Tsuyung Airfield (楚雄机场) is a former World War II United States Army Air Forces airfield from 1941 to 1945 in Chuxiong County, Yunnan Province, China. As the town urbanized, it found itself right at the town center and got demolished. Its current site became the Chuxiong Post Bureau's main building, at the junction of Lucheng East Road and Lucheng North Road. No remnants of its wartime past could be found there. There was a separate Old Tsuyung Airfield built in 1928, which was replaced by the new Tsuyung Airfield which started construction in October 1938 to deal with the increasing demand of "the Hump".[1][2]

Tsuyung Airfield
Part of Fourteenth Air Force
Yunnan Province, China
Tsuyung Airfield is located in China
Tsuyung Airfield
Tsuyung Airfield
Coordinates25°02′20″N 101°32′45″E / 25.038910°N 101.545917°E / 25.038910; 101.545917
TypeMilitary airfield
Site information
Controlled byUnited States Army Air Forces
Site history
Battles/warsChina Defensive Campaign 1942-1945

History

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The airfield was a major transport hub on the China end of "the Hump" air transport route over the Himalayan Mountains, from the Assam Valley in India. The base was host to both Air Transport Command units, then Fourteenth Air Force Troop Carrier squadrons which moved the equipment and supplies to forward airfields in China.

References

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  1. ^ 高大正 (2016-01-27). "云南楚雄5年力争建6座机场引关注 具体规划地还在选址中". 春城晚报.
  2. ^ "抗战时期云南机场建设 (上)(组图)". 云南日报. 2014-01-12.

  This article incorporates public domain material from the Air Force Historical Research Agency

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