Young Air Assault Strip at Fort McCoy provides austere training

By CourtesyOctober 6, 2021

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A C-130J-30 "Hercules", 815th Airlift Squadron, Keesler Air Force Base, Miss. lands at the Young Air Assault Strip on May 7, 2014 during Exercise Patriot Warrior at Fort McCoy, Wisconsin. United States military reserve components from all branches...
2 / 3 Show Caption + Hide Caption – A C-130J-30 "Hercules", 815th Airlift Squadron, Keesler Air Force Base, Miss. lands at the Young Air Assault Strip on May 7, 2014 during Exercise Patriot Warrior at Fort McCoy, Wisconsin. United States military reserve components from all branches participate in combined exercises Patriot Warrior, Global Medic, Diamond Saber and CSTX in preparation for upcoming deployments in joint environments. (U.S. Air Force photo by Master Sgt. Francisco V. Govea II/ Released)


(Photo Credit: Master Sgt. Francisco V. Govea II)
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An aircrew with the Illinois Air National Guard’s 182nd Airlift Wing at Peoria operates a C-130 Hercules at Young Air Assault Strip July 18, 2017, on South Post during the Patriot North 2017 Exercise at Fort McCoy, Wis. Patriot North is a...
3 / 3 Show Caption + Hide Caption – An aircrew with the Illinois Air National Guard’s 182nd Airlift Wing at Peoria operates a C-130 Hercules at Young Air Assault Strip July 18, 2017, on South Post during the Patriot North 2017 Exercise at Fort McCoy, Wis. Patriot North is a training exercise designed for civilian emergency management and responders to work with military entities in the same manner that they would during disasters. The exercise tests the National Guard’s abilities to support response operations based on simulated emergency scenarios, such as a strong storm bringing high winds and the storm surge creating a collapsed building, mass casualties, and the need for search and rescue along with evacuations of injured. (U.S. Army Photo by Scott T. Sturkol, Public Affairs Office, Fort McCoy, Wis.) (Photo Credit: Scott Sturkol) VIEW ORIGINAL

For more than 35 years, Fort McCoy’s Young Air Assault Strip has provided a place for service members to train in austere conditions.

Young Air Assault Strip, which has also been called Young Field, originally opened in October 1984. It was constructed by the 618th Engineer Company, 360th Engineer Battalion, 82nd Airborne Division.

The air strip was named after Pfc. Raphael Young, a member of the 618th who died in September 1984 while training on heavy equipment in advance of the mission to build the air strip.

In a November 1984 article in The Triad, Capt. William Prokopyk, company commander, said that he thought the Soldiers were more safety conscious because of the death of their comrade, which explained the lack of injuries during the actual construction process.

Construction of the air strip was good practice for the 618th, which had the wartime mission of construction and repair of air fields. Young Air Assault Strip, however, was of better quality than a wartime construction, Prokopyk said.

“During wartime, we would probably have less time to complete the mission and we wouldn’t have the soil analysts and survey support that were attached for this mission,” he said.

The construction cost approximately $86,000 and came in about $11,000 under budget.

Young Air Assault Strip is still in use today at Fort McCoy. It has been used for decades as a multiservice air strip that can be used in a variety of ways. It can replicate a terminal; used to receive process, and stage personnel, cargo, and equipment; or used as an austere airfield, said James Hubbard, chief of the Airfield Division at the Directorate of Plans, Training, Mobilization and Security (DPTMS).

“The air strip is an important part of our training complex at Fort McCoy,” Hubbard said in a 2017 article in The Real McCoy. “There’s not many air strips like Young available for training, so it is highly sought-after as a training area for exercises.”

The air strip also features a decommissioned C-130 that is primarily used to train service members to palletize cargo. It was transferred from Little Rock Air Force Base, Ark., in October 2015.

Fort McCoy has supported America’s armed forces since 1909. The installation’s motto is to be the “Total Force Training Center.”

The post’s varied terrain, state-of-the-art ranges, new as well as renovated facilities, and extensive support infrastructure combine to provide military personnel with an environment in which to develop and sustain the skills necessary for mission success.

(Article prepared by the Fort McCoy Public Affairs Office and Directorate of Plans, Training, Mobilization and Security.)