Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

VA-873 (U.S. Navy)

Military unit From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

VA-873 (U.S. Navy)
Remove ads

VA-873 was an attack squadron of the U.S. Navy Reserve, based at Naval Air Station Alameda, California. Its insignia was approved by CNO on 16 March 1964. Colors for the insignia were: a white and blue background outlined in black; the blue background section had five white stars and the white section had a gold outline of San Francisco Golden Gate with two blue rows of waves beneath the bridge; separating the two sections was a stylized aircraft in black with a red flame coming from the tail; the scroll was white outlined in black with black lettering.

Quick facts Attack Squadron 873, Active ...
Thumb
A-4B Skyhawk similar to those flown by VA-873.

Other details of its early years are sketchy, as few records exist for reserve squadrons prior to 1970, the year during which they began submitting history reports.

On 27 January 1968, The President directed the activation of VA-873 following the capture of USS Pueblo by a North Korean patrol boat four days earlier. The squadron was deactivated and returned to reserve status on 12 October 1968.[1]

Remove ads

Aircraft assignment

The squadron first received the following aircraft on the dates shown:[1]

See also

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads