The North Carolina Wing of the Civil Air Patrol is headquartered in Burlington, North Carolina. It serves to administer the operation of the volunteers within the state to accomplish the three congressionally mandated missions of the organization: 1) Emergency Services, 2) Cadet Programs, and 3) Aerospace Education.
The North Carolina Wing was created on December 9, 1941, by Governor J. Melville Broughton, and the Wing held its first meeting on December 30 of that year. By the end of January 1942, the wing had approximately 350 members and over one hundred aircraft. During World War II, the North Carolina Wing was responsible for assisting in fighting a forest fire, dropping paper bombs to simulate air raids, conducting evaluation flights during blackout drills, and spotting U-boats off the North Carolina shore.[1]
In May 2020, members of the North Carolina Wing were activated to support North Carolina's response to the 2020 coronavirus pandemic. North Carolina Wing members staffed two North Carolina Department of Emergency Management field warehouses, providing logistics and administrative support. Members also conducted transport missions in support of the North Carolina Department of Emergency Management. By 6 May 2020, North Carolina Wing members had conducted over 500 transport missions, totaling over 40,000 miles of intrastate travel.[2] In March 2021, members of North Carolina Wing provided support at vaccine points of distribution.[3]
Squadrons in North Carolina Wing
The North Carolina Wing Civil Air Patrol Headquarters. A medical team from the 440th Airlift Wing Medical Squadron responds to a North Carolina CAP cadet playing a head trauma victim during a mass casualty exercise at Pope Air Force Base, N.C.Captain Hoyer, 440th Airlift Wing Medical Squadron, offers some acting advice to 15 year old Civil Air Patrol Cadet Candra Wilson during a mass casualty exercise.The 440th Airlift Wing Medical Squadron removes a North Carolina CAP cadet playing a crash victim from a bus during a mass casualty exercise.Senior Airman Lisa Sam, a medical technician with the 440th Airlift Wing Medical Squadron applies paint to the face of Aaron Schaak, a North Carolina CAP cadet, before a Mass Casualty exercise.
North Carolina Wing has thirty composite, senior, or cadet squadrons as well as four senior flights chartered in the state and assigned to one of six groups. There are also three non-standard squadrons (000, 001, and 999) under North Carolina Wing Headquarters.
North Carolina Wing has ten aircraft based in the state. They are kept in a state of readiness to respond to emergency services missions and are positioned based on need and availability of pilots. Major aircraft maintenance is performed centrally at Sanford Airport (TTA) while minor maintenance and repairs are performed at basing locations as required. Aircraft are also used to provide orientation flights to cadets and develop proficiency and training of CAP pilots.
Aircraft Type
N-number
CAP call sign
Regular Basing
Cessna C172S
N916CP
CAP3202
Southport(SUT)/Fayetteville(FAY)
Cessna C172P
N9841L
CAP3203
Halifax(IXA)/Pitt-Greenville(PGV)
Cessna C172P
N99162
CAP3204
Southport(SUT)
Cessna C172P
N99832
CAP3205
Concord(JQF)
Cessna C172P
N99885
CAP3207
Concord(JQF)
Cessna C182T (G1000)
N716CP
CAP3208
Burlington(BUY)
Cessna C182T (G1000)
N963CP
CAP3209
Raleigh-Durham(RDU)
Cessna C172R
N991CP
CAP3210
Asheville(AVL)
Cessna C182R
N9930E
CAP3230
Triangle North Executive (KLHZ)
Cessna C182T (G1000)
N727CP
CAP3212
Asheville(AVL)
Legal Protection
The North Carolina state Legislature passed H.B. 600 in 2023 to provide legal protection to members in North Carolina.[4]
^Blazich, Frank A. (2012). "North Carolina's Flying Volunteers: The Civil Air Patrol in World War II, 1941-1944". The North Carolina Historical Review. 89 (4): 399–442. JSTOR23523994.