May, Ray, ACCS

Deceased
 
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Last Rank
Senior Chief Petty Officer
Last Primary NEC
AC-0000-Air Traffic Controller
Last Rating/NEC Group
Air Traffic Controller
Primary Unit
1975-1976, AC-0000, Naval Auxiliary Air Station (NAAS) Fallon, NV
Service Years
1955 - 1976
AC-Air Traffic Controller

 Last Photo   Personal Details 

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Home State
Kansas
Kansas
 
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Contact Info
Date of Passing
Jan 10, 2015
 

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 Additional Information
Last Known Activity:

Retired and enjoying life to its fullest

   

  1957-1957, AC-0000, Naval Air Station (NAS) Olathe, KS

AC-Air Traffic Controller

From Month/Year
- / 1957

To Month/Year
- / 1957

Unit
Naval Air Station (NAS) Olathe, KS Unit Page

Rank
Petty Officer Third Class

NEC
AC-0000-Air Traffic Controller

Base, Station or City
Olathe

State/Country
Kansas
 
 
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 Naval Air Station (NAS) Olathe, KS Details

Naval Air Station (NAS) Olathe, KS

A (shortened) history of the Olathe Naval Air Station [ONAS]

 

The Prairie Navy landed in Johnson County eight decades ago with the construction and opening of the Olathe Naval Air Station. The site is now the New Century AirCenter.
 

The bygone military base was dedicated on Oct. 1,1942 in response to the increased need for air stations and naval reserve aviation bases as the United States entered World War II.
 

Over the course of its 27 years in operation, ONASls role was constantly in flux: It first served as a flight training facility for naval cadets, then as a training center and support facility for the Naval Air Transport Service in the latter years of WWII, and finally as a training center for Navy and Marine reservists in the Korean War and in the early years of the Cold War.

 

The naval air base also was the temporary home for the Air Force Reserve's 442d Troop Carrier Wing from 1950 to 1955 prior to its relocation to Grandview Airport, Missouri, later renamed Richards-Gebaur AFB. ONAS also became one of 28 radar stations established throughout the nation in 1952 by the Air Forcels Air Defense Command. The Olathe Air Force Station provided air defense radar coverage of the Kansas City area.
 

Units of the Navy, Marines and Air Force are gone. An Army Reserve detachment remains.

Despite the ONAS not having a household name, like some other bases, there is no doubt that the individuals based at the "Great Prairie Navy" made a significant contribution to preserving freedom and liberty both at home and abroad.


Over the past 55 years, under the direction of the Johnson County Airport Commission, the site of the former naval air base has become a growing economic hub for Johnson County with two busy airports and increased, ongoing commercial and industrial development at the New Century AirCenter.

 

A flashback is in order. From Johnson County farmland, the Olathe Naval Air Station eventually spanned about 2,000 acres with three runways, 14 secondary fields and eventually 44 buildings to train and accommodate mostly Navy and Marine personnel for almost three decades.
 

It was a massive complex with three large hangars, including one with a control tower; storage and training facilities; clubs for enlisted personnel and officers; and barracks for Prairie sailors.
 

ONAS had all the comforts and amenities of a large military base with mess halls, a laundry, a bowling alley, a chapel, a hospital, a cold storage building with free ice, post office and small Post Exchange. The front gate had a small brig and a pass building for visitors to enter the base. Kinnick Hall featured an Olympic-sized swimming pool.
 

The Prairie Navy also included a few notable Americans.
 

The late John Glenn, future astronaut and U.S. senator, was in the first class to be trained at the base, making his first solo flight in a military training plane.  Stearman yellow two-seater biplanes, nicknamed "yellow perils", were used to train pilots.

...
Another notable pilot who trained at ONAS was former TV game show host Bob Barker. He enlisted in the Navy Reserve in 1943 to train as a fighter pilot but did not serve on active duty. His military service ended with the war in 1945.


Source: 
https://www.jocogov.org/newsroom/magazines/best-times/september-october-2022/cover-story-history-olathe-naval-air-station



Type
Communications
 

Parent Unit
Naval Air Stations

Strength
Base

Created/Owned By
YN Pierson, Al (USview, NTWS Chief Admin ), YN2 7752  
   

Last Updated: Apr 25, 2007
   
Memories For This Unit

Best Moment
Getting orders to GCA#3 at NAS Olathe.

   
Yearbook
 
My Photos For This Unit
No Available Photos
8 Members Also There at Same Time
Naval Air Station (NAS) Olathe, KS

Slaughter, Fred, PO1, (1945-1972) AC AC-0000 Petty Officer First Class
Northway, Robert, PO1, (1956-1978) AC AC-0000 Airman Apprentice
Shepherd, Burton Hale, RADM, (1945-1978) OFF 131X Lieutenant
Haussermann, Ed, PO2, (1955-1959) ATR ATR-0000 Petty Officer Second Class
Byrne, Dean, PO2, (1953-1968) AM AM-0000 Petty Officer Third Class
Ikner, Carl, AN, (1956-1960) ADJ ADJ-0000 Airman
Boulle, Jensen, CPO, (1948-1968) Petty Officer First Class
Coakley, Julie, SN, (1956-1959) Seaman Apprentice

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