Boca Raton Army Air Field
Boca Raton Army Air Field (BRAAF) was a World War II United States Army Air Forces installation located approximately 1.7 miles (2.7 km) northwest of the 1940s borders of Boca Raton, Florida. Built as part of the U.S. military's rapid expansion of domestic training infrastructure during the Second World War, the airfield served a strategically significant role as a center for radar training at a time when that technology was reshaping modern warfare. The installation remained active through the war years and its legacy endures today in South Florida's landscape, as the grounds were later repurposed to become the campus of Florida Atlantic University (FAU).
Historical Background
The United States military constructed a vast network of Army Air Forces installations across the country during World War II, transforming civilian and undeveloped land into functional military training grounds with remarkable speed. BRAAF was selected for a specialized, highly classified purpose: training personnel in radar technology.[1]
Radar stands for Radio Detection And Ranging. It was relatively new and closely guarded in the early 1940s. The ability to detect aircraft, ships, and other objects far beyond what the naked eye could see gave Allied forces a decisive tactical advantage across multiple war theaters. Training enough skilled personnel to operate and maintain radar systems was a pressing logistical challenge, and airfields like BRAAF were built specifically to meet that need.
South Florida made sense for this work. The flat terrain, consistent weather patterns, and geographic isolation of the Boca Raton area suited training operations that demanded both airspace and secrecy. Because radar technology was top-secret at the time, activities at Boca Raton Army Air Field weren't widely publicized, and the installation operated with enough secrecy that its full significance stayed hidden from public view for many years.[2]
Operations and Mission
BRAAF functioned as a training hub during World War II, with radar instruction at its core. The airfield was part of a larger constellation of Army Air Forces stations the military wanted to maintain even as the war wound down. In 1945, the Army formally requested authorization to retain 85 AAF stations, and Boca Raton Army Air Field made the list.[3]
The field hosted radar operators, instructors, flight personnel, and support staff. Instructors taught technical and operational courses in radar systems. Beyond that, the installation included administrative personnel and a broader military community that gave rise to typical wartime milestones. Marriage ceremonies took place at the field during the war years, reflecting how thoroughly BRAAF functioned as a self-contained military community.[4]
Flight instruction was also part of the work. Personnel served as flight instructors at what some informally called "the Boca Base."[5] The combination of radar instruction and aviation training made BRAAF complex in scope. Its contributions to the Allied war effort spanned several technical disciplines.
Secrecy and Significance
What set Boca Raton Army Air Field apart was the classified nature of its mission. Radar technology was among the most closely held military secrets of World War II. Personnel stationed at BRAAF were engaged in work that couldn't be openly discussed or publicized. Researchers have described the airfield as one of America's most important military installations of the era, precisely because of its role in developing and spreading radar training when the technology was still shrouded in secrecy.[6]
For decades after the war ended, BRAAF's story remained largely untold. The classified nature of radar research and the postwar repurposing of the land meant the installation's wartime history wasn't immediately accessible to the general public. Historians and researchers have since worked to recover and preserve that history, revealing operations that were deliberately kept from view during the conflict itself.
Comparison with Other Installations
BRAAF existed within a broader network of Army Air Forces training facilities distributed across the United States during World War II. Other installations listed alongside BRAAF in wartime records included Buckley Field in Denver, Colorado; Chanute Field in Rantoul, Illinois; Keesler Field in Biloxi, Mississippi; and Lowry Field, also in the Denver area.[7] Each served distinct training functions within the overall Army Air Forces structure. Their collective presence reflected the scale of military buildup required to sustain American involvement in the war.
Chanute Field and Keesler Field trained mechanics, communications specialists, and general aviation support personnel. Boca Raton Army Air Field's focus on radar technology gave it a more specialized profile. The technical nature of radar instruction required a particular concentration of expertise and equipment that set BRAAF apart from general-purpose training bases.
Postwar Transition
After World War II concluded, Boca Raton Army Air Field faced the same question as many wartime military installations: what would its land and infrastructure become in peacetime? The property eventually passed out of military control and was repurposed for civilian use. The former airfield site became the location where Florida Atlantic University was built.[8]
Florida Atlantic University came to occupy the grounds of the former Boca Raton Army Air Field, though the university's formal founding and development came years after the war. A classified military radar training installation transformed into an institution of higher learning. It's a dramatic shift in purpose, yet physical traces of the airfield's past remained embedded in the campus geography for those aware of the history.
A 1947 photograph of the BRAAF site captures the airfield in transition, between its active military use and eventual repurposing, documenting the land's state in the immediate postwar years.[9]
Legacy
BRAAF's legacy is preserved in several ways. Researchers and historians have documented the installation's wartime role, particularly its function in radar training, which has been called a "previously untold story" of an important chapter in American military history.[10] The secrecy surrounding the installation during the war contributed to its relative obscurity afterward, making historical recovery work particularly meaningful for those connected to South Florida's history.
Florida Atlantic University now occupies the former airfield grounds. It's grown into a major public research university inseparable from the land's wartime past. When FAU's athletic teams gained national attention, such as when the Owls basketball program reached the NCAA Tournament Final Four, media coverage often noted the university's origins on former BRAAF grounds, bringing renewed public awareness to the site's history.[11]
Local historical groups and social media communities focused on Boca Raton and Southern Florida have also kept community memory of the airfield alive. They've shared photographs, documents, and personal recollections related to BRAAF and its place in the region's wartime experience.[12]
Veterans who served at Boca Raton Army Air Field carried their memories forward for decades. Instructors, operators, flight personnel, and support staff all preserved their service in personal histories. Obituaries and personal accounts of individuals who served at the field contribute to the historical record. They document the human dimension of an installation whose official history was long kept from public view.[13][14]
See Also
- Florida Atlantic University
- World War II in South Florida
- United States Army Air Forces
- Radar in World War II