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Naval Air Station Cecil Field Patch – Sew On, 4″

$12.99

Aviators! Are you looking for a high-quality patch you’ll proudly wear or display? Look no further than the Naval Air Station Cecil Field Patch!

  • 4″
  • Embroidered
  • US Naval Aviator Owned Business
  • Sew On
  • Plastic Backing (increases rigidity; the patch lasts longer and stays flat)
  • Reproduction

71 in stock (can be backordered)

SKU: 840231526937 Categories: , , Tags: ,

Description

NAVAL AIR STATION CECIL FIELD Patch

Aviators! Are you looking for a high-quality patch you’ll proudly wear or display? Look no further than the Naval Air Station Cecil Field Patch!

  • 4″
  • Embroidered
  • US Naval Aviator Owned Business
  • Sew On
  • Plastic Backing (increases rigidity; the patch lasts longer and stays flat)
  • Reproduction

An aerial view of Naval Air Statioin Cecil Field - NARA & DVIDS Public ...Naval Air Station Cecil Field or NAS Cecil Field (IATA: NZC, ICAO: KNZC, FAA LID: NZC) was a United States Navy air base, located in Duval County, Florida. Prior to October 1999, NAS Cecil Field was the largest military base in terms of acreage in the Jacksonville, Florida area.

NAS Cecil Field consisted of four separate facilities, the NAS Cecil Field Complex (Cecil Field), Outlying Field Whitehouse (OLF Whitehouse), the Yellow Water Weapons Department and the Pinecastle [Pine Castle] Electronic Warfare Target Area / Warfare Range. Including nearly 2,500 acres (10 km2) at OLF Whitehouse, the NAS Cecil Field complex consisted of 22,939 acres (92.83 km2); in addition, the base leased another 8,379 acres (33.91 km2). By late 1999, approximately 17,200 acres (70 km2) were transferred to the civilian sector in the for

F-18Cs over NAS Cecil Field 1994.JPEG

m of the Jacksonville Aviation Authority, while the remainder was transferred to Naval Air Station Jacksonville.

As directed by the Base Realignment and Closure Commission (BRAC) and the U.S. Congress pursuant to BRAC 1993 and BRAC 1995, NAS Cecil Field was decommissioned as an active naval installation on 30 September 1999. It is now a civilian, public-use, joint civil-military airfield and industrial park known as Cecil Commerce Center and Cecil Airport.

NAS Cecil Field was named in honor of Commander Henry Barton Cecil, USN, who died in 1933 in the crash of the Navy airship USS Akron. Shortly before the United States’ entry into World War II, a 2,600-acre (11 km2) tract of land was purchased in western Duval County and construction began on the “U.S. Naval Auxiliary Air Station, Cecil Field” (NAAS Cecil Field).