RVAH-6


RVAH-6 was a Reconnaissance Attack Squadron of the U.S. Navy. Originally established as Composite Squadron Six on 6 January 1950, it was redesignated as Heavy Attack Squadron Six on 1 July 1956 and was redesignated as Reconnaissance Attack Squadron Six on 23 September 1965. The squadron was disestablished on 20 October 1978.

Operational history

VC-6

VC-6 was established at NAS Moffett Field, California on 6 January 1950 as the Navy's second nuclear attack squadron and was initially equipped with the P2V Neptune. It became the second Navy squadron to operate the AJ-2 Savage, receiving its first aircraft in late 1950. In June 1952, the squadron relocated to NAS North Island, California and was redesignated Heavy Attack Squadron SIX on 1 July 1956.

VAH-6

VAH-6 remained at NAS North Island until relocating to NAS Whidbey Island, Washington in early 1958. In June 1958, VAH-6 reequipped with the Douglas A3D-2 Skywarrior and made several Western Pacific deployments aboard and Mediterranean deployments aboard. The squadron's A3D-2 aircraft were redesignated as the A-3B Skywarrior in September 1962.
In 1965, the squadron relocated to NAS Sanford, Florida. In September 1965, the squadron completed transition to the RA-5C Vigilante and was redesignated as Reconnaissance Attack Squadron SIX.

RVAH-6 / Vietnam

Attrition of airframes and the increasing maintenance and flight hour costs of the RA-5C in a constrained defense budget environment forced the Navy to incrementally retire the RA-5C and sunset the RVAH community beginning in mid-1974. Carrier-based reconnaissance was concurrently conducted by the active duty VFP community at NAS Miramar and the Naval Reserve VFP community at Andrews AFB / NAF Washington with the RF-8G Crusader until 29 March 1987, when the last RF-8G is retired and the mission was fully transferred to the active duty and Naval Reserve VF community at NAS Miramar, NAS Oceana, NAS Dallas and NAS JRB Fort Worth as a secondary role with the F-14 Tomcat equipped with the Tactical Air Reconnaissance Pod System.
Following its return from its final Atlantic/Mediterranean deployment in July 1978, RVAH-6 was inactivated at NAS Key West on 20 October 1978 following over 28 years of active service. One of RVAH-6's aircraft from its final deployment aboard Nimitz, BuNo 156624, was flown to NAS Pensacola, Florida as a permanent addition to the collection of the National Naval Aviation Museum.

Home station assignments

The squadron was assigned to these home stations: