
   At the end of
World War II, Chief of Naval Operations, Adm.
Chester W. Nimitz, ordered the formation of a
flight demonstration team to showcase naval aviation.
The team performed its first flight demonstration
less than a year later, June 1946. Flight Leader,
Lt. Cmdr. Roy "Butch" Voris led the
team flying
the Grumman F6F Hellcat at Craig Field at Naval
Air Station (NAS) Jacksonville, Florida.
First Blue Angels
Pilots
The Navy Flight
Demonstration Team transitioned to
the Grumman F8F Bearcat, August 25, two months
after the first demonstration. In 1947, flight
leader Lt. Cmdr. Robert Clarke, introduced the
famous Diamond Formation, now considered the Blue
Angels' trademark. The Blue Angels began flying
its first jet aircraft, the Grumman F9F-2 Panther,
by the end of the 1940s.
In 1950, the
Korean Conflict put a great demand on
naval aviation. The Navy responded by reassigning
the Blue Angels to the aircraft carrier USS Princeton
(CV-37), where the Blue Angels became the nucleus
of Fighter Squadron 191 (VF-191), known as "Satan's
Kittens."
The Blue Angels
reorganized in 1951 and reported to NAS Corpus
Christi, Texas, where the team began
flying the F9F-5, the faster version of the Panther.
The team remained in Corpus Christi until the
winter of 1954. The beginning of 1955 brought
the team to its present home, Sherman Field, at
NAS Pensacola,
Florida, where it transitioned to flying the swept-wing
Grumman F9F-8 Cougar.
The ensuing 20
years saw the Blue Angels transition
into two more aircraft. In 1957 the team began
flying
the Grumman F11F-1 Tiger, followed in 1969 by
team's first dual-engine jet, the McDonnell Douglas
F-4J Phantom II.
In December 1973,
the Blue Angels reorganized as the U.S. Navy Flight
Demonstration Squadron establishing Cmdr. Tony
Less as the commanding officer and flight leader.
The squadron added support officers and redefined
its mission to support Navy recruiting.
The Blue Angels also transitioned to a new aircraft
in 1974, the McDonnell Douglas A-4F Skyhawk II.
On November 8,
1986, the Blue Angels celebrated
their 40th anniversary by unveiling its present
aircraft,
the sleek McDonnell Douglas (now Boeing) F/A-18
Hornet. The Hornet is the first dual-role fighter/attack
aircraft serving on the nation's front lines of
defense.
In 1992 the Blue
Angels deployed for its first European tour in
19 years. More than one million people in
Sweden, Finland, Russia, Romania, Bulgaria, Italy,
the United Kingdom and Spain saw the Blue Angels
perform during their 30-day tour. In November
1998, Cmdr. Patrick Driscoll landed the first
"Blue Jet" on a "haze gray and
underway" aircraft carrier,
USS Harry S. Truman (CVN-75).
Since its inception
in 1946, the team has flown
for more than 393 million fans. |