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Hurlburt Field

Hurlburt Air Force Base
Eglin AFB Auxiliary Field No. 9
Shield of the United States Air Force Special Operations Command.svg
Part of Air Force Special Operations Command (AFSOC)
Located near: Mary Esther, Florida
Hurlburt Field is located in Florida
Hurlburt Field
Hurlburt Field
Location of Hurlburt Field, Florida
Coordinates 30°25′40″N 086°41′22″W / 30.42778°N 86.68944°W / 30.42778; -86.68944 (Hurlburt Field)
Site information
Controlled by  United States Air Force
Site history
Built 1942
In use 1942 – present
Garrison information
Garrison 1st Special Operations Wing.svg 1st Special Operations Wing
Airfield information
Summary
Elevation AMSL 38 ft / 12 m
Website www.hurlburt.af.mil
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
18/36 9,600 2,926 Concrete
Helipads
Number Length Surface
ft m
H1 1,608 490 Concrete

Hurlburt Field (ICAO: KHRTFAA LID: HRT) is a United States Air Force installation located in Okaloosa County, Florida, immediately west of the Town of Mary Esther. It is part of the greater Eglin Air Force Base reservation, and is home to Headquarters Air Force Special Operations Command (AFSOC), the 1st Special Operations Wing (1 SOW), the USAF Special Operations School (USAFSOS) and the Air Combat Command's (ACC) 505th Command and Control Wing. It was named for First Lieutenant Donald Wilson Hurlburt, who died in a crash at Eglin. The installation is nearly 6,700 acres (27 km2), and employs nearly 8,000 military personnel.

This facility is assigned a three-letter location identifier of HRT by the Federal Aviation Administration, but it does not have an International Air Transport Association (IATA) airport code (the IATA assigned HRT to RAF Linton-on-Ouse in England).

Hurlburt began as a small training field for the much larger Eglin Field. It was initially designated Eglin Auxiliary Field No. 9, and later as Eglin AFB Auxiliary Field 9/Hurlburt Field when the U.S. Air Force became an independent service, before being administratively separated from the rest of the Eglin AFB complex in the 1950s. However, once separated, the facility retained its history and kept all building numbers the same; i.e., all start with a "9". The installation was named by then-Eglin Field base commander Brigadier General Grandison Gardner for First Lieutenant Donald Wilson Hurlburt (1919–1943), who was killed in an aircraft crash at the main base, then known as Eglin Field, in 1943.


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