more at
"A
WWII Army Air Forces officer-candidate recruiting film / documentary, which shows the rigors of
Officer Training School."
Public domain film, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the aspect ratio corrected, and mild video noise reduction applied.
The soundtrack was also processed with volume normalization, noise reduction, clipping reduction, and/or equalization (the resulting sound, though not perfect, is far less noisy than the original).
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/
3.0/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Air_Force_Officer_Training_School
Officer Training School (
OTS) is a
United States Air Force commissioning program located at
Maxwell Air Force Base in
Montgomery, Alabama. It is the current de facto officer candidate school (
OCS) program for the
U.S. Air Force, analogous to the OCS programs operated by the other branches of the
U.S. armed forces
...
During peacetime, OTS is usually the smallest commissioning source in the
USAF, producing fewer officers per year than
AFROTC and the
United States Air Force Academy (
USAFA). Given its shorter lead time for officer production (10 weeks versus the typically 4-year pre-commissioning process for USAFA and AFROTC cadets), it is the commissioning source used to balance out USAF officer manning as deemed necessary by the
Air Force...
The
History of OTS
When the
Aviation Cadet (AvCad)
Program proved insufficient to meet wartime commissioned officer requirements, the
United States Army Air Forces established the
Officer Candidate School (OCS) on
23 February 1942 at
Miami Beach, Florida, its mission being to train and commission members from the enlisted ranks.
OCS moved to the
San Antonio Aviation Cadet Center (now
Lackland AFB), Texas in
1944 and gained the additional mission of training officers directly from civilian status in September
1951.
OTS was organized at
Lackland AFB, Texas in
November 1959, with the first OTS class (60-A) composed of 89 officer trainees, including 11 women, who graduated and were commissioned as 2nd Lieutenants on
9 February 1960. The number of OTS graduates has varied over the years, from 323 the first year to a high of 7,894 officers in 1967.
With the establishment of OTS,
Air Force OCS closed its doors and conducted its last graduation in June
1963. Concurrently, the Air Force also commenced a phaseout of its long-standing Aviation Cadet (AvCad) Program at
Lackland AFB. Unlike OTS, AvCad was limited to pilot and navigator candidates. In addition, AvCads had to successfully complete either undergraduate pilot training or undergraduate navigator training before they could be commissioned as
Second Lieutenants. The last AvCad pilot was commissioned in
October 1961 at the former
Reese AFB, Texas and the last AvCad navigator was commissioned in
March 1965 at the former
James Connally AFB,
Texas. OTS then became the sole organization for training future Air Force officers at Lackland AFB.
On 1 July
1993,
Air Training Command (
ATC) merged with
Air University (AU) to form the new
Air Education and Training Command (
AETC), with Air University becoming a direct reporting unit (
DRU) under AETC. OTS, which was formerly under ATC, and
Air Force ROTC, which was formerly under AU, were then realigned under both AETC and AU. Until
22 September 1993, Officer Training School was located on the
Medina Annex of Lackland AFB, Texas, graduating
Class 93-06 on that date. During the spring and summer of 1993, OTS gradually relocated to
Maxwell AFB, Alabama, commencing operations in interim facilities on
25 September 1993.
Historically, Air Force ROTC had been headed by a major general or brigadier general, while OTS had been headed by a colonel. In
February 1997, in an effort to reduce duplication of effort and streamline administrative and reporting procedures within AU, Air Force ROTC and Officer Training School realigned under a newly created umbrella organization, Air Force
Officer Accession and
Training Schools (AFOATS). Under this restructuring, OTS and AFROTC were placed under the leadership of individual colonels, while general officer oversight for both OTS and AFROTC, representing three-quarters of Air Force officer production, was placed under one command, the AFOATS commander, a brigadier general
.
In the late
1990s, a $52 million military construction (MILCON) project commenced to build a new, dedicated OTS campus at
Maxwell AFB to replace the interim facilities initially occupied in late 1993. The majority of this MILCON project was completed in
2001 and all projects relating to the new-cum-current OTS campus were completed by 2004. AFOATS was later renamed the
Jeanne M. Holm Center for Officer Accession and
Citizen Development.
- published: 22 Jan 2015
- views: 1462