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VAP-61 was a Heavy Photographic Squadron of the U.S. Navy.Originally established as VP-61 on 20 January 1951, it was redesignated VJ-61 on 5 March 1952. It was redesignated as VAP-61 in April 1956, redesignated as VCP-61 on 1 July 1959 and redesignated as VAP-61 on 1 July 1961.
Navy blimp K-110 Patrol Squadron ZP-42 escorting a convoy of merchant ships on Brazilian coast.jpg 2,140 × 1,638; 610 KB Navy Charleston Dental Clinic.jpg 514 × 279; 27 KB Navy Charleston Medical Wellness-Readiness Clinic.jpg 415 × 318; 18 KB
Contributing to the lack of space was the housing of both the Navy Photo Interpretation School as well as the Navy's Photographic Intelligence Center (PIC) on the building's third floor. [6] Sealed off from the rest of the facility, the third floor became one of the most closely guarded top secret areas in all of Washington, D.C.
Because Steichen wanted an unusual amount of control over the unit, outside the purview of the Navy's pre-existing photographic community, and because Radford agreed with him, it was decided the unit would operate out of the Bureau of Aeronautics' Training Literature Division, which was under Radford's direct command.
VAP-62 was a Heavy Photographic Squadron of the U.S. Navy. Originally established as Photographic Squadron Sixty-Two (VJ-62) on 10 April 1952, it was redesignated as Heavy Photographic Squadron (VAP-62) on 2 July 1956. The squadron was disestablished on 15 October 1969. [1]