR) | 1995 | ||||
Schwetzingen | Kilbourne Barracks | New barracks (Wehrmacht) | USAREUR Class VI Agency | 2012 | PSP 79 | |
Tompkins Barracks | Panzer barracks (Wehrmacht) | US Constabulary | 1947 | USAREUR | ||
Tompkins Barracks | US Constabulary | 1 Personal Command (USAREUR) | 2012 | |||
Schwetzingen Terminal Station (SZN) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 2012 | DEBS station (SCW) | |||
Siegelbach | Nuclear depot (central warehouse), Siegelsbach Ammo Facility | USAREUR | 1993 | Medium-range missile warheads Pershing II | ||
Siegelsbach Terminal Station (SSB) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1993 | ||||
Stocksberg | Stocksberg DEBS Repeater (SSB) | USAREUR | 1993 | |||
Stuttgart | Grenadier barracks | Wehrmacht | USAREUR | 1993 | Keep German name. | |
Robinson Barracks | Flanders Barracks (Wehrmacht) | USAREUR | 1995 | Area Command North Württemberg 1965 | ||
Robinson Family Housing | 1993 | Built from 1950 to 1957, a total of 3465 residential units in Stuttgart | ||||
Stuttgart Elementary School | DODEA (DoDDS) | still existing | ||||
Robinson Barracks Elementary School | Erected in Robinson Barracks | DODEA (DoDDS) | still existing | |||
Robinson Barracks Middle School | Erected in Robinson Barracks | DODEA (DoDDS) | still existing | |||
Grenadier Family Housing | 1993 | Built from 1950 to 1957, a total of 3465 residential units in Stuttgart | ||||
Stuttgart Terminal Station (SGT) | Co B / 102nd Signal Bn (USAREUR) | 1995 | DEBS Station (SGT) | |||
AFN Studio | AFN Stuttgart | 1993 | Founded in 1948. | |||
Stuttgart-Bad Cannstatt | Wallace Barracks | Reiter barracks (Wehrmacht) | US Constabulary | 1947 | USAREUR | |
Wallace Barracks | US Constabulary | USAREUR | 1993 | |||
McGee Barracks | Small Reiter barracks (Wehrmacht) | USAREUR | 1993 | |||
Military hospital | 5th Gen Hosp (USAREUR) | 1993 | ||||
Bad Cannstatt Terminal Station (BCT) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1993 | ||||
Stuttgart-Moehringen | Kelley Barracks | Helenen barracks (Wehrmacht) | US Constabulary | 1947 | USAREUR | |
Kelley Barracks | US Constabulary | HQ VII (US) Corps (USAREUR) | 1992 | |||
Kelley Barracks | USAREUR | HQ USAFRICOM | still existing, relocation announced on July 29, 2020 | |||
Möhringen Family Housing | still existing | Built from 1950 to 1957, a total of 3465 residential units in Stuttgart | ||||
Kelley Terminal Station (KLY) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | still existing | ||||
Stuttgart-Vaihingen | Patch barracks | Kurmärker barracks (Wehrmacht) | HQ US Constabulary | 1950 | November 24, 1950 reclassified to HQ Seventh Army | |
Patch barracks | HQ US Constabulary | Seventh Army HQ 1950–1966 | 1967 | Relocation to Heidelberg | ||
Patch barracks | HQ Seventh Army | HQ USEUCOM since 1967 | still existing, announced on July 29, 2020 relocation to Casteau near Mons (Belgium) | Relocation from Camp des Loges, Rocquencourt (France) | ||
Patch Elementary School | Erected in Patch Barracks | DODEA (DoDDS) | still existing | |||
Patch Middle School | Erected in Patch Barracks | DODEA (DoDDS) | still existing | |||
Patch American High School | Erected in Patch Barracks | DODEA (DoDDS) | 2015 | Accredited as a high school in 1979. 2015 Stuttgart High School rebuilt in Böblingen. | ||
Craig Village Family Housing | still existing | Built from 1950 to 1957, a total of 3465 residential units in Stuttgart | ||||
From Steuben Village Family Housing | still existing | Built from 1950 to 1957, a total of 3465 residential units in Stuttgart | ||||
Kefurt Village Family Housing | still existing | Built from 1950 to 1957, a total of 3465 residential units in Stuttgart | ||||
Village Family Housing gives way | still existing | Built from 1950 to 1957, a total of 3465 residential units in Stuttgart | ||||
Vaihingen Terminal Station (VHN) | Co B / 102nd Signal Bn (USAREUR) | 1995 | DEBS Station (PKS) in the P atch K a s erne | |||
Söllingen | RCAF Base Söllingen | US Custodial Team (MUNSS Detachment) | 1984 | Nuclear custody for RCAF Base Söllingen | ||
RCAF Base Söllingen | COB (USAFE) | 1994 | Advanced deployment base | |||
Türkheim | CRC | USAFE | 1958 | FmRgt 31, Meßstetten (Air Force), call sign SWEET APPLE | 412-L position, call sign BIFORM (1981), JOPLIN | |
Ulm | Ford Barracks | Hindenburg barracks (Wehrmacht) | USAREUR | 1960 | ||
Ford Family Housing | 1991 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 677 residential units | ||||
Lead thorn barracks | Wehrmacht | USAREUR | 1962 | armed forces | Keep German name. | |
Boelcke barracks | Wehrmacht | USAREUR | 1959 | armed forces | Keep German name. | |
Flanders barracks | Wehrmacht | USAFE | 1958/1964 | Wilhelmsburg barracks (Bundeswehr) from 1967 | Keep German name. Accommodation for CRC Türkheim. | |
Vacation | US custodial team | 1965 | Nuclear custody, relocation to Günzburg in 1965 | |||
Villingen | Lyautey district | US Custodial Team (15th USAFAD) | 1966 | Nuclear custody for French armed forces (50e RA, 1961–1966) | ||
Weinheim | US Constabulary | 1947 | ||||
Weinberg | Ammunition depot | USAREUR | 1992 | PSP 80 | ||
Wertheim | Peden Barracks | Reinhardshof air base of the Air Force (Wehrmacht), StuKaG 51, StuKaSchule 1 | HQ Artillery Brigade (USAREUR) | 1994 | PSP 6 J | |
FlaRak position Hawk | USAREUR | 1993 | ||||
Wertheim Terminal Station (WRT) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1994 | ||||
Wertheim Family Housing | 1994 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 305 residential units | ||||
Wertheim Dependents School | DoDDS | 1994 | ||||
Wurmberg | FlaRak position Nike | 3/71, 3rd Nike HE Missile | 1984 | Nuclear warheads |
Bavaria
US Armed Forces locations in Bavaria (in brackets: closure before 1990) |
Location | property | Previous user | Troops | Year of dissolution | Reuse | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Albaching | Forward Storage Site | USAREUR | 1993 | |||
On the mountain | Pond Barracks | Ritter von Möhl barracks (Wehrmacht) | Amberg Military Post (USAREUR) | 1992 | ||
Amberg Family Housing | 1994 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 134 residential units | ||||
Amberg Dependents School | DoDDS | 1993 | ||||
Amberg Army Airfield | USAREUR | 1993 | ||||
Amberg Terminal Station (AMG) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1993 | ||||
FlaRak position Hawk | USAREUR | 1993 | ||||
Fuchsstein Storage Area | USAREUR | 1994 | ||||
Ansbach | Barton Barracks | Gneisenau barracks (Wehrmacht) | USAREUR | 1992 | ||
Lead-thorn barracks | Wehrmacht | Artillery (USAREUR) | 1992 | Keep German name. | ||
Bleidorn Family Housing | 1992 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 444 residential units | ||||
Ansbach Elementary School | DODEA (DoDDS) | 1992 | ||||
Ansbach American Middle / High School | DODEA (DoDDS) | 1992 | ||||
Ansbach-Bleidorn Terminal Station (ABB) | 5th Signal Command | 1993 | ||||
Hindenburg barracks | Wehrmacht | HQ Division (USAREUR) | 1992 | Keep German name. | ||
Ansbach-Hindenburg Terminal Station (ABH) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1993 | ||||
FlaRak position Hawk | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
Ansbach-Katterbach | Bismarck barracks | Luftwaffe (Wehrmacht) | Ansbach Air Depot (USAFE) | 1947 | Handover to USAREUR | |
Bismarck barracks | Air Depot (USAFE) | Army Aviation (USAREUR) | still existing | Keep German name | ||
Katterbach Dependents School | DoDDS | 1993 | ||||
Katterbach Terminal Station (KAT) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | still existing | DEBS station (KBH) | |||
FlaRak position Hawk | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
Hawk FlaRak position (Oberdachstetten) | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
Ammunition depot Oberdachstetten | USAREUR | 1992 | PSP 30 | |||
Urlas ammunition depot | USAREUR | 1992 | PSP 31 | |||
Oberdachstetten Family Housing | 1992 | |||||
Aschaffenburg | Fiori Barracks | Pioneer barracks (Wehrmacht) | HQ Brigade (USAREUR) | 1992 | ||
Graves Barracks | Bois Brûlé barracks (Wehrmacht) | USAREUR | 1992 | |||
Jaeger barracks | Jäger barracks (Wehrmacht) | USAREUR | 1992 | Keep German name. | ||
Ready barracks | La Garde barracks (Wehrmacht) | USAREUR | 1992 | |||
Smith Barracks | Artillery barracks (Wehrmacht) | USAREUR | 1992 | |||
Taylor Barracks | Army catering facility (Wehrmacht) | USAREUR | 1990 | Military training area | ||
Aschaffenburg Family Housing | 1998 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 747 residential units | ||||
Aschaffenburg Dependents School | DoDDS | 1998 | ||||
Aschaffenburg Terminal Station (AFG) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1992 | ||||
Travis Park | USAREUR | 2007 | in the districts of Gailbach and Schweinheim | |||
Aschaffenburg Army Airfield | USAREUR | 1991 | ||||
FlaRak position Hawk | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
augsburg | Flak barracks | Wehrmacht | USAREUR | 1994 | Keep German name. | |
Military hospital ( anti-aircraft barracks ) | Wehrmacht | 11th Field Hosp, 34th Gen Hosp (USAREUR) | 1994 | |||
Augsburg-Flak Terminal Station (ABF) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1994 | ||||
Reese Barracks | Somme and Arras barracks (Wehrmacht) | Augsburg Military Post (USAREUR) | 1994 | Area Command Southern Bavaria 1965 | ||
Prince Karl barracks | Wehrmacht | USAREUR 1950 | 1969 | armed forces | Keep German name | |
Centerville Family Housing | 1998 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 2151 residential units in Augsburg | ||||
Augsburg Dependents School | DoDDS | 1998 | ||||
Augsburg American High School | DoDDS | 1998 | Accredited as a high school in 1956. | |||
Cramerton Family Housing | 1998 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 2151 residential units in Augsburg | ||||
Fryar Circle Family Housing | 1998 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 2151 residential units in Augsburg | ||||
Sullivan Heights Family Housing | 1998 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 2151 residential units in Augsburg | ||||
Augsburg Terminal Station (ABG) | Co B / 102nd Signal Bn (USAREUR) | 1995 | DEBS station (RAG) in R eese Barracks A ugsbur g | |||
Haunstetten Army Airfield | USAREUR | 1964 | ||||
Bonstetten Radio Relay Facility (BST) | 11th AD signal Bn (LFV) | 1992 | DEBS Station (BST) | |||
Augsburg-Gablingen | Gablingen barracks | Luftwaffe (Wehrmacht), ZG 76, pilot school 5 | USAREUR | 1998 | ||
Patch barracks | News barracks (Wehrmacht) | USAREUR | 1998 | |||
Sheridan Barracks | News barracks (Wehrmacht) | US Constabulary | 1951 | USAREUR | ||
Sheridan Barracks | US Constabulary | USAREUR | 1998 | |||
Gablingen Dependents School | DoDDS | 1998 | ||||
Site 300 | US Army Field Station (USAFS) / Army Security Agency (ASA) | 1998 | FmElo Aufkl ("largest US Comint complex in Europe") | |||
Collection site Augsburg-Gablingen | Electronic Security Command (USAFE) | 1998 | FmElo Aufkl | |||
NSG activity Gablingen | Naval Security Group (NSG), US Navy | 1998 | FmElo Aufkl | |||
Gablingen Communications Station (GBL) | HQ 11th AD signal Bn (LFV) | 1992 | DEBS station (GAB) | |||
Bad Aibling | Bad Aibling Station , Collection Site F-91 "Garlick" | Luftwaffe (Wehrmacht), JG 51 "Mölders" | USAREUR | 2004 | operated by US Army for NSA (FmElo Aufkl) | |
Bad Aibling Terminal Station (BAI) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 2004 | ||||
Bad Aibling Family Housing Area | 2004 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 110 residential units | ||||
Bad Aibling Dependents School | DoDDS | 2006 | ||||
Bad Kissingen | Daley Barracks | Manteuffel barracks (Wehrmacht) | USAREUR | 1992 | ||
Bad Kissingen Terminal Station (BKI) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1992 | ||||
Bad Kissingen Air Base | HQ 12th Air Force (USAFE) | 1952 | USAREUR | |||
Reiterswiesen Army Airfield | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
Bad Kissingen Dependents School | DoDDS | 1994 | ||||
FlaRak position Hawk | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
Rottershausen Ammo Storage Area | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
Bad Neustadt an der Saale | Camp Lee (Wollbach) | Border Resident Office (USAREUR) | 1992 | Mühlfeld (Rhön) | ||
Bad Tölz | Flint barracks | SS Junker School | Bad Tölz Military Post (USAREUR) | 1991 | ||
Baker Army Airfield | HQ Special Forces (USAREUR) | 1990 | ||||
Sachsenkamerstrasse Housing Area | 1991 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 500 residential units | ||||
Bad Tölz Dependents School | DoDDS | 1991 | ||||
Bad Toelz Relay Station (BTZ) | 102nd signal Bn (USAREUR) | 1995 | ||||
Bamberg | Warner Barracks | Artillery or La Garde and tank barracks (Wehrmacht) | HQ US Constabulary | 1947 | USAREUR | February 1947 relocation to Heidelberg, Patton Barracks |
Warner Barracks | US Constabulary | Bamberg Military Post, HQ Brigade (USAREUR) | 2014 | |||
Warner Barracks Family Housing | 2014 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 841 residential units in Bamberg | ||||
Bamberg Elementary School | DODEA (DoDDS) | 2014 | ||||
Bamberg American High School | DODEA (DoDDS) | 2014 | ||||
Flynn Family Housing | 2014 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 841 residential units in Bamberg | ||||
Bamberg Terminal Station (BBG) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 2014 | ||||
Bamberg Army Airfield | USAREUR | 2012 | ||||
FlaRak position Hawk | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
Bamberg Storage Area | USAREUR | 2000 | PSP 94 | |||
Bayreuth | Hagan Barracks | Hans Schemm Barracks (Wehrmacht) | US Constabulary | 1947 | ||
Roehrensee barracks | Röhrensee barracks (Wehrmacht) | USAREUR | 1992 | Keep German name. | ||
Garden City Family Housing | 1992 | Built from 1950 to 1957, a total of 136 residential units in Bayreuth | ||||
Meranierring Family Housing | 1992 | Built from 1950 to 1957, a total of 136 residential units in Bayreuth | ||||
Berchtesgaden | Strub barracks | USAREUR | 1995 | Keep German name. | ||
Berchtesgaden Recreation Area | USAREUR | 1993 | ||||
Berchtesgaden Dependents School | DoDDS | 1991 | ||||
Berchtesgaden Terminal Station (BGN) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1995 | ||||
Bindlach | Christensen Barracks | Bindlach Air Base | Army Aviation (USAREUR) | 1992 | ||
Bindlach Dependents School | DoDDS | 1992 | ||||
Bindlach Terminal Station (BAI) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1992 | ||||
fire | Camp Gates | Haingrün camp | USAREUR | 1992 | ||
Brandhof | Brandhof Communications Station | USAFE | 1992 | |||
Brandhof Communications Station (BDF) | 11th AD signal Bn (LFV) | 1992 | DEBS station (BDF) | |||
Breitsol | Breitsol Relay Station (BTL) | Co A / 102nd Signal Bn (USAREUR) | 1995 | |||
Breitsol Communications Station | 11th AD signal Bn (LFV) | 1992 | DEBS station (BTL) | |||
Chiemsee | Chiemsee Recreation Area | USAREUR | 1993 | |||
Colmberg | Colmberg Radio Relay Facility | USAFE | 1992 | DEBS station | ||
Coburg | Camp Harris | Hindenburg barracks (Wehrmacht) | US Constabulary | 1950 | USAREUR | |
Harris Barracks (until 1950 Camp Harris) | US Constabulary | Border Observation Point (USAREUR) | 1990 | |||
Coburg-Kronach Family Housing | 1992 | Built after 1957 | ||||
Dachau | Eastman Barracks | SS training camp | 37th Field Artillery Battalion (USAREUR) | 1973 | ||
Dachau Dependents School | DoDDS | 1973 | ||||
Eastman Barracks | Dachau Confinement Facility | 1969 | Military prison | |||
Dachau Communications Station | 11th AD signal Bn (LFV) | 1992 | ||||
Degerndorf | Fort May | Karfreit barracks (Wehrmacht) | US Constabulary | 1948 | ||
May Barracks (until 1948 Fort May) | US Constabulary | USAREUR | 1954 | BAOR until 1958 | ||
Degerndorf Dependents School | DoDDS | 1954 | ||||
Deggendorf | Pirie Barracks | Wehrmacht | US Constabulary | 1951 | USAREUR | |
Pirie Barracks | US Constabulary | USAREUR | 1957 | |||
O'Toole Field | USAREUR | 1957 | Runway | |||
Döbraberg | CRC | USAFE | 1992 | call sign PATRICK, 1964 KILLDEER | ||
Rivet Switch ground communications terminal | Aircraft Control and Warning Squadron (SAC) | 1992 | Rivet Joint Program under ESC (Electronic Security Command) and SAC | |||
Döbraberg Terminal Station (DBA) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1992 | ||||
No dehydrated water | Dehydrated Tactical Defense Site | USAREUR | 1992 | Hawk | ||
cornerstone | US Army Field Station (USAFS) | FWD Ops Bn Eckstein (USAREUR) | 1992 | Remote signal collection Eckstein (FmElo Aufkl) | ||
Eckstein DEBS Micro Wave relay | USAFE | 1992 | DEBS station | |||
Eckstein Radio Station | 11th AD signal Bn (LFV) | 1992 | ||||
Erding | Erding Air Depot | USAFE | 1957 | Erding Air Base (Bundeswehr) | 1955 planned joint use of USAFE and Air Force | |
Erding Air Base | COB (USAFE) | 1994 | Advanced deployment base | |||
Williamsville Family Housing Area | USAFE | 1991 | ||||
Erding Dependents School | DoDDS | 1957 | ||||
FlaRak position Hawk | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
gain | Ferris Barracks | Panzer or St. Mihiel and artillery or Rhineland barracks (Wehrmacht) | HQ Brigade (USAREUR) | 1992 | ||
Erlangen Terminal Station (ELN) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1992 | call sign PLANTER | |||
Erlangen Air Base | USAFE | 1946 | USAREUR | |||
Erlangen Family Housing | 1994 | Built after 1957 | ||||
Erlangen Dependents School | DoDDS | 1994 | With boarding school for Nuremberg High School in Fürth. | |||
Forest Tennenlohe | Tennenlohe Training and Storage Area | USAREUR | 1994 | PSP 34 J. | ||
Eussenhausen | Observation Point Tennessee | USAREUR | 1991 | |||
Wet | Moist Army Airfield | Army Aviation (USAREUR) | 1992 | |||
Feucht Terminal Station (FCT) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1994 | ||||
POMCUS depot | USAREUR | 1992 | USAREUR | |||
Moist POL Storage Facility | USAREUR | 1994 | ||||
Zennwald Ammo Storage Area | USAREUR | 1991 | ||||
Fladungen | Observation Point Sierra | USAREUR | 1991 | |||
Freising | Vimy barracks | Wehrmacht | US Constabulary | 1947 | USAFE | Keep German name |
Vimy Barracks , CRC | US Constabulary | USAFE | 1959 | FmRgt 31 (Luftwaffe), call sign COLD TRACK | Keep German name. 412-L position, call sign RACE CARD | |
Artillery barracks | Wehrmacht | US Constabulary | 1947 | Keep German name | ||
Freising Terminal Station (FSG) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1992 | ||||
FlaRak position Hawk | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
Fürstenfeldbruck | Fürstenfeldbruck (Fursty) Air Base | Luftwaffe (Wehrmacht), Air War School 4 | 36th FBW (USAFE) | 1957 | JaboG 49 (Air Force) | 1952 relocation to Bitburg |
Fürstenfeldbruck Dependents School | DoDDS | 1957 | ||||
Fuerth | Johnson Barracks | Panzer barracks (Wehrmacht) | USAREUR | 1992 | Area Command Northern Bavaria 1965 | |
Fuerth Air Base | Atzenhof air base of the Luftwaffe (Wehrmacht), fighter pilot school 4 | USAFE | 1947 | USAREUR | ||
Industrial Port Air Base | USAFE | 1947 | USAREUR | Industrial port storage depot | ||
Monteith Barracks | Atzenhof Air Base | HQ Supply Command (USAREUR) | 1995 | |||
Nuremberg American High School | DODEA (DoDDS) | 2014 | Accredited as a high school in 1947, with boarding school in Erlangen | |||
Monteith Terminal Station (MTH) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1995 | ||||
Darby Barracks | Sedan barracks (Wehrmacht) | Nuremberg-Fürth Military Post (USAREUR) | 1995 | |||
Darby Barracks | Fürth Confinement Facility | 1995 | Military prison | |||
Kalb Family Housing | 1995 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 84 residential units | ||||
FlaRak position Hawk | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
Feet | Barnette Barracks | Graf Bothmer Barracks (Wehrmacht) | US Constabulary | 1947 | ||
Füssen Dependents School | DoDDS | 1956 | ||||
Garmisch | Artillery barracks | Artillery barracks (Wehrmacht) | USAREUR | 1993 | George C. Marshall Center | Keep German name. |
Sheridan Barracks | Bergjäger barracks (Wehrmacht) | US Army Russian Language School, Garmisch Military Post (USAREUR) | 1957 | Bundeswehr until 1993 | ||
Sheridan Barracks | Bergjäger barracks (Bundeswehr) | George C. Marshall Center | still existing | |||
Garmisch Family Housing | still existing | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 103 residential units | ||||
Garmisch Elementary / Middle School | DODEA (DoDDS) | still existing | ||||
Garmisch Terminal Station (GAR) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1993 | ||||
Garmisch Recreation Area | USAREUR | 1993 | ||||
Violin cheek | Geigenwang DEBS Repeater (GEG) | USAREUR | 1992 | |||
Gerhardshofen | Forward Storage Site | USAREUR | 1993 | |||
Germering | Texas Area | USAREUR | 1957 | Unterpfaffenhofen | ||
Gable City | Giebelstadt Air Base (Y-90) | Giebelstadt Air Base | USAFE Fighter Group | 1962 | USAREUR, Emil-von-Behring-Kaserne (Bundeswehr) | 1946 USAF was the first association to be equipped with Jet Lockheed P-80 Shooting Star, planned for joint use of USAFE and Air Force in 1955 |
CRC | USAFE | 1958 | FmRgt 31, Lauda (Air Force), call sign STRAW BASKET, 1977 BATMAN | 412-L position, call sign MOON GLOW | ||
Giebelstadt Army Airfield | USAFE | HQ Army Aviation Brigade (USAREUR) | 2007 | Base for the B-29 nuclear bomber based on the rotating principle | ||
Giebelstadt Army Terminal Station (GBT) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 2007 | ||||
Giebelstadt Air Force Terminal Station (GST) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 2007 | ||||
Giebelstadt Tactical Defense Site | USAFE | USAREUR | 2007 | Hawk | ||
Grafenwohr | Grafenwoehr Training Area (Tower Barracks) | HQ Training Command, Grafenwoehr Military Post (USAREUR) | still existing | Military training area | ||
Grafenwoehr Army Airfield | USAREUR | still existing | ||||
Grafenwoehr Terminal Station (GFN) (GFO) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | still existing | DEBS station (GRF), call sign CONSOLE | |||
Netzaberg Housing Area | Netzaberg village abandoned for the military training area in 1938 | Netzaberg Housing Area | still existing | Built in 2006 - 2008 as the largest housing estate outside the US with 832 houses for 3,600 US soldiers. | ||
Grafenwoehr Elementary School | DODEA (DoDDS) | still existing | ||||
Netzaberg Elementary School | DODEA (DoDDS) | still existing | ||||
Netzaberg Middle School | DODEA (DoDDS) | still existing | ||||
POMCUS depot | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
FlaRak position Hawk | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
Gunzburg | Prinz-Eugen-Kaserne, nuclear depot (central warehouse Riedheim) | US Custodial Team HQ (512th USAAG) | 1992 | Warheads and nuclear ammunition for II. (GE) Corps and 4 ATAF, PSP 32. | ||
Regency Net Communications Facility Günzburg | 801st Telecommunications "R", C&C Sqn | 1997 | ||||
Hammelburg | Camp Clarke | Hammelburg camp (Wehrmacht) | US Constabulary | 1947 | USAREUR | |
Camp Clarke | US Constabulary | US Army Urban Warfare School | 1957 | armed forces | ||
Forward Storage Site | USAREUR | 1993 | ||||
Heidenheim | Heidenheim Radio Relay Site (HDM) | 11th AD signal Bn (LFV) | 1992 | DEBS Station (HDM) | ||
Hemau | General von Steuben barracks | US Custodial Team (36th USAFAD) | 1992 | Nuclear custody for RakArtBtl 42 | ||
Hepberg | Hepberg Ammo Storage Site | USAREUR | 1991 | PSP 35 | ||
Herzogenaurach | Herzo Artillery Base | Luftwaffe (Wehrmacht), JG 54 , JG 70 | HQ Artillery Brigade (USAREUR) | 1992 | ||
Herzogenaurach Family Housing | 1994 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 200 residential units | ||||
Herzo Terminal Station (HRZ) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1992 | ||||
Hesselberg | Hesselberg Relay Station (HBG) | 102nd signal Bn (USAREUR) | 1995 | |||
Hesselberg DEBS station | USAFE | 1992 | ||||
court | Camp Kingsley | Schmidtlar barracks (Wehrmacht) | US Constabulary | 1947 | USAREUR | |
Kingsley Barracks (Camp Kingsley until 1949), CRC | US Constabulary | USAFE | 1958 | FmRgt 31, Döbraberg (Air Force) | 412-L position, call sign LOUISIANA | |
Rose Barracks | Hofer barracks (Wehrmacht) | Border Observation Point (USAREUR) | 1991 | |||
Rivet Switch Facility | Aircraft Control and Warning Squadron (SAC) | 1992 | Rivet Joint Program see Döbraberg (Bavaria) | |||
Hof Terminal Station (HOF) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1992 | ||||
Hohenfels | Hohenfels Training Area | USAREUR | still existing | Military training area | ||
Hohenfels Army Airfield | USAREUR | still existing | ||||
Hohenfels Training Area | Seventh Army NCO Academy (USAREUR) | 1992 | ASP 2 | |||
Hohenfels Elementary School | DODEA (DoDDS) | 1992 | ||||
Hohenfels American High School | DODEA (DoDDS) | 1992 | ||||
Hohenfels Terminal Station (HFL) (HFO) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | still existing | DEBS Station (HFL) | |||
POMCUS depot | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
FlaRak position Hawk | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
Hohenpeissenberg | Hohenpeißenberg Terminal Station (HPG) | Co B / 102nd Signal Bn (USAREUR) | 1995 | European Tropospheric Scatter Army (ET-A). | ||
Illertissen | From Steuben Missile Training Station | USAREUR | 1957 | Training facility for Pershing IA medium-range missiles | ||
Illesheim | Storck Barracks | Illesheim air base of the Luftwaffe (Wehrmacht), ZG 52 | HQ Brigade, Army Aviation (USAREUR) | still existing | ||
Storck Family Housing | still existing | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 76 residential units | ||||
Illesheim Dependents School | DoDDS | 2005 | ||||
Illesheim Terminal Station (IHM) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 2015 | ||||
POMCUS depot | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
FlaRak position Hawk | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
Ingolstadt | Ingolstadt Air Base | COB (USAFE) | 1994 | Advanced deployment base | ||
Kalteneggolsfeld | Kalteneggolsfeld Radio Relay Facility | USAFE | 1991 | |||
Kalteneggolsfeld Terminal Station (KGD) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1991 | ||||
Kaufbeuren | Army Air Force Station R-70 / Kaufbeuren Air Base | Air Force (Wehrmacht) air base at Apfeltrangerstraße , pilot school 23 | Kaufbeuren Military Post (USAFE) | 1957 | TSLw 1 (Air Force) | 1955 planned joint use of USAFE and Air Force |
Kaufbeuren Air Base | HQ MDAP (Military Defense Assistance Program) | 1957 | Training aid for the German Air Force 1954–1957 | |||
Kitzingen | Harvey Barracks | Luftwaffe (Wehrmacht) | US Constabulary | 1947 | USAREUR | 1955 planned joint use of USAFE and Air Force |
Harvey Barracks | US Constabulary | Material Management Center (USAREUR) | 2007 | HQ Controlled Humidity Storage Facility, Prepositioned War Reserve Munitions | ||
Kitzingen Air Base | Kitzingen Air Base | USAFE | 1947 | USAREUR | ||
Larson Barracks | Kitzingen Air Base | HQ Brigade (USAREUR) | 2007 | |||
Marshall Heights Family Housing | 2007 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 604 residential units | ||||
Kitzingen Dependents School | DoDDS | 1992 | ||||
Kitzingen Terminal Station (KTZ) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 2007 | ||||
FlaRak position Hawk | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
Kronach | Camp Leonard | Border Resident Office (USAREUR) | 1991 | |||
Landsberg am Lech | Saarburg barracks | Wehrmacht | US Custodial Team (24th USAFAD, 74th USAFAD) | 1992 | Nuclear custody for GebRakArtBtl 82 | |
Was Crimes Prison No. 1 | Landsberg / Lech fortress | USAREUR | 1958 | February 26, 1947 Established as the only prison for war criminals | ||
Landsberg Dependents School | DoDDS | 1958 | ||||
Landsberg Air Base, Landsberg Air Ammunition Depot | Penzing Air Base of the Air Force (Wehrmacht), KG 51 , Large Combat Flying School 3 | USAFE | 1958 | LTG 61 (Air Force) | 1955 planned joint use of USAFE and Air Force | |
Landshut | Pinder Barracks | Schoch barracks (Wehrmacht) | US Constabulary | 1948 | USAREUR | |
Pinder Barracks | US Constabulary; 74th Armored Field Artillery Battalion (1951-1955) | USAREUR | 1957 | armed forces | ||
Landshut Dependents School | DoDDS | 1992 | ||||
Landshut La Faire Vite Facility | 11th AD signal Bn (LFV) | 1992 | ||||
Run on the Pegnitz | Telecommunication device | USAREUR | 1992 | FmElo Aufkl | ||
Lechfeld | Lechfeld Air Base | Lechfeld Air Base | USAFE | 1947 | 1956 JaboG 32 (Air Force) | 1955 planned joint use of USAFE and Air Force |
Lechfeld Air Base | US Custodial Team (82nd USAFAD to 1971, then 74th USAFAD) | 1992 | Nuclear custody for FKG 1 (Pershing 1A) | |||
Leipheim | Barracks Air Base | Leipheim Air Base | FOB (USAFE) | 1992 | 1955 USAFE and Air Force joint use planned, FOB for A 10 of the 81st TFW, RAF Bentwaters | |
Leipheim Dependents School | DoDDS | 1992 | ||||
Leipheim Gas Station | Motorway gas station | AAFES | 1957 | |||
Lenggries | Prince Heinrich barracks | Wehrmacht | US Constabulary | 1947 | Keep German name. | |
Main blue | Mainbullau Missile Station | 1/67, 1st Nike HE Missile | 1971/1992 | Nuclear warheads, 1961–1971, 1971–1992 Hawk | ||
Memmingen | Memmingen Air Base | Luftwaffe (Wehrmacht), KG 51, Destroyer School 2, StuKaSchule 2 | US Custodial Team (7261 (7611) MUNSS Detachment) | 1991 | 1955 USAFE and Air Force joint use planned nuclear custody for JaboG 34 | |
Memmingen Dependents School | DoDDS | 1991 | ||||
Mittenwald | Jaeger barracks | Jäger barracks (Wehrmacht) | USAREUR | 1957 | armed forces | Keep German name. |
Pioneer barracks | Pioneer barracks (Wehrmacht) | USAREUR | 1957 | armed forces | Keep German name. | |
Mönchberg | Regency Net Communications Facility Mönchberg | 801st Telecommunications "R", C&C Sqn | 1997 | |||
Munich | Kaulbachstrasse 15 | House of the painter Wilhelm von Kaulbach, confiscated by Gauleiter Adolf Wagner in 1937 | AFN Munich | 1984 | 1984 move to Kaulbachstrasse 45 to release the historic house. | |
Kaulbachstrasse 45 | AFN Munich | 1992 | 1984 move from Kaulbachstrasse 15. | |||
Military hospital | 98th General Hosp (USAREUR) | 1957 | Schwabing Clinic | |||
Munich-Bogenhausen | Peterson Barracks | Lohengrin barracks (Wehrmacht) | USAREUR | 1957 | ||
Munich-Freimann | Henry Barracks | General-Wever Kaserne (Flak-Kaserne) (Wehrmacht) | USAREUR | 1957 | Initial reception of refugees | |
Warner barracks | SS barracks | USAREUR | 1968 | Ernst von Bergmann Barracks (German Armed Forces) | ||
Will barracks | Panzer or Verdun barracks (Wehrmacht) | USAREUR | 2014 | Fürst-Wrede-Kaserne (Bundeswehr) | Freimann | |
Munich-Giesing | McGraw Barracks | Tegernseerlandstraße barracks or Reichszeugmeisterei (Wehrmacht) | Munich Military Post (USAREUR) | 1992 | ||
University of Maryland (McGraw Campus) | 1993 | Founded in 1950 | ||||
Munich Terminal Station (MNH), McGraw | Co B / 102nd Signal Bn (USAREUR) | 1995 | European Tropospheric Scatter Army (ET-A). | |||
Military hospital | 2nd Field Hosp (USAREUR) | 1992 | Perlacher Forest | |||
Perlacher Forst Family Housing | 1992 | Built from 1950 to 1957, a total of 2250 residential units in Munich | ||||
Munich American High School | Cincinnatistraße, Perlacher Forst | DODEA (DoDDS) | 1992 | Perlacher Forst school center | Founded in 1946 in Villa Lehmann, Holzkirchner Straße. Accredited as a high school in 1947, with boarding school. 1948 move to Rotbuchenstrasse. 1956 move to Cincinnatistraße. | |
Munich-Lerchenau | Virginia Area Storage Facility | USAREUR | 1957 | |||
Munich-Milbertshofen | Alabama Area | Heereszeugamt (Wehrmacht) | USAREUR | 1957 | Texas Area → Germering | |
Munich-Oberföhring | Grünthal Family Housing | 1992 | Built from 1950 to 1957, a total of 2250 residential units in Munich | |||
Munich-Oberwiesenfeld | Jensen Barracks | News or Saar barracks (Wehrmacht) | US Constabulary | 1952 | ||
Luitpold barracks | Wehrmacht | USAREUR | 1957 | armed forces | Keep German name | |
Oberwiesenfeld Air Base / Army Airfield | Barracks element Oberwiesenfeld | USAFE / USAREUR | 1957 | |||
Indiana Depot | Stetten barracks (Wehrmacht) | USAREUR | 1957 | Stetten Barracks | ||
Munich-Riem | Munich Air Base | Munich Airport | USAFE | 1947 | Munich Airport | |
Murnau | Kimbro Barracks | Kemmel barracks (Wehrmacht) | Pioneer School (USAREUR) | 1961 | ||
Neubiberg | Neubiberg Air Base | Neubiberg Air Base | 86th Fighter Group (USAFE) | 1952 | MAC | 1952 Relocation to Ramstein, 1955 joint use of USAFE and Air Force planned |
Neubiberg Air Base | Neubiberg Air Base | 317th Troop Carrier Group (MAC) | 1958 | OSLw (Air Force) | 1958 Relocation to Rhein-Main Air Base | |
New Ulm | Nelson Barracks | Reinhardt barracks (Wehrmacht) | Pershing II (USAREUR) | 1991 | ||
Wiley Barracks | Ludendorff barracks (Wehrmacht) | NCO Academy (USAREUR) | 1991 | |||
Apron | Pershing II medium-range missile position (USAREUR) | 1991 | INF object of the USA | |||
Family Housing | 1991 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 384 residential units | ||||
Neu-Ulm Dependents School | DoDDS | 1991 | ||||
Neu-Ulm Terminal Station (ULM) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1991 | ||||
Nuremberg | Merrell Barracks | SS or south barracks | Army Aviation (USAREUR) | 1992 | ||
Merrell Terminal Station (MRL) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1992 | ||||
Merrell Dependents School | DoDDS | 1992 | ||||
Nuremberg Terminal Station (NBG) | Co B / 102nd Signal Bn (USAREUR) | 1995 | European Tropospheric Scatter Army (ET-A). DEBS station (NBG) | |||
Military hospital | 98th Gen Hosp, 16th Field Hosp (USAREUR) | 1992 | ||||
Army Nuremberg Hospital Terminal Station (ANH) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1992 | ||||
Pastoriusstrasse Family Housing | 1994 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 1690 residential units | ||||
AFN Studio | AFN Nuremberg | 1995 | Founded in 1950. | |||
Alte Regensburger Str. 9–23 | Wehrmacht | Labor service | 1995 | |||
Oberammergau | Hawkins Barracks | Hoetzendorf barracks (Wehrmacht) | Special Weapons School (USAREUR) | 1975 | NATO | 1975 bilateral organization Germany-USA |
Hawkins Barracks | USAREUR | NATO School | 2003 | 2003 Subordinate to Supreme Allied Commander Transformation | ||
Oberammergau Family Housing | 2003 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 165 residential units | ||||
Oberpfaffenhofen | Oberpfaffenhofen Air Force Depot | Dornier factory airfield | USAFE | 1949 | Oberpfaffenhofen airfield | Most important basis for repairs during the Berlin Airlift 1948–1949 |
Oberschleissheim | Schleissheim Army Airfield | Luftwaffe (Wehrmacht), JG 71, Night Hunting School 1, Destroyer School 1, 7th Hunting Division, Fighter Pilot in Southern Germany | USAREUR | 1957 | ||
FlaRak position Hawk | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
Passau | Maybach Air Strip | US Constabulary | 1947 | USAREUR until 1957 | ||
Kohlbruck Ammo Storage Facility | USAREUR | 1957 | ||||
rain | Camp May | Border Camp (USAREUR) | 1991 | |||
regensburg | Fort Skelly | Flak barracks (Luftwaffe) | US Constabulary | 1947 | USAFE | |
Fort Skelly | US Constabulary | USAFE | 1956 | |||
Leopold barracks | Somme and Arras barracks (Wehrmacht) | USAREUR | 1956 | |||
Pioneer barracks | Pioneer barracks (Wehrmacht) | Regensburg Military Post (USAREUR) | 1956 | |||
Knight Barracks CRC | Raffler barracks (Wehrmacht) | USAFE | 1959 | FmRgt 31, Burglengenfeld (Air Force), call sign ANGEL FACE | 412-L position Winzener Höhe, call sign MERCURY | |
Regensburg Family Housing | 2002 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 264 residential units | ||||
Regensburg Dependents School | DoDDS | 2002 | ||||
Military hospital | 26th Station Hosp (USAREUR) | 1956 | ||||
Regensburg Army Airfield | USAREUR | 1956 | ||||
Hawk FlaRak position (Oberhinkofen) | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
Regensburg Terminal Station (RGN) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1992 | ||||
Reinwarzhofen | Reinwarzhofen Relay Station (RHN) | Co B / 102nd Signal Bn (USAREUR) | 1992 | DEBS station (RWH) | ||
FlaRak position Hawk | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
Rimbach | Telecommunication device | USAREUR | 1992 | FmElo Aufkl | ||
Röhrnbach | Camp Whalen | USAREUR | 1991 | Used by French armed forces from 1962 to 1966 (FFA). | ||
Red sand | Forward Storage Site | USAREUR | 1993 | |||
Rötz | Camp Reed | Border Observation Point (USAREUR) | 1991 | |||
Scheyern | 8608 DU-SIGINT Collection Site | USAFE | 1958 | Schyren barracks (Bundeswehr) | operated by US Air Force for NSA (FmElo Aufkl) | |
Schneeberg | US Army Field Station (USAFS) | LSC barracks | FWD Ops Bn Schneeberg (USAREUR) | 1992 | FmElo Aufkl | |
Schwabach | O'Brien Barracks | News barracks (Wehrmacht) | US Constabulary | 1949 | USAREUR | |
O'Brien Barracks | US Constabulary | Anti-aircraft missiles (USAREUR) | 1992 | |||
POMCUS depot | USAREUR | 1994 | ||||
Whitson Barracks | Wehrmacht | USAREUR | 1992 | |||
Schwabach Family Housing | 1994 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 158 residential units | ||||
Schwabach Terminal Station (SWB) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1994 | ||||
Schwanberg | Schwanberg Relay Station (SBG) | Co A / 102nd Signal Bn (USAREUR) | 1995 | |||
Schwanberg Communications Station | 11th AD signal Bn (LFV) | 1992 | ||||
Schweinfurt | Schweinfurt Air Base | Schweinfurt air base of the Luftwaffe (Wehrmacht), pilot school 7 | USAFE | 1947 | US Constabulary | |
Conn Barracks | Schweinfurt Air Base (USAFE) | US Constabulary | 1951 | USAREUR | ||
Conn Barracks | US Constabulary | HQ Brigade (USAREUR) | 2014 | |||
Ledward Barracks | Panzer barracks (Wehrmacht) | USAREUR | 2014 | |||
Askren Manor Family Housing | 2014 | Built between 1953 and 1957, a total of 707 residential units in Schweinfurt | ||||
Yorktown Village Family Housing | 2014 | Built from 1986 to 1992, a total of 707 residential units in Schweinfurt | ||||
Schweinfurt Dependents School | DoDDS | 2005 | ||||
Schweinfurt Terminal Station (SFT) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 2014 | DEBS station (SHW) | |||
FlaRak position Hawk | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
Schweitenkirchen | Schweitenkirchen Relay Station (SKN) | Co B / 102nd Signal Bn (USAREUR) | 1991 | |||
Seibersdorf | Seibersdorf Communications Facility | 11th AD signal Bn (LFV) | 1992 | Seibersdorf, also called Wenzenbach, replaced Regensburg in 1976 | ||
Siegenburg | Siegenburg Air Range | USAFE | 2014 | Air-to-ground firing range | ||
Sonthofen | Castle barracks | Ordensburg Sonthofen | US Constabulary School | 1951 | ||
Sonthofen Dependents School | DoDDS | 1951 | ||||
Straubing | Straubing Air Base | Straubing Air Base | USAFE | 1947 | US Constabulary | |
Mansfield Barracks | Straubing Air Base (USAFE) | US Constabulary | 1948 | USAREUR | ||
Mansfield Barracks | US Constabulary | ACR (USAREUR) | 1964 | Gäubodenkaserne (Bundeswehr) | ||
Straubing Dependents School | DoDDS | 1964 | ||||
Sulzheim | FlaRak position Hawk | USAREUR | 1992 | |||
Vilseck | Rose Barracks | South camp (Wehrmacht) | Army Aviation, HQ Brigade (USAREUR) | still existing, relocation announced on July 29, 2020 | HQ Brigade since 1990, ASP 1 | |
Vilseck Elementary School | DODEA (DoDDS) | still existing | ||||
Vilseck American High School | DODEA (DoDDS) | still existing | ||||
Vilseck Terminal Station (VIL) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | still existing | ||||
Waidhaus | Border Camp | Border Observation Point (USAREUR) | 1991 | |||
Pastures | Orsbon Barracks | Metz barracks (Wehrmacht) | US Constabulary | 1951 | USAREUR | |
Orsbon Barracks | US Constabulary | USAREUR | 1958 | |||
Camp Pitman | USAREUR | 1991 | ||||
Camp LaGuardia | USAREUR | 1958 | ||||
Weißenkirchen | Telecommunication device | USAREUR | 1992 | FmElo Aufkl | ||
Wild spots | Camp wild spots | USAREUR | 1994 | Training area, ASP 3 | ||
Wildflecken Family Housing | 1994 | Built from 1950 to 1957, a total of 48 residential units | ||||
Wildflecken Tactical Defense Site | Anti-aircraft missiles (USAREUR) | 1994 | Hawk | |||
Wildflecken Dependents School | DoDDS | 1951 | ||||
Wildflecken Communications Facility (WFL) | 11th AD signal Bn (LFV) | 1992 | ||||
Reussendorf Ammo Storage Area | USAREUR | 1994 | ||||
Wurzburg | Emery Barracks | Adolf Hitler Barracks (Wehrmacht) | HQ FlaRak Brigade (USAREUR) | 1992 | ||
Faulenberg barracks | Wehrmacht | USAREUR | 2007 | Keep German name. | ||
Military hospital | 33rd Gen Hosp, 10th Field Hosp (USAREUR) | 2007 | ||||
Army Hospital Würzburg Terminal Station (AHW) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 2007 | ||||
Hindenburg Barracks | Wehrmacht | HQ Division (USAREUR) | 1992 | Keep German name. | ||
Leighton Barracks | Würzburg Air Base of the Air Force (Wehrmacht), AG 123, pilot school 2 | Würzburg Military Post (USAREUR) | 2008 | Area Command Franconia or Northwestern Bavaria 1965 | ||
Leighton Family Housing | 2008 | Built from 1950 to 1957, a total of 1313 residential units in Würzburg | ||||
Würzburg American High School | Erected in Leighton Barracks | DODEA (DoDDS) | 2008 | Accredited as a high school in 1955 | ||
Lincoln Family Housing | 2008 | Built from 1950 to 1957, a total of 1313 residential units in Würzburg | ||||
Skyline Family Housing | 2008 | Built from 1950 to 1957, a total of 1313 residential units in Würzburg | ||||
Würzburg Terminal Station (WBG) | Co A / 102nd Signal Bn (USAREUR) | 1995 | DEBS station (WBG), call sign CHALET | |||
River Terminal Station (RVR) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1995 | Würzburg River Training Area | |||
AFN Studio | AFN Würzburg | Established in 1980. | ||||
FlaRak position Hawk | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
Steinbachtal Ammo Area | USAREUR | 1996 | PSP 7 J | |||
Hawk FlaRak position (Emery / Würzburg-Steinbachtal) | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
Emery Terminal Station (ERY) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1992 | ||||
Zirndorf | Adams Barracks | Santa Maria or Gendarmerie barracks | USAREUR | 1955 | ||
Pinder Barracks | Flak barracks (Wehrmacht) | HQ Division Artillery (USAREUR) | 1995 | |||
Bernbach Range | USAREUR | 1993 | PSP 56 J. | |||
Pinder Terminal Station (PDR) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1995 | ||||
Dambach Family Housing | 1995 | |||||
Zugspitze | Zugspitze Terminal Station (ZUE) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1992 | European Tropospheric Scatter Army (ET-A). | ||
Zugspitze DEBS Station (ZUG) | USAFE | 1992 |
Hesse
US armed forces locations in Hesse (in brackets: closed before 1990) |
Family Housing Areas of the US armed forces in Hesse 1990 (1 = Hansa-Allee, Hügelstrasse, Platenstrasse, Von Steuben; 2 = Betts, Edwards; 3 = Atterberry; 4 = Gibbs Village) |
Location | property | Previous user | Troops | Year of dissolution | Reuse | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Alsberg | Forward Storage Site | USAREUR | 1993 | |||
Altenburg | Altenburg Storage Area | USAREUR | 1991 | |||
Babenhausen | Babenhausen barracks | HQ Artillery Brigade (USAREUR) | 2007 | |||
Babenhausen Family Housing | 2007 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 337 residential units | ||||
Babenhausen Dependents School | DoDDS | 2007 | ||||
Babenhausen Terminal Station (BHN) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 2007 | ||||
FlaRak position Hawk | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
Bad Hersfeld | McPheeters Barracks | Langemarck barracks or barracks of the motor vehicle department 9 (Wehrmacht) | US Constabulary | 1951 | USAREUR | |
McPheeters Barracks | US Constabulary | USAREUR | 1994 | |||
McPheeters Village Family Housing | 1994 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 160 residential units | ||||
Bad Hersfeld Dependents School | DoDDS | 1994 | ||||
Daley Village Family Housing | 1994 | |||||
Bad Hersfeld Terminal Station (BHD) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1994 | ||||
Johannesberg Army Airfield | USAREUR | 1994 | Werve Thompson Army Airfield | |||
FlaRak position Hawk | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
Bad Nauheim | Spa hotel | HQ Continental Base Section | 1947 | Supreme logistics authority | ||
Alvin York Village Family Housing | 2006 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 696 residential units | ||||
Bad Nauheim Dependents School | DoDDS | 1991 | ||||
Bad Vilbel | Bad Vilbel Family Housing | 1995 | Built after 1957 | |||
Bimbach | Bimbach Storage Area | USAREUR | 1993 | PSP 16 J | ||
Hawk FlaRak position (Finkenberg) | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
Bosserode | Observation Point Romeo | USAREUR | 1991 | |||
Büdingen | Armstrong Barracks | Kruger Barracks (Wehrmacht) | US Constabulary | 1947/1951 | USAREUR | |
Armstrong Barracks | US Constabulary | Army Aviation (USAREUR) | 2008 | USAREUR | ||
Lorbach Ammo Area | USAREUR | 1993 | PSP 3 J | |||
Armstrong Village Family Housing | 2008 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 172 residential units | ||||
Büdingen Terminal Station (BUD) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 2008 | ||||
POMCUS depot | USAREUR | 1992 | USAREUR | |||
Butzbach | Castle barracks | Wehrmacht | HQ Brigade (USAREUR) | 1992 | town hall | |
Roman Way Village Family Housing | 2008 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 632 residential units in Butzbach | ||||
Butzbach Dependents School | DoDDS | 2008 | ||||
Butzbach Terminal Station (BUT) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1992 | ||||
POMCUS depot | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
FlaRak position Hawk | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
Darmstadt | Kelley Barracks | Life guard barracks (Wehrmacht) | US Constabulary | 1947 | USAREUR | |
Kelley Barracks | US Constabulary | Darmstadt Military Post (USAREUR) | 2009 | |||
Cambrai-Fritsch barracks | Wehrmacht | HQ 32nd AADCOM (USAREUR) | 1996 | Keep German name | ||
Ernst Ludwig barracks | Wehrmacht | HQ Division (USAREUR) | 1996 | Keep German name | ||
Ernst Ludwig barracks | Wehrmacht | HQ 1/67, 1st Nike HE Missile | 1971 | PSP 242. Nuclear Warheads, 1961–1971 | ||
Jefferson Village Family Housing | 2008 | Built from 1950 to 1957, a total of 772 residential units in Darmstadt | ||||
Darmstadt Dependents School | DoDDS | 2009 | ||||
Lincoln Village Family Housing | 2008 | Built from 1950 to 1957, a total of 772 residential units in Darmstadt | ||||
St. Barbara Village Family Housing | 2008 | Eberstadt. Built from 1950 to 1957, a total of 772 residential units in Darmstadt | ||||
Darmstadt Terminal Station (DST) | Co A / 102nd Signal Bn (USAREUR) | 1995 | DEBS station (DST), call sign CORNBEEF | |||
Darmstadt-Griesheim | Griesheim Army Airfield | Luftwaffe (Wehrmacht), hunting section leader Middle Rhine | USAREUR | 1998 | 1955 planned joint use of USAFE and Air Force | |
Griesheim Missile Facility | 1/67, 1st Nike HE Missile | 1992 | Nuclear warheads | |||
Army printing | Army newspaper "Stars & Stripes" | 2009 | Central editorial office for Europe | |||
Darmstadt-Griesheim Terminal Station (DMT) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1992 | ||||
Stars & Stripes Terminal Station (S&S) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 2009 | ||||
Dagger Complex | Local Training Area 6910 (NSA) | 2015 | Monitoring system, moved to Wiesbaden in 2015 | |||
Griesheim Family Housing | 2015 | Built from 1950 to 1957, a total of 772 residential units in Darmstadt | ||||
Eschborn | Camp Eschborn | Pioneers (USAREUR) | 1992 | Camp Phoenix | ||
Eschborn Storage Area | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
Eschborn Terminal Station (EBN) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1992 | ||||
Eschwege | Young Barracks | Hindenburg barracks of the Luftwaffe (Wehrmacht), AG 23 | Border Resident Office (USAREUR) | 1991 | ||
Feldberg | Feldberg Relay Site (FEG) | 102nd signal Bn (USAREUR) | 1992 | European Tropospheric Scatter - Army (ET-A), Mainline Site 8. | ||
Feldberg Radio Relay Site | USAFE | 1992 | DEBS station (FEL) | |||
Regency Net Communications Facility Feldberg | 801st Telecommunications "R", C&C Sqn | 1997 | ||||
Solutions | Forward Storage Site | USAREUR | 1993 | |||
Frankfurt am Main | Creighton W. Abrams Complex | IG Farben high-rise | HQ V (US) Corps (USAREUR) | 1995 | University of Frankfurt | Frankfurt-Westend |
Frankfurt American High School | Friedrich Ebert Reform School | DODEA (DoDDS) | 1995 | Creighton W. Abrams Complex. Accredited as a high school in 1947. 1946 - 1954 Am Bornheimer Hang, 1954 move to a new building on Siolistraße at the IG Farben building. | ||
Frankfurt Terminal Station (FKT) | Co A / 102nd Signal Bn (USAREUR) | 1995 | Creighton W. Abrams Complex | |||
Frankfurt_Consulate Terminal Station (CON) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 2005 | Frankfurt-Westend, 1951–2005 seat of the US Consulate General | |||
Gutleut barracks | Wehrmacht | Military Police | 1977 | Authority center | Keep German name | |
Gutleut barracks | Frankfurt Confinement Facility | 1977 | Military prison | |||
Kennedy Barracks | USAREUR | 1994 | ||||
Hansa-Allee Family Housing | 1995 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 2,655 residential units in Frankfurt | ||||
Hügelstrasse Family Housing | 1995 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 2,655 residential units in Frankfurt | ||||
Platenstrasse Family Housing | 1995 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 2,655 residential units in Frankfurt | ||||
From Steuben Family Housing | 1995 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 2,655 residential units in Frankfurt | ||||
Bertramstrasse 6th | AFN Frankfurt | 2004 | Hessian radio | 1966 relocation from Höchst Castle ; Until 2004 European headquarters of the American Forces Network | ||
Frankfurt-Bonames | Maurice Rose Army Airfield | Army Aviation (USAREUR) | 1992 | Old airfield in the Frankfurt green belt | ||
Frankfurt-Bornheim | Atterberry Barracks | Kurhessen barracks (Wehrmacht) | USAREUR | 1995 | New Atterberry settlement (from 2003) | Frankfurt-Bornheim |
Atterberry Family Housing | 1995 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 2,655 residential units in Frankfurt | ||||
Frankfurt-Eckenheim | Gibbs Barracks | Marbach barracks (Wehrmacht) | Frankfurt Military Post (USAREUR) | 1995 | Division control watch 1 of the Frankfurt am Main fire brigade | Area Command Taunus 1965 |
Gibbs Village Family Housing | 1995 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 2,655 residential units in Frankfurt | ||||
Gibbs Terminal Station (GBS) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1995 | ||||
Frankfurt-Hausen | Hausen Equip Maint Center | Pershing II launcher repair facility (USAREUR) | 1995 | US INF facility, closed in 1991 | ||
Am Fischstein Family Housing | 1995 | Grain settlement | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 2,655 residential units in Frankfurt | |||
Frankfurt-Heddernheim | Heddernheim Storage Facility | USAREUR | 1993 | |||
Frankfurt-Höchst | McNair Barracks | HQ Telecommunications Brigade (USAREUR) | 1992 | |||
Michael Barracks | Police barracks | USAREUR | 1992 | |||
Highest family housing | 1993 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 2,655 residential units in Frankfurt | ||||
Highest Dependents School | DoDDS | 1993 | ||||
Höchst Terminal Station (HST) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1992 | ||||
Höchst Castle | AFN Frankfurt | 1966 | 1966 Move to Frankfurt-Nordend in Bertramstrasse. 6th | |||
Frankfurt-Preungesheim | Bett's barracks | Friedberg barracks (Wehrmacht) | USAREUR | 1995 | New Betts settlement (from 2003) | |
Betts Family Housing | 1996 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 2,655 residential units in Frankfurt | ||||
Drake Barracks | Artillery barracks (Wehrmacht) | HQ 3rd Armored Division (USAREUR) | 1994 | Federal Police | Frankfurt-Preungesheim | |
Drake Terminal Station (DRK) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1994 | ||||
Edwards Barracks | USAREUR | 1992 | Mixed residential and commercial area | Frankfurt-Preungesheim | ||
Edwards Family Housing | 1995 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 2,655 residential units in Frankfurt | ||||
Frankfurt-Nordend | Clark Barracks (Military Hospital) | Hermann-Göring-Lazarett (Air Force) | 97th Gen Hosp (USAREUR) | 1994 | Since 2005 seat of the US Consulate General | Frankfurt-Nordend |
Frankfurt-Rhine-Main | Rhein-Main Air Base (Y-73) | HQ 21st Air Force MAC | 2005 | Frankfurt am Main airport | "Gateway to Europe", airfield of the Berlin Airlift 1948–1949, 2005 relocation to Ramstein and Spangdahlem | |
Rhein-Main Terminal Station (RMN) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 2005 | DEBS station (RMN) | |||
Gateway Gardens Family Housing Area | USAFE | 2005 | ||||
Long Terrace Family Housing Area | USAFE | 2009 | ||||
Rhein-Main Dependents School | DoDDS | 2009 | ||||
Zeppelinheim Air Ammunition Storage Annex | USAFE | 1992 | ||||
Frankfurt-Rödelheim | Rödelheim Ordnance Facility | USAREUR | 1997 | Rebstock Airfield | ||
Rödelheim Terminal Station (RHM) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1997 | ||||
Friedberg | Ray Barracks | Watchtower Barracks (Wehrmacht) | HQ Brigade (USAREUR) | 2008 | The most famous soldier was Elvis Presley from 1958 to 1960 | |
MacArthur Place Family Housing | 2008 | Built after 1957 | ||||
Friedberg Terminal Station (FBG) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 2008 | ||||
Friedberg Heliport | USAREUR | 1991 | ||||
Friedberg Storage Site, POMCUS Depot | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
FlaRak position Hawk | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
FlaRak position Hawk (Ockstadt) | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
Fritzlar | Fritzlar Air Base (Y-86) | Fritzlar Air Base of the Air Force (Wehrmacht), KG 54 | ACR (USAREUR) | 1951 | Quartier Lasalle (FFA) until 1956 | 1956 Bundeswehr |
Fritzlar barracks | Georg Friedrich Barracks (Wehrmacht) | US Constabulary | 1947 | USAFE until 1951 | ||
Fulda | Downs barracks | Ludendorff barracks (Wehrmacht) | US Constabulary | 1947 | USAREUR | |
Downs barracks | US Constabulary | Fulda Military Post (USAREUR) | 1994 | |||
D'Orazio Barracks | Bleidorn barracks (Wehrmacht) | ACR (USAREUR) | 1994 | |||
Downs Family Housing | 1994 | Built from 1950 to 1957, a total of 211 residential units | ||||
Fulda Dependents School | DoDDS | 1994 | ||||
Fulda Terminal Station (FDA) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1994 | ||||
Sickels Army Airfield | USAREUR | 1994 | ||||
Patterson Field | USAREUR | 1994 | ||||
Severson Field | Artillery barracks (Wehrmacht) | USAREUR | 1994 | |||
FlaRak position Hawk | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
Gerlos Ammo Storage Site | USAREUR | 1993 | ||||
Gelnhausen | Coleman Barracks | Gelnhausener or Panzerjäger barracks (Wehrmacht) | HQ Brigade (USAREUR) | 2006 | ||
Coleman Village Family Housing | 2006 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 674 residential units | ||||
Gelnhausen Dependents School | DoDDS | 2004 | ||||
Gelnhausen Terminal Station (GEL) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 2006 | ||||
Giesel | Forward Storage Site | USAREUR | 1993 | |||
to water | Pendleton Barracks | Lead-thorn barracks of the Luftwaffe (Wehrmacht), KG 55 | Giessen Military Post (USAREUR) | 2008 | Area Command Hesse 1965 | |
Rivers Barracks | Verdun or forest barracks (Wehrmacht) | HQ Artillery Brigade (USAREUR) | 1992 | |||
From Steuben barracks | USAREUR | 1993 | European Quarter Giessen | |||
From Steuben barracks | US Custodial Team (30th USAFAD) | 1992 | European Quarter Giessen | Nuclear custody for RakArtBtl 52 | ||
George C. Marshall Village Family Housing | 2008 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 620 residential units in Gießen | ||||
John F. Dulles Village Family Housing | 2008 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 620 residential units in Gießen | ||||
Giessen Dependents School | DoDDS | 1993 | ||||
Giessen Relay Station (GSN) | 102nd signal Bn (USAREUR) | 1995 | DEBS Station (GSN) | |||
Giessen General Depot | USAREUR | 2008 | ||||
Camp Smith | POW camp | USAREUR | 1951 | FFA until 1956 | ||
FlaRak position Hawk | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
Grebenhain | Forward Storage Site | USAREUR | 1993 | |||
Hanau | Pioneer barracks (Wolfgang) | Pioneer barracks (Wehrmacht) | HQ Engineer Brigade (USAREUR) | 2008 | Mixed use of residential and commercial space | Keep German name |
Wolfgang barracks | USAREUR | 2008 | Area Command Vogelsberg 1965 | |||
Yorkhof Barracks | Wehrmacht | USAREUR | 2008 | Keep German name | ||
Argonne barracks | Wehrmacht | Hanau Military Post (USAREUR) | 2008 | Keep German name | ||
Cardwell Village Family Housing | 2008 | Built from 1950 to 1957, a total of 1547 residential units in Hanau | ||||
New Argonner Family Housing | 2008 | Built from 1950 to 1957, a total of 1547 residential units in Hanau | ||||
Pioneer Village Family Housing | 2008 | Built from 1950 to 1957, a total of 1547 residential units in Hanau | ||||
Hanau Dependents School | DoDDS | 2009 | ||||
Hanau Terminal Station (HNU) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 2008 | DEBS station (HAU) | |||
New Argonne Barracks | USAREUR | 2008 | ||||
Barracks Air Base | Langendiebach Air Base of the Luftwaffe (Wehrmacht), KG 55 | HQ Army Aviation Brigade (USAREUR) | 2007 | Hanau AAF | ||
Hawk FlaRak position (air base) | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
François barracks | Marbach or Ulanen barracks (Wehrmacht) | USAREUR | 1992 | State Horticultural Show Hanau 2002 | ||
Grossauheim barracks | USAREUR | 1993 | ||||
Hessen-Homburg barracks | USAREUR | 1992 | School center Hessen-Homburg | Keep German name | ||
Hutier barracks | USAREUR | 1994/2007 | Hanau Hazard Defense Center | Keep German name | ||
POMCUS depot | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
FlaRak position Hawk | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
Herbornseelbach | Aartal barracks , nuclear depot (central warehouse) | US Custodial Team HQ (557th USAAG) | 1992 | Warheads and nuclear ammunition for III. (GE) Corps and 2 ATAF | ||
Regency Net Communications Facility Herbornseelbach | 801st Telecommunications "R", C&C Sqn | 1997 | ||||
Herbornseelbach Dependents School | DoDDS | 1992 | ||||
High Meissner | Mount Meissner Station | USAREUR, USAFE | 1992 | FmElo Aufkl | ||
Mount Meissner Radio Relay Station | 11th AD signal Bn (LFV) | 1992 | ||||
High Lohr | High Lohr Relay Station (HLR) | Co A / 102nd Signal Bn (USAREUR) | 1995 | |||
Homberg (Efze) | Hawk FlaRak (Semmelberg) | USAREUR | 1992 | |||
Homberg (Ohm) | FlaRak position Hawk | USAREUR | 1992 | |||
kassel | Luettich barracks | Liège barracks (Wehrmacht) | USAREUR | 1951 | Caserne De Gete Kazerne (FBA / BSD) | Keep German name |
Waldau barracks | Wehrmacht | Kassel Military Post (USAREUR) | 1952 | Keep German name | ||
Wilson Barracks | Graf Haeseler Barracks (Wehrmacht) | USAREUR | 1952 | Graf-Haeseler-Kaserne (Bundeswehr) until 1993 | ||
Towle barracks | Jäger barracks (Wehrmacht) | USAREUR | 1952 | |||
Kassel Dependents School | DoDDS | 1953 | ||||
Kemel | Taunus barracks | US Custodial Team (Team D, 501st USAAD) | 1987 | Nuclear custody for 3./FlaRakBtl 23 (Nike). | ||
Kilian cities | Nidder barracks | US Custodial Team (501st USAAD) | 1987 | Nuclear custody for FlaRakBtl 23 (Nike) 1960–1987. | ||
Nidder barracks | US Custodial Team (Team A, 501st USAAD) | 1987 | Nuclear custody for 2./FlaRakBtl 23 (Nike). | |||
Kirch-Göns | Ayers Barracks | HQ Brigade (USAREUR) | 1997 | |||
George Gershwin Village Family Housing | 2006 | Built after 1957 | ||||
FlaRak position Hawk | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
Kirch-Göns Terminal Station (KGN) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1997 | ||||
Bodies | Limes barracks (Lich) | US Custodial Team (Team B, 501st USAAD) | 1987 | Nuclear custody for 1./FlaRakBtl 23, Lich (Nike). | ||
Köppern ammunition depot | NATO site 17 | USAREUR | 1992 | PSP 8 J | ||
Lampertheim | Lampertheim Ammo Area | USAREUR | 1992 | PSP 54 | ||
Limbach | Limbach Ammo Area | USAREUR | 1992 | RASP 953 | ||
Lorsch | Viernheim-Lorsch Ammo Storage Area, Advanced Weapons Storage Facility | USAREUR | 1993 | 1957 Honest John 1408 rockets. RASP 951 | ||
Lüderbach | Observation Point India | USAREUR | 1991 | |||
Mainz-Kastel | Kastel Storage Facility | USAREUR | 1995 | |||
Kastel Family Housing | still existing | Built after 1957 | ||||
Mainz-Kastel Terminal Station (MKL) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1995 | ||||
Marburg | Minick Barracks | Tannenberg barracks (Wehrmacht) | USAREUR | 1951 | FFA until 1956 | |
Miller Barracks | Jäger barracks (Wehrmacht) | US Constabulary | 1947 | USAREUR | ||
Miller Barracks | US Constabulary | USAREUR | 1947 | FFA until 1951 | ||
Marburg General Storage Facility | USAREUR | 1994 | ||||
Melibocus | Melibocus Relay Station (MBS) | Co A / 102nd Signal Bn (USAREUR) | 1995 | DEBS station (MEL) | ||
Muenster | Nuclear depot (central warehouse), Münster Ammo Depot, Advanced Weapons Storage Facility | USAREUR | 1995 | 1957 Nike-Ajax 1008 missiles. PSP 4 y. | ||
Regency Net Communications Facility Münster | 801st Telecommunications "R", C&C Sqn | 1997 | ||||
Münster Terminal Station (MTR) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1997 | ||||
Ober-Ramstadt | Ober-Ramstadt Maintenance Plant | USAREUR | 1993 | Tire Rebuild Plant | ||
Oberramstadt Terminal Station (OBR) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1993 | ||||
Oberursel | Camp King | DULAG Luft (Air Force) | Military Intelligence Service Center (USAREUR) | 1993 | House Alaska | |
Oberursel Terminal Station (OBL) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1993 | ||||
Offenbach | Offenbach Barracks | USAREUR | 1992 | Collection point of the Target Forces for looted art (1945) | ||
Ottrau | Forward Storage Site | USAREUR | 1993 | |||
FlaRak position Hawk | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
Rainrod | FlaRak position Hawk | USAREUR | 1992 | |||
Rasdorf | Observation Point Alpha | USAREUR | 1991 | Point Alpha reminder, memorial and meeting place | ||
Red vests | Rothwesten barracks | Air Force (Wehrmacht) Rothwesten Air Base, AG 22 | US Constabulary | 1947 | USAREUR | |
Rothwesten Tech Ops Facility | US Constabulary | USAFE | 1993 | CRC, call sign GUN POST | ||
Over the Horizon Receiver Site R4 | US Constabulary | USAREUR | 1993 | operated by US Army for NSA (FmElo Aufkl) | ||
FlaRak position Hawk | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
Rothwesten Terminal Station (RWN) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1993 | DEBS station (RWN) | |||
Ruesselsheim | Azbill Barracks | Rüsselsheim Barracks (Wehrmacht) | Transport Association (USAREUR) | 1995 | ||
Schwarzenborn | Schwarzenborn Radio Relay Site | Military training area | USAFE | 1993 | ||
Schwarzenborn Terminal Station (SZN) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1993 | DEBS station (SBN) | |||
Dying fritz | Forward Storage Site | USAREUR | 1993 | |||
Baptismal font | Micro wave relay | USAREUR | 1993 | |||
Treysa | Harthberg barracks | US Custodial Team (7th USAFAD) | 1992 | Nuclear custody for RakArtBtl 22 | ||
Vielbrunn | Vielbrunn Ammo Area | USAREUR | 1993 | PSP 5 J | ||
Walldorf | Walldorf Ammo Area | USAREUR | 1993 | PSP 2 J | ||
Wasserkuppe | CRC | USAFE | 1991 | 412-L position, call sign BIRD BRAIN | ||
Wasserkuppe Communications Facility (WSE) | 11th AD signal Bn (LFV) | 1992 | ||||
Weilburg | Sadowski Barracks | New barracks (Wehrmacht) | US Constabulary | 1947 | Education Service Center | |
Wetzlar | Gaffey Barracks | Spilburg barracks (Wehrmacht) | Wetzlar Military Post (USAREUR) | 1951 | FFA until 1956 | |
Lloyd Barracks | News or Silhoferau barracks (Wehrmacht) | US Constabulary | 1947 | USAREUR | ||
Lloyd Barracks | US Constabulary | USAREUR | 1951 | FFA until 1956 | ||
Wiesbaden | Lindsey Air Station | Gersdorff barracks (Wehrmacht) | HQ USAFE 1950–1974, Wiesbaden Military Post (USAFE) | 1994 | Relocation of HQ USAFE 1974 to Ramstein | |
Wiesbaden Air Base (Y-80) | Air Force (Wehrmacht) Air Base Erbenheim, JG 53 | USAFE | 1973 | Airfield of the Berlin Airlift 1948–1949 | ||
Wiesbaden Air Base | Erbenheim Air Base | HQ 5/1, 5th Nike HE Missile | 1983 | Nuclear warheads, 1961–1983, call sign BELIEVE | ||
Military hospital | USAFE Hospital | 1994 | ||||
Lindsey Air Force Terminal Station (LSY) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1994 | ||||
Lindsey Army Terminal Station (LDY) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1994 | ||||
Wiesbaden Army Airfield | Wiesbaden Air Base | USAREUR | still existing | 1998 Location of a brigade, renamed Lucius D. Clay Kaserne (US headquarters) in 2012 | ||
Wiesbaden Terminal Station (WSN) | Co A / 102nd Signal Bn (USAREUR) | still existing | DEBS Station (WBN) | |||
Amelia Earhart Hotel | still existing | |||||
American Arms Hotel | still existing | |||||
Aukamm Family Housing | still existing | |||||
Aukamm Elementary School | DODEA (DoDDS) | still existing | ||||
Crestview Family Housing | still existing | |||||
Hainerberg Family Housing | still existing | |||||
Hainerberg Elementary School | DODEA (DoDDS) | still existing | ||||
Wiesbaden Middle School | DODEA (DoDDS) | still existing | ||||
Wiesbaden American High School (General HH Arnold School) | Texas Street | DODEA (DoDDS) | still existing | Accredited as high school in 1948, Air Force School System in 1954. 1955 Relocation from Lahnstrasse to Texasstrasse. | ||
DoDDS Germany Region HQ | DoDDS | still existing | ||||
Wiesbaden-Biebrich | Camp Pieri | Freudenberg Barracks (Wehrmacht) | US Constabulary | 1950 | USAREUR | Collection point of the Target Forces for looted art (1945). |
Camp Pieri | US Constabulary | USAREUR | 1992 | |||
Hindenburg barracks | Wehrmacht | USAREUR | 1992 | Keep German name | ||
Rhine barracks | Wehrmacht | USAREUR | 1992 | Hessian State Office for Environment and Geology | Keep German name | |
Biebrich Dependents School | DoDDS | 1992 | ||||
Wiesbaden-Biebrich Terminal Station (WBN) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1992 | ||||
Wiesbaden-Schierstein | Camp Schierstein | 497 RTG (Reconnaissance Technical Group) | 1992 | Photo and satellite reconnaissance for NGOs (National Reconnaissance Office) | ||
Camp Schierstein | US EUCOM Electronic Intelligence Center | 1992 | ||||
Camp Schierstein | 1836 EIS (Electronic Intelligence Squadron) (USAFE) | 1992 | ||||
Schierstein harbor | Rhine River Patrol (NAVFORGER) | 1958 | Patrol on the Rhine between Bingen and Karlsruhe 1948–1958, mixed crew from US Navy and US constabulary | |||
Schierstein Family Housing | 1993 | |||||
Goat mountain | Camp Bloomquist | USAREUR | 1992 |
Rhineland-Palatinate
US Air Force (USAFE) locations in Rhineland-Palatinate (in brackets: closure before 1990) |
US Land Forces (USAREUR) locations in Rhineland-Palatinate (in brackets: closure before 1990) |
Location | property | Previous user | Troops | Year of dissolution | Reuse | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Adenau | Arft Radio Relay Site, Adenau (ANU) | TARE (Telegraph Automatic Relay Equipment) | 1995 | European Tropospheric Scatter Army (ET-A). DEBS station (ANU) | ||
Alzey | Alzey Communications Annex | USAFE | 1991 | call sign MUTATE | ||
Bad Kreuznach | George C. Marshall Barracks | Des Gouttes Barracks (Wehrmacht) | HQ Division (USAREUR) | 2001 | ||
Minick barracks | USAREUR | 1993 | ||||
Rose Barracks | Hindenburg barracks (Wehrmacht) | Bad Kreuznach Military Post (USAREUR) | 2001 | Area Command Rhineland 1965 | ||
Bad Kreuznach Family Housing | 2001 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 995 residential units | ||||
Bad Kreuznach Dependents School | DoDDS | 2001 | ||||
Bad Kreuznach Terminal Station (BKH) | Co C / 102nd Signal Bn (USAREUR) | 1995 | DEBS station (BKH) | |||
Military hospital | 57th Field Hosp, 14th Field Hosp (USAREUR) | 2001 | ||||
Bad Kreuznach-Hospital Terminal Station (BHH) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 2001 | ||||
Bad Kreuznach Army Airfield | USAREUR | 2001 | ||||
Rheingrafenstein Storage Area | USAREUR | 1991 | call sign CALORIE | |||
Balesfeld | Balesfeld Missile Station | 4/6, 4th Nike HE Missile | 1971/1995 | Nuclear warheads, 1961-1971, 1971-1995 Hawk | ||
Bambergerhof | Bambergerhof Terminal Station (BHF) | Co C / 102nd Signal Bn (USAREUR) | 1995 | |||
spell | Micro Wave relay (BAN) | USAREUR | 1967 | LANDCENT Microwave System 1952–1962, AIRCENT Microwave System 1952–1958, AFCENT Microwave System (Station 16) 1962–1967. DEBS Station (BAN) | ||
Bann Communications Station | USAFE | 1992 | EAME Main Control Station | |||
DMSP (Defense Meteorological Satellite Program) | USAFE | 1992 | ||||
Baumholder | Strasbourg barracks | Wehrmacht | USAREUR | 1992 | Keep German name | |
Smith Barracks | Frohnhausen camp | Baumholder Military Post (USAREUR) | still existing | Military training area | ||
Smith Elementary School | DODEA (DoDDS) | still existing | ||||
Baumholder Middle School | DODEA (DoDDS) | still existing | ||||
Baumholder American High School | DODEA (DoDDS) | still existing | Accredited as a high school in 1956. 2019 new school building based on the “21st Century Schools” concept. | |||
Wetzel Barracks | Faulenberg barracks | USAREUR | still existing | ASP 4 | ||
Wetzel Family Housing | still existing | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 2286 residential units in Baumholder. | ||||
Baumholder Family Housing | still existing | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 2286 residential units in Baumholder | ||||
Baumholder Tactical Defense Missile Facility | 5/6, 5th Nike HE Missile | 1993 | Nuclear warheads | |||
Baumholder Terminal Station (BHR) | Co C / 102nd Signal Bn (USAREUR) | 1995 | DEBS Station (BHR) | |||
TARE main routing center | TARE (Telegraph Automatic Relay Equipment) | 1995 | US Army for NATO's Integrated Communications Systems (NICES) | |||
Military hospital | Field Hosp (USAREUR) | still existing | ||||
Bingen am Rhein | De la Marne barracks | USAREUR | 1956 | |||
Birch field | Birkenfeld Housing Facility | 1991 | ||||
Bitburg | Bitburg Air Base | 36th FBW (USAFE) | 1994 | Built in 1952 by the French building authorities | ||
Bitburg Family Housing Area | USAFE | 2017 | Housing estate for Spangdahlem Air Base | |||
Bitburg Air Base | 701 TMW (USAFE) | 1969 | Tactical Missile Wing → Hahn | |||
Bitburg Elementary School | DODEA (DoDDS) | 2017 | ||||
Bitburg Middle School | DODEA (DoDDS) | 2017 | ||||
Bitburg American High School | DODEA (DoDDS) | 2017 | Accredited as a high school in 1956 | |||
Bitburg Army Terminal Station (BIT) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1994 | DEBS station (BIG) | |||
Bitburg Air Force Terminal Station (BIG) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1994 | ||||
FlaRak position Hawk | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
Böllenborn | Regency Net Communications Facility Böllenborn | 801st Telecommunications "R", C&C Sqn | 1997 | |||
Börfink | Börfink Admin Site , SOC, CRC | USAFE, NATO | 1994 | Bunkered command post "Erwin", call sign HARD TIRE (1981), WATERHOLE, SAAR RADAR; Static War HQ (KriegsHQ) AFCENT / AAFCE | ||
Börfink Terminal Station (BFK) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1994 | DEBS station (BOR) | |||
Borrstadt | Börrstadt ammunition depot | USAREUR | 1992 | PSP A 82 | ||
Brimingen | 4/6, 4th Nike HE Missile | 1971 | Nuclear warheads, 1961-1971, 1971-1990 Hawk | |||
Büchel | Büchel Air Base | US Custodial Team (702nd MUNSS Detachment) | still existing | Nuclear custody for JaboG 33 | ||
Büchel Dependents School | DoDDS | still existing | ||||
Clausen | Clausen Ammo Area 59 | USAREUR | 1991 | Action Lindwurm to remove chemical warfare agents. | ||
Dahn | Dahn Ammo Area | USAREUR | 1993 | RASP 972 | ||
Dahn Terminal Station (DHN) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1993 | ||||
Dannenfels | Dannenfels Communication Station (DFS) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1991 | |||
Dexheim | Anderson Barracks | USAREUR | 2009 | |||
Dexheim Missile Facility | 5/1, 5th Nike HE Missile | 1983 | Nuclear warheads | |||
Dexheim Family Housing | 2009 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 176 residential units | ||||
Dexheim Dependents School | DoDDS | 2009 | ||||
Dexheim Terminal Station (DXM) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 2009 | ||||
Dichtelbach | Dichtelbach Missile Station ( Kandrich ) | 5/1, 5th Nike HE Missile | 1991 | Nuclear warheads, 1982 Patriot | ||
Thunder Mountain | Donnersberg Terminal Station (DOG) (DON) | Co C / 102nd Signal Bn (USAREUR) | 1995 | LANDCENT Microwave System 1952 - 1962. European Tropospheric Scatter - Army (ET-A), Nodal Site 9.1. DEBS station (DON) | ||
Eppelsheim | Eppelsheim Class V Point | USAREUR | 1992 | PSP 52 | ||
Erbeskopf | Erbeskopf Communications Station, SOC | USAFE | 1992 | Relocation in 1965 from Langerkopf to the new 412-L position. | ||
Erbeskopf Terminal Station (ERF) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1992 | ||||
Fischbach | Nuclear depot (central warehouse), Fischbach Ordnance Depot | USAREUR | 1993 | Chemical weapons storage and extermination facility | ||
Fischbach Terminal Station (FIS) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1993 | ||||
Fürfeld | Fürfeld Class III and Class V Point | USAREUR | 1992 | PSP 51 | ||
Geinsheim | Geinsheim Activity | 2/56, 2nd Nike HE Missile | 1994 | Nuclear warheads | ||
Germersheim | De Gaulle barracks | USAREUR | 1956 | |||
Germersheim Army Depot | USAREUR | still existing | USAREUR | Controlled Humidity Storage Facility, PSP 75 | ||
POMCUS depot | USAREUR | 1992 | USAREUR | Prepositioned War Reserve Munitions | ||
Germersheim Terminal Station (GHM) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1993 | ||||
Goßberg | NATO control center Metro Tango | NATO | 1993 | |||
Grenderich | Patriot position | USAREUR | 1990 | |||
Großlittgen | Großlittgen Storage Annex | USAFE | Annex Spangdahlem | |||
Grünstadt | Grünstadt Communications Station | USAREUR, USAFE | USAREUR, USAFE | 1992 | FmElo Aufkl | |
Grünstadt AAFES Facility | AAFES | still existing | ||||
Rooster | Hahn Air Base | 50th TFW (USAFE) | 1994 | Frankfurt Hahn Airport | Built in 1952 by the French building authorities. | |
Hahn Air Base | MUNSS | 1994 | Nuclear custody for 50th TFW | |||
Hahn Air Base | Dual Based Forces 1970 | 1994 | Hahn AB with Holloman AFB, New Mexico | |||
Hahn Air Base | 701 TMW (USAFE) | 1969 | Tactical Missile Wing | |||
Hahn Terminal Station (HAN) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1994 | DEBS station (HAN) | |||
Hahn Family Housing Area | USAFE | 1994 | ||||
Hahn Dependents School | DoDDS | 1993 | ||||
Sohren Family Housing Area | USAFE | 1994 | ||||
Hisel | Hisel Missile Station | HQ 4/6, 4th Nike HE Missile | 1971 | Nuclear warheads, 1961–1971, 1971–1992 Hawk | ||
Hochspeyer | Hochspeyer Ammunition Storage Annex | USAFE | 1992 | |||
Fischbach Terminal Station (FSH) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1992 | Fischbach (near Kaiserslautern) | |||
Hontheim | Hontheim Missile Station | 4/6, 4th Nike HE Missile | 1983 | Nuclear warheads, 1961–1983 | ||
Hontheim Missile Station | 5/6, 5th Nike HE Missile | 1990 | Nuclear warheads, 1983–1990, relocated from Reitscheid | |||
Hoppstädten-Weiersbach | Hoppstaedten Army Airfield | USAREUR | 1994 | Boehmer AAF | ||
Idar-Oberstein | Strasbourg barracks | Quartier Strasbourg (FFA) until 1951 | USAREUR | 2008 | ||
POMCUS depot | USAREUR | 1992 | Controlled Humidity Storage Facility, Prepositioned War Reserve Munitions 1985–1990 | |||
Idar-Oberstein Family Housing | 1995 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 346 residential units | ||||
Idar-Oberstein Dependents School | DoDDS | 1995 | ||||
Idar-Oberstein Terminal Station (IDN) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 2008 | ||||
Idenheim | Idenheim Communications Annex | USAFE | 1992 | |||
Idenheim Terminal Station (IDM) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1992 | ||||
Kaiserslautern | Daenner barracks | Verdun district (FFA) until 1951 | HQ 21st Support Command (USAREUR) | still existing | 1967 USAREUR establishes the use of the German name Daenner-Kaserne for the property. | |
Kleber barracks | Quartier Kléber (FFA) until 1951 | USAREUR | still existing | German name before 1945: 23er barracks. | ||
Panzer barracks | Quartier Roux (FFA) until 1951 | Kaiserslautern Military Post (USAREUR, USAFE) | still existing | 1967 USAREUR establishes the use of the German name Panzer-Kaserne for the property. | ||
Pulaski Barracks | USAREUR | still existing | Barracks built after 1950, Area Command Palatinate 1965 | |||
Kaiserslautern Elementary School | DODEA (DoDDS) | still existing | ||||
Kaiserslautern Middle School | DODEA (DoDDS) | still existing | 2019 new school building based on the “21st Century Schools” concept. | |||
Rhine Ordnance Barracks | Advanced Weapons Storage Facility | still existing | Barracks built after 1950, 1957 Redstone 26 rockets | |||
Kaiserslautern Army Depot | USAREUR | 1995 | Depot built after 1950 | |||
POMCUS depot | USAREUR | 1994 | Controlled Humidity Storage Facility, Prepositioned War Reserve Munitions 1985–1990 | |||
Rhine Medical Depot | USAREUR | 1975 | Largest depot of its kind in Europe, set up in Kaiserslautern on October 12, 1947, relocated to Pirmasens in 1975. | |||
Fliegerstrasse at the Blutacker Family Housing | still existing | Built from 1950 to 1957, a total of 1851 residential units in Kaiserslautern (excluding USAFE). | ||||
Mannheimer Strasse Family Housing | still existing | Annex 4 USAFE. Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 1851 residential units in Kaiserslautern (excluding USAFE) | ||||
Kaiserslautern Terminal Station (KLN) | Co C / 102nd Signal Bn (USAREUR) | 1995 | DEBS station (KLN) | |||
AFN Studio | AFN Kaiserslautern | still existing | Founded in 1953; AFN with TV studio. | |||
Kaiserslautern-Vogelweh | Kapon Air Station | AFTAC (Air Force Technical Applications Center) | 1993 | |||
Kapon Air Station | US Space Command (SPACECOM) | 1993 | ||||
Vogelweh Family Housing | still existing | Annex USAFE. Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 1808 residential units in Vogelweh (excluding USAFE) | ||||
Vogelweh Elementary School | DODEA (DoDDS) | still existing | ||||
Vogelweh American High School | Illinois Place | DODEA (DoDDS) | still existing | 1982 largest American high school outside the USA (1,600 students). | ||
Vogelweh Terminal Station (VOG) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1993 | ||||
Candelabra | Kandel Ammo Area | USAREUR | 1991 | PSP 76 | ||
Kastellaun | Kastellaun Family Housing Area | USAFE | 1991 | Built after 1957. Housing estate for the Wüschheim missile base. | ||
Candle Home | Regency Net Communications Facility Kerzenheim | 801st Telecommunications "R", C&C Sqn | 1997 | |||
Kindsbach | ADOC | USAFE | 1992 | NATO command bunker "Kindsbach Cave", call sign PASSPORT; USAFE Combat Operations Center (War HQ). | ||
ACE HIGH troposcatter terminal (ABHZ) | USAFE | 1995 | Forward scatter connection for SHAPE to Casteau (BCAZ) and Chièvres (BCHZ) via Baraque de Fraiture (BFRZ) (all BE) 1962–1995. | |||
Kindsbach Army Terminal Station (KDH) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1979 | AFCENT Microwave System 1967-1979 | |||
Kindsbach Air Force Terminal Station (KBH) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1992 | ||||
Kindsbach Storage Annex | USAFE | 1992 | ||||
Kirchheimbolanden | POL Storage Facility | USAREUR | 1992 | May 5, 1986 Bomb attack on the tank farm | ||
Weierhof Family Housing | 1993 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 98 residential units | ||||
War field | Nuclear depot (central warehouse), Kriegsfeld Ammo Depot | USAREUR | 1995 | RASP 952 | ||
Kriegsfeld Terminal Station (KSD) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 2000 | ||||
North Point Advanced Weapons Storage Facility | USAREUR | 1991 | 1957 Nike-Hercules 84 missiles | |||
Mörsfeld Storage Point | USAREUR | 2000 | ||||
Ruppertsecken ammunition depot | USAREUR | 2000 | PSP 3 | |||
Landau (Palatinate) | Camp Thomas Nast | HQ 2/56, 2nd Nike HE Missile | 1984 | Nuclear warheads, 1961–1984 | ||
Camp Thomas Nast | 2/56, 2nd Nike HE Missile | 1984 | Nuclear warheads | |||
Landstuhl | Wilson Barracks | Marceau Barracks (FFA) | USAREUR | 1958 | German name Kirchberg-Kaserne | |
Military hospital | 2nd Gen Hosp, 20th Station Hosp (USAREUR) | still existing | ||||
Central Hospital | Landstuhl Regional Medical Center (USAREUR) | still existing | Army Medical Center | |||
Landstuhl Family Housing Area | still existing | Annex USAFE. Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 1468 residential units in Landstuhl (excluding USAFE). | ||||
Landstuhl Elementary Middle School | DODEA (DoDDS) | still existing | Founded in 1955, the school was rebuilt in 2008, further investments in 2019 based on the “21st Century Schools” concept. | |||
Landstuhl Terminal Station (LDL) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | still existing | DEBS station (LDL) | |||
Long head | Langerkopf Radio Relay Site | USAFE | 1992 | SOC 1952–1965 (412-L position, relocated to Erbeskopf), call sign LOG ROLL, EAME Main Control Station | ||
Langerkopf Relay Station (LKF) | 102nd signal Bn (USAREUR) | 1995 | DEBS station (LKF) | |||
Leistadt | Regency Net Communications Facility Hill 460 | 801st Telecommunications "R", C&C Sqn | 1997 | |||
Lviv | Lviv Missile Station | 2/56, 2nd Nike HE Missile | 1992 | Nuclear warheads. | ||
Lviv Ammo Area 64 | USAREUR | 1992 | PSP A 64 | |||
Wage field | Terminal Station (LSD) wage field | Co C / 102nd Signal Bn (USAREUR) | 1995 | |||
Mainz | Dragoon barracks | Wehrmacht | USAREUR | 1993 | Keep German name | |
Lee Barracks | Quartier Mangin (FFA) until 1949 | HQ Brigade (USAREUR) | 1995 | District in Gonsenheim | German name Kathen-Kaserne | |
Dr. Martin Luther King Village Family Housing | 1995 | Built from 1950 to 1957, a total of 1017 residential units in Mainz (excluding USAFE) | ||||
Mainz Dependents School | DoDDS | 1994 | ||||
Mainz Terminal Station (MNZ) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1995 | ||||
Finthen Army Airfield | HQ Army Aviation Brigade (USAREUR) | 1993 | ||||
Finthen Family Housing | 1995 | Built from 1950 to 1957, a total of 1017 residential units in Mainz (excluding USAFE) | ||||
Fintherlandstrasse Family Housing | 2014 | Built from 1950 to 1957, a total of 1017 residential units in Mainz (excluding USAFE) | ||||
Sandflora Family Housing | 1994 | Built from 1950 to 1957, a total of 1017 residential units in Mainz (excluding USAFE) | ||||
Uhlerborn Family Housing | 1997 | Budenheim. Built from 1950 to 1957, a total of 1017 residential units in Mainz (excluding USAFE) | ||||
Finthen Terminal Station (FIN) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1993 | ||||
POMCUS depot | USAREUR | 1993 | ||||
Maßweiler | Massweiler barracks | USAREUR | 1992 | Bunker command post USAREUR (KriegsHQ) | ||
Massweiler Terminal Station (MAS) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1992 | ||||
Mehlingen | Mehlingen Communications Annex | USAFE | 1992 | call sign MAROON | ||
Lousy | Rhine Ammo Depot, nuclear depot (central warehouse) | Advanced Weapons Storage Facility | Headquarters for USAREUR / 7th Army, 1957 LaCrosse 1020 rockets | |||
Miesau Army Depot | USAREUR | still existing | ||||
POMCUS depot | USAREUR | 1995 | Controlled Humidity Storage Facility, Prepositioned War Reserve Munitions | |||
Miesau Terminal Station (MIE) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | still existing | ||||
Montabaur | Westerwald barracks | US Custodial Team (83rd USAFAD) | 1992 | Nuclear custody for RakArtBtl 350 (Lance) | ||
Morbach | Advanced Weapons Prestock Point | USAREUR | 1995 | |||
Morbach Ammunition Storage Station | USAFE | 1992 | ||||
Morbach Railroad Junction | USAFE | 1992 | ||||
Muhl-Züsch | Muhl-Züsch Radio Relay Site | USAFE | 1992 | |||
Muhl Terminal Station (MUL) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1992 | DEBS station (MUL) | |||
Münchweiler | Military hospital | 225th Station Hosp (USAREUR) | 1993 | |||
Münchweiler Underground Warehouse 7602 | USAREUR | 1995 | Civilian Support Center | |||
Münchweiler Terminal Station (MWL) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1967 | LANDCENT Microwave System 1952–1962, AIRCENT Microwave System 1952–1958, AFCENT Microwave System (Station 17) 1962–1967 | |||
Merzalben Underground Warehouse 7602 | USAREUR | 1995 | ||||
Leimen Ammo Area 67 (nuclear depot) | USAREUR | 1993 | PSP A 67 | |||
Münchweiler Family Housing Area | 1992 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 99 residential units | ||||
Nahbollenbach | Nahbollenbach Storage Area | USAREUR | 1998 | |||
Nahbollenbach Terminal Station (NAH) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1998 | ||||
Winter Breath Storage Area | USAREUR | 1993 | ||||
POMCUS depot | USAREUR | 1994 | ||||
New bridge | Army Hospital Neubrücke | Army Hospital (USAREUR) | 1995 | Reserve hospital, relocated from Birkenfeld in 1955 | ||
Army Hospital Neubrücke | HQ 5/6, 5th Nike HE Missile | 1983 | Nuclear warheads, 1961–1983 | |||
Neubrücke Family Housing | 1995 | Built after 1957 | ||||
Neubrücke Dependents School | DoDDS | 1993 | ||||
Neubrücke Terminal Station (NEW) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1995 | ||||
Oberauerbach | Oberauerbach Missile Station | 2/56, 2nd Nike HE Missile | 1991 | Nuclear warheads | ||
Obersayn | Wäller barracks (Westerburg) | US Custodial Team (Team C, 501st USAAD) | 1987 | Nuclear custody for 4./FlaRakBtl 23, Westerburg (Nike). | ||
Horse field | Horse Field Air Base | USAFE | 1960 | LeKG 42 , JaboG 35 (Air Force) | Built in 1952 by the French building authorities, initially as RCAF Base, from 1955 US Air Base, planned for joint use of USAFE and Air Force in 1955 | |
Pirmasens | Husterhoeh barracks | Husterhöh barracks (Wehrmacht) | 59th Ordnance Brigade, Pirmasens Military Post (USAREUR) | 1997 | 1964 USAREUR defines the use of German names for the barracks in Pirmasens and Zweibrücken. Nuclear safe custody center. | |
Husterhöh Communications Site | USAFE | 1992 | Centralized Comint relay center | |||
Pirmasens Terminal Station (PMS) | Co C / 102nd Signal Bn (USAREUR) | 1995 | DEBS station (PMS) | |||
Regency Net Base | 801st Telecommunications "R", C&C Sqn | 1997 | Nuclear weapons command network | |||
Rhine Medical Depot | USAREUR | 1995 | Largest depot of its kind in Europe, set up in Kaiserslautern on October 12, 1947, relocated to Pirmasens in 1975. | |||
POMCUS depot | USAREUR | 1995 | Controlled Humidity Storage Facility, Prepositioned War Reserve Munitions 1985–1990 | |||
Pirmasens Family Housing Area | 1992 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 933 residential units | ||||
Pirmasens Dependents School | DoDDS | 1997 | ||||
Schmalenberg Underground Warehouse / Storage Area 7600 | USAREUR | 1997 | ||||
Prüm | Prüm Air Station (PUM) | USAFE | 1994 | DEBS Station (PUM), call sign MORPHA, JEREMIAH | ||
Prüm Dependents School | DoDDS | 1994 | ||||
Quirnheim | Gdansk barracks | USAREUR | 2001 | |||
Quirnheim Missile Station | 5/1, 5th Nike HE Missile | 1994 | Nuclear warheads | |||
Ramstein | Ramstein Air Base | HQ 12th Air Force 1952–1957, HQ 17th Air Force 1959–1972, HQ USAFE since 1974 | still existing | Built in 1952 by the French building authorities (BA-MA BW 1/48 800). NATO HQ Air Force. The Ramstein air conference on August 28, 1988 killed 70 people and injured around a thousand. | ||
Ramstein Air Base | 7232 Munitions Maintenance Group, 1974 7000 MUNSS (USAFE) | still existing | Nuclear central warehouse of the Air Force | |||
Ramstein Air Base | Dual Based Forces 1970 | 1994 | Ramstein AB with Mountain Home AFB, Idaho. | |||
Ramstein Air Base | Dual Based Forces 1970 | 1994 | Ramstein AB with Otis AFB, Mississippi. | |||
Ramstein Air Base | Dual Based Forces 1970 | 1994 | Ramstein AB with Seymour-Johnson AFB, North Carolina. | |||
Ramstein Family Housing Area | USAFE | still existing | ||||
Ramstein Elementary School | DODEA (DoDDS) | still existing | ||||
Ramstein Intermediate School | DODEA (DoDDS) | still existing | ||||
Ramstein Middle School | DODEA (DoDDS) | still existing | ||||
Ramstein American High School | DODEA (DoDDS) | still existing | 1057 pupils in the 2007/08 school year. 2019 new school building based on the “21st Century Schools” concept. | |||
Ramstein Terminal Station (RSN) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | still existing | DEBS station (RSN) | |||
Rittersdorf | Rittersdorf Annex USAFE | USAREUR | 1992 | Missile depot (Hawk, Chaparral) for Bitburg Air Base | ||
Rittersdorf Terminal Station (RTF) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1992 | ||||
Ruppertsweiler | Command bunker | USAREUR | 1992 | NATO command bunker "Arius RUF 1". Static War Headquarters (KriegsHQ) 4ATAF | ||
Ruppertsweiler Warehouse 7608 | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
Ruppertsweiler Ammo Area 65 | USAREUR | 1992 | PSP A 65 | |||
Schifferstadt | Schifferstadt Ammo Area | USAREUR | 1992 | PSP 77 | ||
Schönborn | Schoenborn Missile Station | 5/6, 5th Nike HE Missile | 1992 | Nuclear warheads | ||
Schönfeld | CRC Schönfeld | USAFE | 1994 | call sign BARBER | ||
Schönfeld Terminal Station (SCH) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1994 | European Tropospheric Scatter - Army (ET-A), Nodal Site 7. | |||
Sembach | Sembach Air Base | HQ 17th Air Force 1972-1995 (USAFE) | still existing | Built in 1952 by the French building authorities (BA-MA BW 1/92 283). 1995 cessation of flight operations. | ||
Sembach Air Base | MUNSS | 1994 | Nuclear custody for 17th Air Force | |||
Sembach Air Base | 66th TRW 1953-1958, 66th ECW 1966-1994 | 1994 | Electronic Combat Wing | |||
Sembach Air Base | 701 TMW (USAFE) | 1969 | Tactical Missile Wing → Hahn | |||
Sembach Air Base | Dual Based Forces 1970 | 1994 | Sembach AB with Otis AFB, Mississippi | |||
Sembach Air Base | FOB (USAFE) | 1994 | FOB for A 10 of the 81st TFW, RAF Bentwaters | |||
Sembach Air Base | FOB (USAFE) | 1994 | FOB for E / F 111A from RAF Upper Heyford | |||
Regency Net | HQ 801st Telecommunications "R", C&C Sqn | 1997 | Nuclear weapons command network | |||
Sembach Terminal Station (SEH) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1997 | ||||
Sembach DEBS Station (SEH) | USAFE | 1992 | ADP (Automatic Data Processing) | |||
Sembach Elementary School | DODEA (DoDDS) | still existing | ||||
Sembach Middle School | DODEA (DoDDS) | still existing | 2019 new school building based on the “21st Century Schools” concept. | |||
Siegelbach | Telecommunication device | USAFE | 1993 | |||
Siegelbach Terminal Station (SBH) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1993 | ||||
Spa bridges | Spabrücken Storage Facility | USAREUR | 1992 | PSP 50 | ||
Spangdahlem | Spangdahlem Air Base | 52nd TFW (USAFE) | still existing, relocation announced on July 29, 2020 | Built in 1952 by the French building authorities (BA-MA BW 1/48 894, 11 825, 83 752). | ||
Spangdahlem Air Base | MUNSS | 1994 | Nuclear custody for 52nd TFW | |||
Spangdahlem Air Base | Dual Based Forces 1970 | 1994 | Spangdahlem AB with Holloman AFB, New Mexico. | |||
Spangdahlem Elementary School | DODEA (DoDDS) | still existing | ||||
Spangdahlem American High School | DODEA (DoDDS) | still existing | Founded in 2015 in place of Bitburg High School, new school building in 2019 based on the “21st Century Schools” concept. | |||
Speicher Family Housing Area | USAFE | still existing | ||||
Binsfeld Family Housing Area | USAFE | still existing | ||||
Herforst Family Housing Area | USAFE | still existing | ||||
FlaRak position Hawk | USAREUR | 1992 | ||||
Spangdahlem Terminal Station (SPM) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1994 | DEBS Station (SPM) | |||
stone | Stone Communication Station | USAREUR | 1992 | European Tropospheric Scatter - Army (ET-A), Nodal Site 8.1. | ||
trier | Trier Air Base (Y-57) | USAFE | 1960 | General von Seidel barracks (Luftwaffe), later a reception facility for asylum seekers (AfA) | Built in 1953 | |
US Custodial Team (6th USAFAD) | 1966 | Nuclear custody for French armed forces (68e RA, 1961–1966) | ||||
Trier Dependents School | DoDDS | 1966 | ||||
Wackernheim | McCully Barracks | Graf Haeseler Barracks (Wehrmacht) | USAREUR | still existing | Since 1993 logistics facility for US headquarters in Wiesbaden | |
McCully Barracks | Graf Haeseler Barracks (Wehrmacht) | 5/1, 5th Nike HE Missile | 1989 | Nuclear warheads, 1983–1989 Chaparral | ||
Wackernheim Terminal Station (WKM) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1993 | ||||
Weilerbach | Weilerbach Central Storage Site (nuclear depot) | USAREUR | 1992 | USA medium-range missile (INF) warheads and nuclear ammunition | ||
Welschbillig | Welschbillig Missile Station | 4/6, 4th Nike HE Missile | 1971/1992 | Nuclear warheads, 1961–1971, 1971–1992 Hawk | ||
Worms | Taukkunen Barracks | Kemmel barracks (Wehrmacht) | HQ 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1996 | HQ 5th Signal Command set up in 1974 | |
De La Police barracks | USAREUR | 1996 | ||||
Engineer barracks | USAREUR | 1996 | ||||
Thomas Jefferson Village Family Housing | 1999 | Built from 1950 to 1957, a total of 412 residential units | ||||
Worms Dependents School | DoDDS | 1996 | ||||
Haide Labor Service Camp | Labor service | 1995 | ||||
Worms Terminal Station (WMS) | 5th Signal Command (USAREUR) | 1996 | ||||
Wüschheim | Wüschheim Air Station | Cruise Missile Position (USAFE) | 1992 | 1966 Matador, US INF object | ||
Wüschheim Tac Opera Facility | 5/6, 5th Nike HE Missile | 1966 | Nuclear warheads, 1961–1966 | |||
Zweibrücken | Kreuzberg barracks | Quartier Turenne (FFA) until 1951 | USAREUR | 1993 | 1964 USAREUR determines the use of the German name for the property in Zweibrücken. | |
Kreuzberg barracks | TAMMC (USAREUR) | 1993 | 1966 TAMMC is relocated from Orléans to Zweibrücken. | |||
Zweibrücken Family Housing | 1993 | Built between 1950 and 1957, a total of 381 residential units (excluding USAFE) | ||||
Zweibrücken Dependents School | DoDDS | 1993 | ||||
Zweibrücken Air Base | RCAF Base Zweibrücken until 1969 | 26th TRW (USAFE) | 1991 | Built in 1952 by the French building authorities. | ||
Zweibrücken Air Base | Dual Based Forces 1980 | 1991 | Zweibrücken AB with Bergstrom AFB, Texas. | |||
Zweibrücken Army Airfield | Zweibrücken Air Base | USAREUR | 1994 | |||
Zweibrücken Terminal Station (ZBN) | Co C / 102nd Signal Bn (USAREUR) | 1995 |
Saarland
Location | property | Previous user | Troops | Year of dissolution | Reuse | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Büschfeld | Büschfeld Ammo Storage Area | USAREUR | 1991 | PSP S 29 A | ||
Differten | Differten Ammo Storage Area | USAREUR | 1991 | PSP S 9 A | ||
Freisen | Freisen station | USAREUR | 1962 | LANDCENT Microwave System 1952–1962 | ||
Home town | Domestic Ammo Storage Site | USAREUR | 1991 | PSP S 5 | ||
Reitscheid | Reitscheid Missile Station | 5/6, 5th Nike HE Missile | 1983/1992 | Nuclear warheads 1961–1983, relocated to Hontheim, Hawk 1983–1992 | ||
Saarlouis | Maréchal Ney district | US Custodial Team (16th USAFAD) | 1966 | Nuclear custody for French armed forces (303e GA, 1961–1966) | ||
Urexweiler | Urexweiler Ammo Storage Area | USAREUR | 1991 | PSP 32 | ||
Weiskirchen | Weiskirchen Terminal Station (WKN) | Co C / 102nd Signal Bn (USAREUR) | 1967 | LANDCENT Microwave System 1952–1962, AIRCENT Microwave System 1952–1958, AFCENT Microwave System (Station 15) 1962–1967 |
Abbreviations
abbreviation | text |
---|---|
AADCOM | Army Air Defense Command |
AAFCE | Allied Air Forces Central Europe |
AAFES | Army and Air Force Exchange Service |
FROM | Air base |
ACE | Allied Command Europe |
ACR | Armored Cavalry Regiment |
ADOC | Air Defense Operations Center |
AFB | Air Force Base |
AFCENT | Allied Forces Central Europe |
AFN | American Forces Network |
AIRCENT | Allied Air Forces Central Europe |
Ammo | Ammunition |
ArtRgt | Artillery Regiment |
ASP | Ammunition Storage Point |
ATAF | Allied Tactical Air Force |
BAOR | British Army of the Rhine |
BE | Belgian, Belgium |
BEN | Brigade d'Engins Nucléaires |
Bn | Battalion |
BSD | Belgian Strijdkrachten in Duitsland |
CENTAG | Central Army Group |
Co | Company |
COB | Collocated Operating Base |
C&C | Command and Control |
CRC | Control and Reporting Center |
CRP | Control and Reporting Post |
DEBS | Digital European Backbone System |
Det | Detachment |
DoDDS | Department of Defense Dependents Schools |
DODEA | Department of Defense Education Activity |
DULAG | Transit camp |
EAME | European-African-Middle Eastern Communications Area |
FBA | Forces Belges en Allemagne |
FBW | Fighter Bomber Wing |
FFA | Forces Françaises en Allemagne |
FOB | Forward Operating Base |
FKG | Missile Squadron |
FlaRak | Anti-aircraft missiles |
FlaRakBtl | Anti-aircraft missile battalion |
FmElo Aufkl | Telecommunication and electronic reconnaissance |
FmRgt | Telecommunications Regiment |
FR | French, France |
FWD | Forward |
GA | Groupe d'Artillerie |
GE | German, Germany |
Born | Mountain |
gene | general |
GR | Greek, Greece |
HE | High explosives |
Hosp | hospital |
HQ | Headquarters |
INF | Intermediate Nuclear Forces |
IT | Italian, Italy |
JaboG | Fighter-bomber squadron |
LANDCENT | Allied Land Forces Central Europe |
LeKG | Light Combat Squadron |
LFV | La Faire Vite communications network |
LTG | Air Transport Squadron |
MAC | Military Airlift Command |
MP | Military Police |
MUNSS | Munitions Support Squadron |
NATO | North Atlantic Treaty Organization |
NAVFORGER | United States Naval Forces Germany |
NCO | Non-Commissioned Officer |
NL | Netherlands, Netherlands |
NO | Norwegian, Norway |
NSA | National Security Agency |
OSLw | Air Force Officer School |
POLE | Petrol Oil Lubricants |
POMCUS | Prepositioned Organizational Material Configurated to Unit Sets |
PSP | Prestock Point |
RA | Régiment d'Artillerie |
RAF | Royal Air Force |
RAFG | Royal Air Force Germany |
RakArtBtl | Missile Artillery Battalion |
RASP | Reserve Ammunition Storage Point |
RCAF | Royal Canadian Air Force |
SAC | Strategic Air Command |
SHAPE | Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe |
SOC | Sector Operations Center |
Sqn | Squadron |
TFW | Tactical Fighter Wing |
TRW | Tactical Reconnaissance Wing |
TSLw | Air Force Technical School |
TU | Turkish, Turkey |
u / i | unidentified |
USAAD | United States Army Artillery Detachment |
USAAG | United States Army Artillery Group |
USAFAD | United States Army Field Artillery Detachment |
USAFE | United States Air Force in Europe |
USAFRICOM | United States Africa Command |
USAREUR | United States Army in Europe |
USEUCOM | United States European Command |
USMARFOREUR | United States Marine Forces in Europe |
See also
- US Army Garrison Schweinfurt
- Foreign military bases in Germany
- List of American military locations in Germany
- List of American military locations in northern Germany
- List of British military bases in Germany
- List of French military locations in Germany
- List of Belgian military locations in Germany
- List of Canadian military locations in Germany
- List of Dutch military locations in Germany
- List of other military locations in Germany
- List of Soviet military bases in Germany
- Allied headquarters in Berlin
- Territorial organization of the US armed forces in Germany
- 59th Ordnance Brigade
- Weapon Storage and Security System WS3
- United States Constabulary
- American field post in the Cold War
- List of American military locations in France
- List of American military locations in Great Britain
literature
- Benz, Wolfgang (ed.), Germany under Allied occupation 1945–1949/55, Akademie-Verlag, Berlin 1999.
- Cunningham, Keith B. and Andreas Klemmer, Restructuring the US Military Bases in Germany, Bonn International Center for Conversion (BICC) Report 4, Bonn 1995.
- Duke, Simon W., United States Military Forces and Installations in Europe, Oxford 1989.
- Duke, Simon W. and Wolfgang Krieger (Eds.), US Military Forces in Europe. The Early Years 1945-1970, Westview Press, Boulder - San Francisco - Oxford 1993.
- Frederiksen, Oliver, The American Military Occupation of Germany 1945–1953, Historical Division, US Army Europe, 1954.
- Grieswelle, Detlev and Wilfried Schlau (eds.), Allied troops in the Federal Republic of Germany. Lectures and contributions by the Political Academy of the Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung, Issue 13, Bonn 1990.
- Haglund, David G. and Olaf Mager (eds.), Homeward Bound ?, Allied Forces in the New Germany, Westview Press, Boulder 1992.
- Harder, Hans-Joachim, Guarantors of Peace and Freedom: The US Forces in Germany 1945–1990, in: Maulucci, Thomas W. Jr. and Detlef Junker, GIs in Germany, Cambridge University Press, New York 2013, 37–54.
- Henke, Klaus-Dietmar, The American Occupation of Germany, Oldenbourg-Verlag, Munich 1996.
- Hickman, Donald J., The United States Army in Europe 1953-1963, Historical Division. US Army Europe, 1964.
- Lemza, John W., American Military Communities in West Germany. Life on the Cold War Badlands 1945 - 1990, McFarland, 2016.
- Leuerer, Thomas, The Stationing of American Forces in Germany. Military communities of the US Army in Germany since 1945, Ergon-Verlag, Diss.University of Würzburg 1996.
- Libby, Brian Arthur, Policing Germany. The United States Constabulary 1946-1952, Diss. Ph.D. Purdue University, Ann Arbor 1977.
- Mako, William P., US Ground Forces and the Defense of Central Europe, Brookings Institution, Washington DC 1983.
- Nelson, Daniel J., A History of US Military Forces in Germany, Westview Special Studies in Military Affairs, Boulder - London 1987.
- Schraut, Hans-Jürgen, from occupier to protector. The change in US military strategy and the presence of American armed forces in Germany, 1945–1953, Diss. Uni Munich 1994.
- Seiler, Signe, American soldiers in Germany, in: Grieswelle, Schlau (Ed.), Allied Troops in Germany, Bonn 1990.
- Snyder, Thomas and Daniel F. Harrington, Historical Highlights. United States Air Forces in Europe 1942–1997, USAFE Office of History, Ramstein Air Base, 1997.
- Stützle, Walther, United States Military Forces and Installations in Europe, SIPRI, Stockholm 1989.
- Stützle, Walther, Europe After an American Withdrawal, SIPRI, Stockholm 1990.
Literature on individual garrisons
- Baden-Württemberg
- Harder, Hans-Joachim, Baden-Württemberg Military History Manual, Stuttgart 1987.
- Bamberg
- Becker, Hans, Americans in Bamberg. Main results of an empirical study, in: Grieswelle, Schlau (Hrsg.), Alliierte Truppen in Deutschland, Bonn 1990.
- Becker, Hans and Joachim Burdack, Americans in Bamberg. An ethnic minority between segregation and integration, Bamberger Geographische Schriften, special series, Bamberg 1987.
- Bitburg Air Base
- Neu, Peter (Ed.), Bitburg Airfield. Military location and economic factor of a region; Origin, development, closure, conversion = Air Base Bitburg: Eagle Country, published by the Zweckverband Flugplatz Bitburg, Druckerei Anders, Prüm 1998.
- Frankfurt am Main
- Schmidt, Hans-Joachim, Disarmament in Frankfurt? Statement on the question of possible US troop withdrawals from the area of the city of Frankfurt, Hessian Foundation for Peace and Conflict Research, Frankfurt / Main 1990.
- Fürstenfeldbruck Air Base
- Jung, Hartmut, Fürstenfeldbruck. Chronicle of an air base (1935–1994), Fürstenfeldbruck 1994.
- Heidelberg
- Elkins, Walter F. and Christian Führer and Michael J. Montgomery, Americans in Heidelberg 1945 - 2013, Verlag Regionalkultur, Heidelberg 2014.
- Marburg
- Gimbel, John, A German Community Under American Occupation. Marburg 1945–1952, Stanford 1961.
- Rhineland-Palatinate
- Herget, Winfried, Werner Kremp and Walter G. Rödel (eds.), Neighbor America. 50 years of Americans in Rhineland-Palatinate 1945–1995, Trier 1996.
- Sembach Air Base
- Plassmann, Max, The US Air Bases in Rhineland-Palatinate from the first planning to conversion with special consideration of Sembach, Master's thesis, Mainz 1996.
- Stuttgart
- Mönch, Winfried, "Little America" in Greater Stuttgart. Notes on the US garrison 1945–1992, in: Die Alte Stadt. Quarterly magazine for city history, urban sociology and monument preservation. 21st year. 1/94, Kohlhammer-Verlag, Stuttgart 1994.
- Ulm / Neu-Ulm
- Lenk, Joachim, Little America left and right of the Danube, Münsingen, undated
Web links
- Restructuring the US Military Bases in Germany: Scope, Impacts, and Opportunities . BICC report 4, 1995
- Page on the history of the American armed forces in Germany (English)
- The transformation of the US armed forces in Europe
- US bases in Germany (English)
- Allied Museum, Berlin Allied Museum, Berlin
- Paul Schäfer (Ed.): US Armed Forces in Germany ( Memento from January 3, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) (including legal basis and consequences of the stationing for Germany; PDF; 3.21 MB)
- www.zone-interdite.net Flash animated world map with military zones (German / English)
- www.zone-interdite.net Flash animated world map with military zones (German / English)
- The history of the US Army in Ulm and Neu-Ulm 1951 to 1991 (German, English)
Individual evidence
- ↑ named after Major John L. McKee, who was shot down and killed on April 12, 1945 as an artillery observer over Germany (General Order April 2, 1955).
- ↑ Alternative lead project Germany-Italy. System in operation until the 1990s. From there connection to Cavriana (IMBZ), Monte Giogo / Livorno (IMXZ), Nice (FNIZ), Roma (ITLZ), Ischia (IICZ), Monte Vulture (IVUZ), Monte Mancuso / Catanzaro (IMMZ), Monte Lauro (ICCZ) ) as well as to Malta (IDBZ), Greece and Turkey.
- ↑ named after Captain Charles H. Cook, Jr., who died on July 11, 1943 near Gela in Sicily. (General Order August 18, 1949).
- ↑ named after Staff Sergeant Charles L. Campbell, who died on March 28, 1945 while crossing the Rhine near Mannheim (General Order August 23, 1948).
- ↑ named after Patrick Henry (May 29, 1736 to June 6, 1799), governor of Virginia and one of the founding fathers of the United States.
- ↑ named on January 31, 1958 after the American writer Mark Twain (November 30, 1835 to April 21, 1910), real name Samuel L. Clemens, author of "Tom Sawyer" and "Huckleberry Finn", who lived between 1880 and 1907 Visited Heidelberg nine times.
- ↑ named after General George S. Patton, Jr. (November 11, 1885 to December 1, 1945), KG Third Army and popular war hero, killed in a car accident near Heidelberg (General Order October 30, 1946).
- ↑ named after Brigadier General James E. Wharton, who fell in command of the 28th ID on August 12, 1944 in Normandy (General Order June 3, 1952).
- ↑ named after John F. Kennedy (May 29, 1917 to November 22, 1963), President of the USA 1961–1963.
- ↑ named after Adolph C. Gerszewski, who died on April 9, 1945 near Heilbronn (General Order August 23, 1948).
- ↑ named 1945 after Pfc Adrian Phillips, who died in January 1945.
- ↑ named after the insignia of the US Regiment of Dragoons (General Order January 24, 1947).
- ↑ Named after Paul Revere (December 21, 1734 to May 10, 1818), American freedom fighter.
- ↑ named in 1945 after Technician 4th Grade Lester W. Smiley, who was awarded the Silver Star for bravery in World War II .
- ↑ Since the end of the war, German prisoners of war have been questioned in Foreign Military Studies, work began in 1946 under the direction of Colonel General Halder in Allendorf (near Gießen), completed in 1961. Connection also to the Mil communications system of the USA 1945/1946 in Oberursel (Camp King, House Alaska). Warehouses in Allendorf (Interrogation Enclosure), Neustadt (near Marburg), Garmisch, Oßweil near Ludwigsburg, Königstein, Karlsruhe.
- ↑ named after Corporal Edgar G. Wilkin, who died on March 18, 1945 in fighting in the Siegfried Line in Germany. (General Order July 15, 1949).
- ↑ named after Brigadier General John W. Coffey, who was awarded the Legion of Merit for his services in setting up Headquarters Command, European Theater of Operations in England in 1943 and who crashed and killed on March 8, 1951 during a reconnaissance flight near Koblenz (General Order February 27, 1952).
- ↑ named after Pfc Frederick C. Murphy, who died as a medic on March 18, 1945 in the fighting in the Siegfried Line in Germany (General Order July 22, 1949).
- ↑ named after Pfc Jose F. Valdez, who died on January 25, 1945 near Rosencrantz in France (General Order November 7, 1949).
- ↑ named after General George S. Patton, Jr. (November 11, 1885 to December 21, 1945), KG Third Army and popular war hero, killed in a car accident near Heidelberg.
- ↑ named after 1st Sergeant Samuel J. Turley, who died on November 9, 1944 near Metz in France (General Order October 1, 1947).
- ↑ named after Pfc Cecil V. Taylor, who died on April 18, 1945 near Beilstein in Germany (General Order August 23, 1948).
- ↑ named after Benjamin Franklin (July 17, 1706 to April 17, 1790), one of the founding fathers of the USA, ambassador of the USA in Paris during the War of Independence 1776 to 1785.
- ↑ named after Pfc Dominic V. Spinelli, who died on April 14, 1945 as a medic near Wilsbach in Germany (General Order August 23, 1948).
- ↑ named after Pfc George F. Sullivan, who died on April 10, 1945 near Heilbronn (General Order August 23, 1948).
- ↑ named after Pfc Robert Funari, Jr., who died on April 5, 1945 near Heilbronn (General Order August 23, 1948).
- ↑ named after LTC Wilson D. Coleman, who died on July 30, 1944 near St-Denis-le-Cast in France (General Order December 14, 1951).
- ↑ named after Pfc Robert M. Hammonds, who died on April 11, 1945 near Heilbronn (General Order August 23, 1948).
- ↑ named after Cpl Arthur N. Cawley, who fell on August 17, 1944 (General Order May 13, 1947).
- ↑ named after the insignia of the US Regiment of Dragoons (General Order January 24, 1947).
- ↑ named after 2nd Lieutenant John F. Dolan, who died on March 2, 1945 near St. Tönis in Germany (General Order June 17, 1947), renamed Dolan Barracks on September 26, 1949.
- ↑ named after Major General Charles E. Kilbourne, who died on November 12, 1963 as the oldest holder (born December 18, 1872) of the Medal of Honor (General Order March 8, 1966).
- ↑ named after Pfc George S. Tompkins, who fell near Heilbronn on April 3, 1945 (General Order August 23, 1948).
- ↑ named after 1st Lieutenant James E. Robinson, who died on April 6, 1945 near Untergriesheim in Germany (General Order June 20, 1949).
- ↑ named after Pfc Herman P. Wallace, who died on February 27, 1945 near Prümzurley in Germany (General Order June 30, 1949).
- ↑ named after Private William D. McGee, who died on March 18, 1945 near Mülheim in Germany (General Order June 30, 1949).
- ↑ named on June 30, 1949 after Staff Sergeant Jonah E. Kelley, who died on January 31, 1945 near Kesternich in Germany.
- ↑ named after Lieutenant General Alexander M. Patch Jr. (November 23, 1889 to November 21, 1945), KG Seventh Army during Operation "Dragoon" 1944–1945 (General Order August 20, 1951).
- ↑ named after General Malin Craig (1875 to 1945), head of personnel in the US Army during World War II.
- ↑ named after Baron Friedrich Wilhelm von Steuben, Prussian General and Inspector General of the Continental Army of the United States 1777 to 1783, died 1794 in Steubenville, NY
- ↑ named after Staff Sergeant Gus Kefurt, holder of the Medal of Honor, who fell at Bennwihr in France on December 24, 1944.
- ↑ named after Sergeant Ellis R. Weicht, holder of the Medal of Honor, who fell on December 3, 1944 near St-Hippolyte in France.
- ↑ In 1984 the Canadian government (CDN) ended the bilateral nuclear agreement with the USA, i. H. No longer a nuclear role for Söllingen, source: Kristensen, 2005.
- ↑ named after Major James C. Ford, who fell on November 8, 1944 in the Hürtgenwald in Germany (General Order February 13, 1952).
- ↑ named after Technician 5th Grade Forrest E. Peden, who died on February 3, 1945 near Biesheim in France (General Order June 2, 1953).
- ↑ named after LTC David B. Barton, who died as a telecommunications officer on June 3, 1944 near Velletri in Italy (General Order May 28, 1952).
- ↑ named after Pfc Nanti J. Fiori, who died in Belgium on September 12, 1944 (General Order July 30, 1951).
- ↑ named after Staff Sergeant William E. Graves, who died in Belgium on January 24, 1945 (General Order July 30, 1951).
- ↑ named after Sergeant John P. Ready, who died on August 6, 1944 near Mandeville in Normandy (General Order July 30, 1951).
- ↑ named after Lieutenant Colonel George A. Smith, who died on June 6, 1944 near St-Laurent-sur-Mer in Normandy (General Order August 10, 1951).
- ↑ named after Private James W. Reese , who fell on Monte Vassilio in Sicily on August 5, 1943 (General Order June 20, 1949).
- ↑ named after the location in the city center of Augsburg
- ↑ named after General Kenneth F. Cramer, 1951 to 1952 commander of the 43rd ID in Augsburg, died in 1953.
- ↑ named after Private Elmer E. Fryar, who died on December 8, 1944 in Leyte in the Philippines.
- ↑ named after Captain Robert L. Sullivan, stationed in Augsburg and died in 1953.
- ↑ named after Lieutenant General Alexander M. Patch Jr. (November 23, 1889 to November 21, 1945), KG Seventh Army during Operation "Dragoon" 1944–1945 (General Order September 25, 1946).
- ↑ named after Pfc Carl V. Sheridan, who fell on November 26, 1944 while storming Frenz Castle near Weisweiler in Germany (General Order September 25, 1946).
- ↑ named after Technician 5th Grade William T. Daley, who died on April 15, 1945 near Creussen in Germany (General Order February 17, 1953).
- ↑ named after Colonel Harry A. Flint, who fell as commander of the 39th IR in Normandy in July 1944 (General Order October 19, 1946).
- ↑ named after Colonel AJ ("Bo") Baker, who died on March 24, 1980 after deployments in Panama and Vietnam as a Special Forces officer (General Order April 15, 1980).
- ↑ named after Cpl Henry F. Warner, who died on December 21, 1944 near Bütgenbach in Belgium (General Order June 15, 1950).
- ↑ named after Thomas F. Flynn
- ↑ named after Martin Hagan.
- ↑ named after 2nd Lieutenant Dale E. Christensen, who died on August 4, 1944 near Afun in Dutch New Guinea (General Order February 13, 1952).
- ↑ named after Sergeant Beecher J. Gates, who fell in Luxembourg on January 11, 1945 (General Order December 20, 1954).
- ↑ named after 2nd Lieutenant James L. Harris, who died on October 7, 1944 near Vagney in France (General Order June 2, 1949).
- ↑ named after LTC Tobias C. Eastman, who died as Commander 37th FA Bn on April 26, 1945 in Germany (General Order September 14, 1966).
- ↑ named after Captain James M. Pirie, who died on September 28, 1944 near Richicourt in France (General Order December 18, 1946).
- ↑ named after Lieutenant Bartholomew D. O'Toole, who fell on November 10, 1944 (General Order December 18, 1946).
- ↑ A separate SAC system has been designed to handle information gathered from airborne reconnaissance operations. These RIVET JOINT missions are highly secret and are carried out by the Electronic Security Command. Throughout the 1980s there have been an average of approximately 70 flights a month. A second type of intelligence operation is also used by SAC, code-named COBRA BALL, and is designed to monitor specific Soviet radar sites and missile testing sites. Specially adapted RC-135s are operated from various locations and can monitor Soviet missile test programs using high-resolution cameras and radar. A number of ground facilities located in Europe and elsewhere receive data from these two types of mission. The European sites are at Hellenikon AB, (GR), and at Döbraberg AB and Hof AB (GE). (SIPRI, p. 331 f.)
- ↑ named after 1st Lieutenant Leland V. Williams, who crashed into a mountain in the Taunus with his C-47 on July 8, 1948 during the Airlift to Berlin.
- ↑ named after 2nd Lieutenant Geoffrey C. Ferris, who died on May 6, 1943 near Djebel el Deba in Tunisia (General Order March 25, 1949 / May 11, 1949).
- ↑ named after Private Elden H. Johnson, who died on June 3, 1944 near Valmontone in Italy (General Order May 11, 1949).
- ↑ named after 1st Lieutenant Jimmie W. Monteith, who died on June 6, 1944 near Colleville-sur-Mer in Normandy (General Order May 11, 1949).
- ↑ named after Brigadier General William O. Darby, who died as Deputy Commander of the 10th ID (Mountain) on April 30, 1945 near Tarbole in Italy (General Order March 25, 1949).
- ↑ named on November 7, 1950 after the German emigrant Johann Kalb, Major General of the Continental Army of the United States 1777 to 1780.
- ↑ named after Pfc Carl V. Sheridan, who fell on November 26, 1944 while storming Frenz Castle near Weisweiler in Germany (General Order August 15, 1949).
- ↑ named after Private Denny T. Clarke, who died on November 11, 1944 near Viviers in France (General Order July 24, 1947).
- ↑ named after 2nd Lieutenant David R. Kingsley, who, as part of a B-17 bomber crew during an attack on the Ploesti oil field in Romania, showed himself to be particularly brave after being shot at the bomber (General Order June 12, 1949).
- ↑ named after Maj Gen Maurice Rose, who fell as commander of the 3rd AD on March 30, 1945 in Germany (General Order April 24, 1947).
- ↑ named after Baron Friedrich Wilhelm von Steuben, Prussian General and Inspector General of the Continental Army of the United States 1777 to 1783, died 1794 in Steubenville, NY
- ↑ named after Colonel Louis J. Storck, who died in raids in France on July 30, 1944 (General Order August 28, 1961).
- ↑ named after Captain James R. Harvey, who was posthumously awarded the Distinguished Service Cross because of his great bravery in the fighting at Pont-l'Abbé in France from June 12 to 15, 1944 (General Order February 21, 1951).
- ↑ named after Captain Stanley L. Larson, who died on May 30, 1944 in the Anzio bridgehead in Italy (General Order April 11, 1962).
- ↑ named 1969 after General George C. Marshall (December 31, 1880 to October 16, 1959), Chief of Staff US Army during World War II, Secretary of State 1947–1949, creator of the European Recovery Program 1947, better known as the Marshall Plan.
- ↑ named after Sergeant Patrick Leonard, who was awarded the Medal of Honor on May 17, 1870 for "Valor, Ability, and Humanity" (General Order January 12, 1967).
- ↑ named after Technician 5th Grade Pinder, who died on June 6, 1944 near Colleville-sur-Mer in Normandy (General Order May 11, 1949).
- ↑ named after Staff Sergeant George Peterson, who died on March 30, 1945 at Eisern in Germany (General Order January 29, 1948).
- ↑ named after Private Robert T. Henry, who died on December 3, 1944 near Lüchem in Germany (General Order January 29, 1948).
- ↑ named after Cpl Henry F. Warner, who died on December 21, 1944 near Bütgenbach in Belgium (General Order January 29, 1948).
- ↑ named after 1st Lieutenant Walter J. Will, who died on March 30, 1945 at Eisern in Germany (General Order January 29, 1948).
- ↑ named after Pfc Francis X. McGraw, who died on November 19, 1944 near Schevenhütte in the Hürtgenwald in Germany (General Order January 29, 1948).
- ↑ named after Maj Jensen, adjutant of General George S. Patton Jr., who died on April 1, 1943 near El Guettar, Algeria (General Order March 21, 1947).
- ↑ named after Technician 4th Grade Truman Kimbro, who died on December 19, 1944 near Rocherath in Belgium (General Order March 26, 1957).
- ↑ named after Sergeant William L. Nelson, who died in Tunisia on April 24, 1943 and was awarded the Medal of Honor for his services in North Africa (General Order January 13, 1955).
- ↑ named after Captain Robert C. Wiley, who fell in France on August 9, 1944 (General Order June 2, 1953).
- ↑ named after Private Joseph F. Merrell, who died on April 18, 1945 near Lohe in Germany (General Order May 11, 1949).
- ↑ named after Lieutenant Colonel Jesse M. Hawkins, who died on the European theater of war in World War II (General Order September 20, 1954).
- ↑ named after Colonel Alfred A. Maybach, who fell as commander of the 51st Armd IBn on November 12, 1944 while taking Coutances in France (General Order October 21, 1946).
- ↑ named after Captain Thomas M. Skelly, who was shot down as a US Army Air Force pilot near Lintfort in the Rhineland (Germany) (General Order January 15, 1947).
- ↑ named after 1st Lieutenant Jimmie S. Knight, who died on February 27, 1945 near Golkrath in Germany (General Order May 12, 1947).
- ↑ named after Captain Dennis D. Whalen, who died in a traffic accident on May 2, 1962 during a reconnaissance voyage along the German-Czechoslovakian border (General Order November 22, 1962).
- ↑ named after Captain Thomas F. O'Brien, who fell near Aachen on November 16, 1944 (General Order May 11, 1949).
- ↑ named after Private William H. (Red) Whitson, who died at Avranches on July 31, 1944 (General Order January 15, 1947).
- ↑ named after 2nd Lieutenant Orville B. Conn, who died in Normandy on August 10, 1944 (General Order December 22, 1947).
- ↑ named after LTC William J. Ledward, who fell as commander of the 27th Armd FA Bn on June 4, 1944 in Albana, Italy (General Order October 19, 1946).
- ↑ named after the family seat of Thomas Askren in Indianapolis, Indiana, built between 1828 and 1833.
- ↑ named after the Battle of Yorktown, also known as the German battle, with the victory of the French-American troops under Comte de Rochambeau and George Washington in the War of Independence against Great Britain in 1781.
- ↑ named after Colonel Clayton J. Mansfield, who died on January 7, 1945 near Devantave in Belgium (General Order April 24, 1951).
- ↑ named after Maj Gen Maurice Rose, who fell as commander of the 3rd AD on March 30, 1945 in Germany (General Order September 15, 1952).
- ↑ named after Staff Sergeant Herman L. Orsbon, who died on December 30, 1944 near Bastogne in Belgium (General Order May 9, 1947).
- ↑ named after Major James H. Pitman, who died on September 18, 1944 near Lunéville in France (General Order September 21, 1959).
- ↑ named after Fiorella H. LaGuardia (December 11, 1882 to September 20, 1947), Mayor of New York 1934–1945.
- ↑ named after 1st Lieutenant Robert M. Emery, who fell as a pioneer officer on November 8, 1942 on Djebel Murdajajdo in Algeria (General Order May 18, 1953).
- ↑ named after Captain John A. Leighton, who died in raids in France on July 28, 1944 (General Order June 17, 1947).
- ↑ named after Abraham Lincoln (February 12, 1809 to April 15, 1865), President of the USA from 1861 to 1865.
- ↑ named after Pfc John W. Adams, who fell on November 18, 1944 (General Order July 26, 1949).
- ↑ named after Technician 5th Grade Pinder, who died on June 6, 1944 near Colleville-sur-Mer in Normandy (General Order May 11, 1949).
- ↑ named after LTC John W. McPheeters, who took over the 91 FA Bn in 1943 after the Battle of the Kasserine Pass and who fell on landing in the Anzio bridgehead in March 1944 (General Order October 21, 1946).
- ↑ named after Technician 5th Grade William T. Daley, who died on April 15, 1945 near Creussen in Germany (General Order February 17, 1953).
- ↑ The Continental Base Section provided logistic support to US occupation forces in Germany and Austria, commanded the Bremen Port Command and the base and filler depots in the theater, and discharged responsibility for the bulk storage and distribution of all supplies (see Frederiksen, p . 24 and p. 42).
- ↑ named on May 5th, 1969 after Alvin York (1887 to 1964), one of the most highly decorated American soldiers of the First World War.
- ↑ named after 1st Lieutenant Eugene M. Armstrong, an Afro-American who died in the Anzio bridgehead on March 26, 1944 (General Order June 5, 1947).
- ↑ named on May 5th, 1969 after the Roman road there.
- ↑ named after Captain Charles F. Kelley, Jr., who died on March 9, 1943 near Madjène-bel-Abbès in Algeria (General Order April 7, 1950).
- ↑ named after Thomas Jefferson (April 13, 1743 to July 4, 1826), one of the founding fathers of the USA and President of the USA from 1801 to 1809.
- ↑ named after Abraham Lincoln (February 12, 1809 to April 15, 1865), President of the USA from 1861 to 1865.
- ↑ named after Saint Barbara, the patron saint of artillery.
- ↑ named after 1st Lieutenant Sherwood Young, who died in France on November 25, 1944 (General Order November 28, 1950).
- ↑ named after General Creighton W. Abrams (September 15, 1914 to September 4, 1974), Commander in Chief in Vietnam 1968–1972 and Chief of Staff US Army 1972–1974 (General Order 1975).
- ↑ named after John F. Kennedy (May 29, 1917 to November 22, 1963), President of the USA 1961–1963.
- ↑ named after Baron Friedrich Wilhelm von Steuben, Prussian General and Inspector General of the Continental Army of the United States 1777 to 1783, died 1794 in Steubenville, NY
- ↑ named after Maj Gen Maurice Rose, who fell as commander of the 3rd AD on March 30, 1945 in Germany (General Order April 24, 1947).
- ↑ named after Pfc Leo M. Atterberry, who died on January 20, 1945 near Diekirch in Luxembourg (General Order July 29, 1947).
- ↑ named after General Leslie J. McNair (May 25, 1883 - July 25, 1944), KG US Army Ground Forces on the European theater of war, killed in Normandy in an accidental bombing by the Eighth Air Force.
- ↑ named after 2nd Lieutenant Harry J. Michael, who died on March 14, 1945 near Niederzerf in Germany.
- ↑ named after Brigadier General Edward C. Betts, who served as Judge Advocate of Headquarters and who died in Germany on May 6, 1946 (General Order July 29, 1947).
- ↑ named after 1st Lieutenant Nathan F. Drake who died in Fort Dornot near Metz in France on September 6, 1944 (General Order July 29, 1947).
- ↑ named after 1st Lieutenant Vernon L. Edwards, who fell on the Nied in France on November 11, 1944 (General Order July 29, 1947).
- ↑ named after Private Thomas E. Clark, who fell as a medic on November 24, 1944 in France (General Order July 29, 1947).
- ↑ named after the name of the Rhein-Main airport as "Gateway to Europe".
- ↑ named after 1st Lieutenant Bernard J. Ray, who died on November 17, 1944 near Schevenhütte in the Hürtgenwald in Germany (General Order February 13, 1953).
- ↑ See Burk, Heinrich, Elvis in the Wetterau. The "King" in Germany, Eichborn-Verlag, Frankfurt am Main 1995.
- ↑ named on May 5, 1969 after General of the Army Douglas MacArthur (January 26, 1880 to April 5, 1964), Commander-in-Chief US Army in the Pacific theater of war.
- ↑ named after 2nd Lieutenant Robert C. Downs, who died on October 20, 1944 near Uckange in France (General Order January 19, 1950).
- ↑ named after 1st Sergeant Americo L. D'Orazio, who died on February 18, 1945 near Vosseneck in Germany (General Order October 19, 1946).
- ↑ named after Pfc Charles D. Patterson, who fell as an artillery observer on August 17, 1944 near Lignon in France (General Order October 19, 1946).
- ↑ named after Captain Robert A. Severson, who was shot down as an Army Air Force officer over the Hürtgenwald in Germany on October 12, 1944 (General Order October 19, 1946).
- ↑ named after 2nd Lieutenant Kenneth W. Coleman, who fell in France on November 9, 1944 (General Order November 9, 1950).
- ↑ named after Staff Sergeant Jack J. Pendleton, who died on October 12, 1944 near Bardenberg in Germany (General Order April 5, 1950).
- ↑ named after Staff Sergeant Ruben Rivers, who died on November 7, 1944 near Bonamont in France (General Order June 29, 1950).
- ↑ named after Baron Friedrich Wilhelm von Steuben, Prussian General and Inspector General of the Continental Army of the United States 1777 to 1783, died 1794 in Steubenville, NY (General Order July 2, 1952).
- ↑ named 1969 after General George C. Marshall (December 31, 1880 to October 16, 1959), Chief of Staff US Army during World War II, Secretary of State 1947–1949, creator of the European Recovery Program 1947, better known as the Marshall Plan.
- ↑ named after John F. Dulles (February 25, 1888 to May 24, 1959), US Secretary of State under President Dwight D. Eisenhower 1953 to 1959.
- ↑ named after Technician 5th grade Alfred L. Wilson, who died as a medic on November 8, 1944 at Bezange-la-Petite in France (General Order January 24, 1951).
- ↑ named after Private John R. Towle, who died on September 21, 1944 near Nijmegen in the Netherlands (General Order January 24, 1951).
- ↑ named in 1952 after Staff Sergeant Lovall E. Ayers, who died in World War II.
- ↑ named after the American musician George Gershwin (September 26, 1898 to July 11, 1937).
- ↑ named after Staff Sergeant John W. Minick, who fell on November 21, 1944 (General Order December 20, 1950).
- ↑ named after Staff Sergeant Andrew Miller, who died on November 29, 1944 near Woippy in France (General Order August 30, 1950).
- ↑ named after Colonel Charles B. King, who died in Normandy on June 22, 1944 (General Order September 12, 1946).
- ↑ In 1945/1946 in Oberursel the house of Alaska in the villa of a wealthy industrialist was operated by the US intelligence service to imprison top personnel of the Wehrmacht and the Nazi state.
- ↑ named after Warrant Officer Roy G. Azbill, who died as a helicopter pilot in Vietnam on December 30, 1964 (General Order July 12, 1967).
- ↑ named after Sergeant Joseph J. Sadowski, who died on September 14, 1944 near Valhey in France (General Order February 28, 1947).
- ↑ named after General Hugh J. Gaffey (November 18, 1895 to June 16, 1946), Chief of Staff of the Third Army of General George Patton 1944–1945.
- ↑ named after 1st Lieutenant Edgar H. Lloyd, who died on November 16, 1944 near Pompey in France (General Order July 15, 1949).
- ↑ named after Captain Darrell R. Lindsey, who was posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor for bravery for leading a bomber formation against a railway bridge over the Seine in August 1944 (General Order February 28, 1947).
- ↑ Wiesbaden was the central location of the U-2 program for manned aerial reconnaissance over the Soviet Union from great heights (68,000 ft) from 1955 to 1960. First operational flight from Wiesbaden via Moscow, Leningrad, Baltic States. 1956/1957 and afterwards the US Air Force used bases in Wiesbaden, Giebelstadt as well as Incirlik (TU), Bodø (NO), Lahore and Peshawar (Pakistan), Atsugi (Japan). In May 1960, Gary Powers was shot down over Sverdlovsk and the program was discontinued.
- ↑ named after Amelia Mary Earhart (born July 24, 1897; lost July 2, 1937 in the Pacific Ocean), an American aviation pioneer and suffragette.
- ↑ named after its location with a view of the Taunus.
- ↑ named after Army General HH Arnold, Commander of the Air Force in World War II and the time immediately afterwards.
- ↑ named after Captain Francis W. Pieri, who died on August 22, 1944 near Montargis in France (General Order March 29, 1948).
- ↑ named after Paul Bloomquist, Army Aviator of the Year 1965, who was killed in a terrorist attack on V Corps Headquarters in Frankfurt.
- ↑ named 1969 after General George C. Marshall (December 31, 1880 to October 16, 1959), Chief of Staff US Army during World War II, Secretary of State 1947–1949, creator of the European Recovery Program 1947, better known as the Marshall Plan.
- ↑ named after Staff Sergeant John W. Minick, who died on November 21, 1944 (General Order July 31, 1968).
- ↑ named after Maj Gen Maurice Rose, who fell as commander of the 3rd AD on March 30, 1945 in Germany (General Order October 11, 1956).
- ↑ named after Captain Harold D. Smith, who died on August 6, 1944 (General Order October 1, 1951).
- ↑ named after Pfc Walter C. Wetzel, who was awarded the Medal of Honor for his bravery in a mission during the Second World War in Birken, Germany (General Order August 7, 1968).
- ↑ BA-MA BW 1/11 807
- ↑ named after Technician 4th Grade Anderson, who died on March 2, 1945 near Vockrath in Germany (General Order October 1, 1951).
- ↑ USAFE's first missile unit, the 1st Pilotless Bomber Squadron, Light, transferred to Bitburg AB on March 20, 1953. It was assigned the first surface-to-surface guided missile Matador (TM-61). The first missile wing in both the USAF and USAFE, the 701st Tactical Missile Wing, was established at Hahn AB on September 15, 1956. In Sep 1954, the 69th PBS and its Matadors were assigned. This unit underwent numerous changes in designation, becoming the 7382nd Guided Missile Gp on 1 Feb 1956, converting to the Mace (TM-76) in Mar 1960, and phasing out in 1966. The last Mace missile unit assigned to USAFE, the 71st TMW , was inactivated at Bitburg Air Base on April 30, 1969.Sembach also became a Matador missile base, starting with the activation of 11th TMS on 21 Jun 1956 and expanding on 20 Aug 1959 with the arrival from Hahn of the 38th TMW, which soon converted to the Mace.
- ^ Combined Army-Air Force Community. Mayor Theo Vandano described Kaiserslautern as the largest US military community outside the USA since 1951, with more than 60,000 members in the city and its surroundings.
- ↑ named after the general of the Continental Army from Poland in the American War of Independence Casimir Pulaski (March 6, 1745 to October 11, 1779).
- ↑ named after the American Catholic military chaplain Emil Kapaun (April 20, 1916 to May 23, 1951), who had distinguished himself through particular bravery and who died while a North Korean prisoner of war. His beatification has begun.
- ↑ named after the American cartoonist Thomas Nast (December 27, 1840 to December 7, 1902) from Landau.
- ↑ named after Technician 5th grade Alfred L. Wilson, who died as a medic on November 8, 1944 at Bezange-la-Petite in France (General Order April 1, 1952).
- ↑ named after Captain Robert E. Lee, who as 1st Lieutenant made a particularly courageous mission on November 17, 1944 (General Order October 11, 1956).
- ↑ named after Martin Luther King, Jr. (January 15, 1929 to April 4, 1968), Afro-American civil rights activist.
- ↑ named after Thomas P. Danziger.
- ↑ Allied Air Forces Central Europe (AAFCE) 1974–1980, HQ 4 ATAF 1957–1980, HQ AIRCENT since 1993.
- ↑ named after 1st Lieutenant William C. McCully, who died in Germany on October 20, 1944 (General Order October 1, 1951).
- ↑ named after Staff Sergeant Ernest Taukkunen, who died on March 2, 1945 near Schiefbahn in Germany (General Order October 11, 1956).
- ↑ named after Thomas Jefferson (April 13, 1743 to July 4, 1826), one of the founding fathers of the USA and President of the USA from 1801 to 1809.
- ↑ TAMMC (Theater Army Material Management Center), supply control system USAREUR, 1966 moved out of the room Orléans to Zweibrücken, first with 174 French civilian specialists, to 700 men Polish security personnel of the laboratory service.
- ↑ ACE High was a USAFE operated communications facility for NATO. It was a forward scatter connection with the headquarters at SHAPE. From 1960 to 1966 the control center in Paris was on the Eiffel Tower (Tour Eiffel control center) and "Paris Nord" near Beauvais. The connection with BAOR / RAFG was established via Roetgen. In Europe there were 49 tropospheric scatters and 41 microwave (line of sight) stations. After France withdrew from military integration, a new connection was established from Casteau and Chièvres (Belgium) via Kindsbach and Feldberg / Black Forest to Dosso di Galli on Lake Garda (Italy).
- ↑ See The Link with Home - and the Germans listened. The radio stations of the Western powers from 1945 to 1994, catalog of the Allied Museum, Berlin 2001.
- ↑ The "La Faire Vite" microwave network was set up in 1976, the main components were type AN / FSQ-91 devices from Harris from Melbourne, Florida. These are Doppler direction finders from two stations that pass their data on to an evaluation point via multiplexers. The data from the Eastern Bloc countries and Western Europe, received and processed with the aid of the latest technology, was forwarded directly to the LFV headquarters, the Field Station Augsburg-Gablingen, via fiber optic cables.