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Pretty sad to see this now. I was stationed there in 1988 right after Boot camp from Lackland AFB in San Antonio, Texas, I was 21 years old. I got my Jet Engine mechanic training there. The dorms was pretty good. I had good memories of Chanute AFB and Rantoul. Thank you for posting this video.
I was there from September 86 through June 87. Got my Aircraft Instruments training there. Also saw Top Gun there about 6 times. Great memories of that place.
I was there in '67 going through A/C electrical repairman (42330) school. Waitlisted for school, so we lived in one of the old quonset huts till start of school. then into the dorm. Always waited for "Pizza Pop" to come through selling pizza and soda pop in the evenings. From there, went to Ramstein AFB in Germany, and Try all over Europe and North Africa, then to Kincheloe AFB (SAC) on the UP in Michigan. Not much in Rantoul. but we always went to Champaign-Urbana for fun and games.
Chanute AFB was my birthplace! In late autumn 1963. This was the last place my dad was stationed before he retired from the service and entered civilian life. Dad had told me we lived on Symington Road in the base housing area. I barely remember our days there now. But Rantoul looks like a nice quiet community. Rest In Peace, Mom and Dad! You are missed! 🇺🇸 🇺🇸
Wasn’t Chuck Yeager there briefly ? I remember him breaking the sound barrier over Wilmington,Il in 62 or 63, we had the Joliet Arsenal , but they said he took off from Rantoul, shook our grade school building when he did it!
@@MisterMikeTexas it was something I’ll never forget ! I don’t remember though if he was just passing through or if he was stationed there briefly or what.
I was born there in Nov 1963. All I know is that my father was trained to be some kind of missile mechanic there. I know more about Chanute from this video than I’ve ever known before about my birthplace.
I was stationed at Chanute after Boot camp as a Aircraft Environmental Systems mechanic from 81-82....I remember those long marching days to and from the dorm to school. There was a "static" display of a B-58 Hustler I can never forget about that. I didn't do much roaming around because "tech"school was very difficult so I spent the majority of my time studying. My time served in the USAF was a very exciting experience if you desire a lifelong experience join the USAF in the aircraft mechanical field.
I was stationed there Dec 84 to March 85. Damn it was cold. Was trained to be a maintenance scheduling specialist. Dorm I was in was near one of the gates. You went out the gate and there was Hardee's and motel. The dorm was a new build that was only half completed.
Stayed at the 72nd side of the dinning hall. A.G.E. marching to school in the winter wind some of the lighter students knocked sideways from the wind. Back in the fall of 1987, there was a comic book store just outside 1 of the gates. There was also a musical instrument store. They sold guitars and amps. The man that worked there made and recorded his own music. His music was very American like John mellencamp. Most of the people on base and off base were poor. E-1 pay was around $550 a month. Minus $100 for the G.I. bill. It was a good place to start for people out of high school.
Was just there a month ago. Stayed in Paxton for a few days. Was so different than back home and I loved it. Went to that Walmart as well. Thanks for sharing I didn’t know this about Rantoul
Shame to see the base abandoned and half gone and run down. I went there in 1985 for training as a Navy Aerographer's Mate (Weather man). All branches of the military did their weather school there.
I was stationed there in 1983, trained for Parachute and Survival Equipment specialist. Met my first husband there, he was a Marine, training for Communications and Electronics specialist. There were many students from all branches there. I still have my graduation photo where we posed in front of a large aircraft.
i was at Chanute 81 for aircraft structural repair (sheetmetal) so you and I were sister shops. When i was at Eielson AK i was the shop chief for the SE shop. Packing parachutes really sucked.
I am 82 now and was stationed at Chanute from 1958 to 1962. I, with my late wife lived there my last year in the Air Force. Looks unkept from my days there. Sad!
Just saw your post today. Little late. 😄Thanks for sharing! I was commander of the 71st Student Squadron (the building you referred to as being the Chanute Transition Center). I was stationed there from 1979-1983.
If you take a left at the 9:36 mark there are two blocks of housing. That’s were I lived as a kid from about 1982-1993. Alan Ritchson lived across the from me. He played Thad in Blue Mountain State and he is now playing Jack Reacher. For me those were the good old days.
So many of your videos are so familiar to us since we grew up in Central IL! Actually like riding along with you in those places and are surprised by how little they've actually changed since we moved out of state! Can't wait for more!
Based at Chanute AFB in 1970 (32551 Avionic Instrument Systems Specialist). I'm from Michigan so the cold winter didn't bother me much. I was quartered in the old wooden barracks across the street from the new brick dorms where the mechanics and fire fighters were quartered. I enjoyed the eclectic vibe the base had. There were newer buildings scattered among the original structures. i.e. the mess hall and the brick dorms. There were also cool historical objects there as well. Like a B-36 on the flight line that we marched by on the way to classes. And a B-58 Hustler on a pedestal. I think is was by the chapel. Chanute AFB is part of my history I fondly recall. Thanks for the flashback.
Born and raised there. Worked on base from 89 until the day it closed. Like so many others left when it closed. Close to the HQ was housing Senoir Officer row and Senior NCO housing. Wonder if the golf course is still there. Many fond memories. Drove around there about same time you did. Broke my heart to see it now. I like to remember it when it was alive and vibrant. Thanks for the video.
I was there in 1975 for the welding class. Chanute AFB was so cold in winter. Had to march 3 miles in the snow to get to welding school. It got over 50- below zero in winter.
Nice video. I was at Chanute Tech School 1965-66. I didn't recognize anything, knowing I was there over 50 years ago. Lived in old WW2 wooden barracks then. By the way the word Corps is pronounced Core.
Helped truck away debree from White Hall. Most of the apartments used to be base housing. Lincolns Challenge is in the new building on the base. The missle was the original location for the west gate entry. That blocked off driveway was the old hospital that has since been bought.
From what Mom and Dad told me, we lived in a four-plex on Symington. I remember it was a two-story townhouse with basement. I need to look at our old photos to jog my memory some more.
Great video. Most of the bldgs I remember are gone. I was there '68 for 3 Level Trg in Aircraft Environmental Sys. Again, in '71 for 7 Level School. Born and raised in Joliet, Morris, and Coal City, 170 MI to North, approx, I was home almost every weekend. Visited many times after my '73 Discharge. It was ATC HQ, and was an air museum for a while. They even had an aero club for a spell. Don't look the same. I couldn't watch whole vid...broke my heart!
My dad was there when Pearl Harbor was bombed. 1941. Became a propeller specialist and trainer. We went back there while the museum was open. He commented that very few buildings were left from that time. And they had very few planes there. From there to Lincoln NB to England where he worked on Jimmie Stewart's B17.
I did my training at Chanute AFB for Air Frame Repair in Summer of 1971 sure was great to see this video, I even think I seen the Hanger I had my training in. Thank you.
My deceased Husband and I were there beginning in 1986. He was an instructor. My son was born in the hospital there and my daughter attended her first year of school here. Wonderful memories. Sad to see it now
Me too. I learned how to be somewhat of an adult. I then went off to Travis AFB ~ Gateway to the Pacific. Worked on Lockheed C-141 & C-5A cargo aircraft. 😊 Did you know the C-5 could haul 100 Volkswagen Beetles or 1 million ping pong balls anywhere in the world?? Pretty cool I thought.
I was there from February through June 1986 going through aircraft electrical systems training. As I came from Hawaii, it was super cold there and very flat land. Had a very enjoyable time there.
I was at Chanute May to September 1990 for Air Force Technical Training school. Heavy Equipment mechanics. I loved it there and sad to see it so run down.
09:54 "This part of town appears to be occupied by low end apartment complexes" Actually, those buildings; typical post WW2 Military family housing complex, which were essentially apartments, and in later years converted to civilian apartment complexes. Lots of them were built across the country mainly due to the "Baby Boom." I grew up in such a complex, but not in that state.
They're actually still very nice on the insides and the the real estate company renting them out charges up the arse per month. The officer quarter buildings are still very nice inside and out. You can't touch one of those for less than $100k. It's ridiculous. Plus the deeds are all locked up with the AF and a battle with the village getting them. So anyone who actually buys them might as well plan on owning it until their death
Sad 😮 indeed I was stationed here 1963. To the 50th to finish basic and do the two weeks of KP. I was then moved to the 54th training Sq. I learned to be a Air Craft electrician. The barracks were of WW2 vintage two-story wooden with a 4 x 4 block of pristine linoleum near the front door for inspection. It was Heavily cleaned and polished with neutral shoe polish. This block was never stepped on. You know I liked the place. I went on to Forbes AFB in Topeka Ka. It was SAC base until we showed up with C130B And so on ect. ect. MSgt JA Hicks Ret.
I have driven past that missile so many times. My mom met my step dad, who was stationed at Chanute in the late 80's early 90's. I grew up in Paxton, just up the road from Rantoul.
Had a high school buddy with this same back story... he was a real hammerhead, had a mullet and lots of zits. Anyways, we used to smoke his step-dads Marlboros when he left his field jacket lying around. Good times! As far as the "missile" he seemed to always have an acute awareness of long, hard objects... he went on to serve in the Navy on a submarine.
My Dad was career Army stationed at U of I as an ROTC instructor ‘61 to ‘64. We drove over to Chanute from Urbana once a month to buy groceries at the commissary. There was a wrecked B-17 left over from the war that they used for fire training. We always made a point of driving past it because we thought it was cool...and it was. If I remember correctly, they also had either an intact B-17 or a B-25 on display. I’m glad I got to see them as they’re pretty scarce now.
All those low end apartment complexes are former military family housing units. The 'dormitories' were Bachelor Enlisted Quarters (BEQ) or Bachelor Officer Quarters (BOQ). The duplexes and single family houses were officers family quarters. At 28:05 that interesting old house was, I think the medical dispensary for the family housing area at one time. The building at 30:00 looks to have been the base hospital before the new one was built at the SW section.
As you drive up to the headquarters building, the Base flag pole is displayed prominently in the front yard. The pole was just under 80' tall. In 1971, both halyards (flag pole ropes) broke from wear and had to be replaced. The company I worked for at the time, Skywork? of Gibson City, IL. 22 miles NW, had the only aerial truck that could reach to the top of the pole. We were contracted to replace the halyards on an emergency immediate contract. I took the ropes (5/8'' parachute cord) up and threaded them thru the pulleys and then I painted the pole white epoxy on the way down with the Base furnishing all materials. We made the Base paper because of the importance of getting the Base flag flying again and that our aerial truck was a 1938 Pirsch retired fire truck.. I've got pictures if I knew how to get them on your site. Thanks for your video, brought back old memories.
Chris thx for taking us along on your excellent tour of Chanute and it's surrounding areas of Rantoul... I was in tech school there just over 50 years ago.. Dec of 70.. I was looking for my old barracks that was probably mixed in with those abandoned dorms.. So much has changed since I was there.. Sad to see how it has gone down hill... Well thx again for your excellent video and history of Chanute.. the most informative I've seen yet...Take care..
Hard to fathom that 50+ years has gone by since I went to teach school at Chanute. The ICBM was my view from my dorm, White Hall & Grissom Hall is where we attended electronics and missile training. Great video!
I was there four months for tech school in '77 - '78 and my squadron was in the big brick building right beside the missile gate, which I think was officially called the west gate? Drive out that gate and hook a right to go into Rantoul, or a left to go to Champaign, both of which I did frequently in my off duty time just to get away from the barracks.
Thanks for sharing your video. Appreciate you having street signs in the lower right corner. I first traveled with my Recuiter to Chanute in Early 1970 for my 1st Flight Physical prior to starting Officer Training School in May. While @ Chanute I slept in a WWII 2 story Open Bay Barracks. I have returned to visit Rantoul & former Chanute Airfield many times since. It’s been sad to see the old buildings on Base torn down and or abandoned. But good to see some new uses of some buildings.
I got a tour of Chanute back in the 80’s from a married enlisted man. The ‘low income apartments’ you drove past, were where he lived with his family. Back in the day they were on-base family housing. His townhouse apartment had a utilitarian style about it, like you’d expect at a military base, but seemed comfortable enough. Those townhouses, and even the lawns at that housing complex were immaculately maintained back then. The duplex single story houses you drove past afterwards were other on-base housing for families, officers I think. Overall, back in that day, the base had a nice feel about it. Sort of a cross between a small town and a college campus. While no longer pristine, it is nice to see that despite being decommissioned decades ago, most buildings haven't been allowed to get rundown.
Thanks for posting this. I was there at Chanute from May to July of 92 for my tech school for fire fighting. Some good memories. . The building you said was turned into a transition. Place for youth was where my dorm was.
I was a NICU nurse in Urbana in the 80s, Chanute had a base hospital that delivered a lot of Airforce wives' babies. If the baby was having medical issues they would call us to transport the sick baby to our NICU. I've been there for just that reason but arriving inside an ambulance and in the dark so I can't identify what building was the base hospital back then. They were always glad to see us when we rolled in as they were not equipped to handle a sick baby.
I remember a few neighbors driving the 30 or 40 miles to Rantoul AFB for their non military jobs at the base. More then just Rantoul suffered when the base closed.
A J Kerr I was there Dec 65 for jet engine training. I lived in Freeport, Il and we t home on weekends. My next pcs base was Sewart afb Smyrna, tn where i stayed until my tour of duty was up. I continued to work on airplanes for 48 years until i retired.
I visited chanute many times before it closed. Some of the notable things that their dining facilities were some of the best in the Air Force! I Firefighting school was there along with aircraft maintenance school. They had one of the first F 15’s in the mechanic school that broke the climb record and subsequently tweaked the fuselage so bad they couldn’t remove one of the engines! Also the ICBM training was there with complete mock ups of the launch sites and missle control rooms, the “turn the key press a button” rooms for training the maint crew and launch crew. It was quite exceptional.
The former Savanna Illinois Army Depot has ground that is contaminated with unexploded munitions, so I kinda know about superfund sites of former government installations. The Army Depot was opened in 1917 and closed in about 1993 the same time as Chanute.
I was an AGE mech. I was there from Dec.86 to May 87. I remember one of my instructors SSGT. Luby. It was great times. I was from Chicago so I would go home almost every weekend! It's very sad to see the condition of the base. Amazing how the Government can let something go to waste!
I was there for training the summer of 89. I think my dorm was the second one (the abandoned one) shown right in the beginning. I stayed there for 6 months. My training class was he longest on the base. They called us furniture. Because to the other classes we were they when they got there and were still there after they left. I have been to many of those places on my bicycle back then. At the tine I arrived I had been in the AF just a touch longer than the average kid leaving Basic, so I had rank and was able to ride my bike to class and not have to get up so early or march to class. 17:39 The field where there are weird sidewalks.. There was a large field with about 15-20 static aircraft that you could walk to. I have seen satellite photos of the base after it was closed that a lot of them were moved to outside of the hanger (probably this aeronautical museum you spoke of later in the video). They had a huge B-36 there. One day it was missing. So I followed the deep wheel impressions to the runway. It had been purchased and they were ripping it apart. It was purchased with the intention of flying it out because it was supposed to be in perfect condition. Once they got inside they found it to be stripped and large cable bundles were cut. I have photos of inside that aircraft as I also helped disassemble parts of it. I still have some part of it. Inside one of the hangers is an ICBM in an underground silo. That is where they trained the crews to work on the missile. One day the blast door was opened and I looked down the shaft and saw the missile. You can see the blast door in that TV show Mysteries of the abandoned. one day there was suddenly 2 B-52s on the runway. One tan and one green. A few days later they were crushed to little pieces in 2 different piles so the Russians could take satellite photos. It was part of some treaty between us and them. Way out by the lake was the firefighter school. There was steel mock-ups of aircraft and helicopters. They would be covered in jet fuel and set ablaze. I wonder how they cleaned that up. As I rode my bike by all I could smell was diesel fuel. I have a bunch of photos of that place. Every Friday I would get a cab that could take my bike and I'd go to Champaign. Ride around to a mil surplus store. Go to a vintage diner for dinner and then to Green street and drink with the college kids. Then ride my bike back to base in the dark. I never learned how far that bike ride was. BrockDog if your out there somewhere contact me!!
Okay., I must say more... All of the places you visit later are just base things... and have nothing to do with Rantoul. Rantoul has lost a crap load of people since the base closed, but the base (south east of the city) all has a similar road structure, etc. Its all government. You can see it in how the roads are laid. Not the the same as rest of city. There has been stuff trying to come in... etc. But its hard. It is a LOT of space. The place has amazing "abandoned" Elements that are fascinating. Like apocalyptic looking.
I got there in September 1986 and left in February 1987. I got trained in Aerospace Ground Equipment. I think the dorm that is being used as senior care is the one I was in. We used to take a Corky’s cab (15 passenger vans) to a bar called Tritos. One of my friends got a crappy tattoo in Rantoul while drunk!🤣 I have great memories from my time there! Chow hall food was really good!
The building @ 21:19 is Lincoln's Challenge Academy. Its a state military school. Built within the last 5 years. I attended this school back in 2016. The empty field behind used to be the old facility. Looked alot like the other barracks. Before the new building you would've seen Cadets marching to and from alot of the buildings in the area that used to be our school/gym/ laundry area. I think the new building has everything under one roof now. Chanute Air Force Base was told to be one of the most haunted places in Illinois. Lots of good memories at this place. -Cadet Panega Team 3 46-16
Lincoln’s Challenge is older than that, I went there in 2005, I was 15 fasho…Team 5 Bonecrushers. We use to sneak off campus & buy contraband from the gas station (cigarettes, candy, chips, etc), meet with the girls where they did laundry, I got all memories
Team 3 Wolf Pack, Class 18-03. I was 16, it was 6 months of hell weeks and team punishment. Brutal 11 hour days counting dots on a wall, and great food. Front leaning rest position - MOVE!
@@apnollie439 Team 3 Wolf Pack, Class 18-03. I was 16, it was 6 months of hell weeks and team punishment. Brutal 11 hour days counting dots on a wall, and great food. Front leaning rest position - MOVE!
That's some cool footage and knowledge about the base. I was stationed there in the 80s a couple of different times. That one building you just went by was the barracks that I stayed in the first time I was in Chanute. That Base also used to have the world's largest static airplane display in the world. They actually had the Enola Gay there.
I love your channel, born in garden city, finished school in St Clair shores. I left Michigan in 1981. I recognize the typical architecture of the former airforce base similar to kinchole ,upper peninsula and selfridge in MT Clemons, only base more modern by today's standards is Macdill down in Tampa, again great job on your channel! Your correct I have more money in my pockets since I left Illinois for Tennessee 😂👍
I was one of the thousands who went to school there during my aircraft electrician training days. I remember marching past a B-36 on static display. Anyone know what happened to the aircraft there? I also went to see Jethro Tull in Champagne/Urbana during my training days. oh yeah with REO speedwagon. They got booed by locals. LOL Many memories. The year was 1971 and in 1972 I went to U-tapao ,Thailand to participate for the next 19 months of the war maintaining B-52s and KC-135s.Thanks for stirring my gray matter.
THANK YOU for this! I am from Chicago, and Chanute was my technical school (Fuels Specialist) from Feb-Apr of 1986. I had fun for the short time that I was there! Thanks again! (Key trivia: That senior center was MY dorm!) (@ 26:15, that big building was the base hospital)
I was here in 2003.. They have a military school there. Lincoln's Challenge Academy ran by the Illinois Air National Guard. That is the new building that you saw. I was class 20-03. It's a beautiful program for adolescents ...
Closed down Blytheville AFB in Dec of 92, one of the last people there. Also grew up about 20 miles east of there. Sad to see many of the buildings falling in now.
At 26:11, that was the hospital as I recall. Stayed there overnight after having my wisdom teeth pulled in winter of 1973. Smaller bldg at the NW corner was the dental clinic.
boy, does this bring back memories! stationed here for 3 months 1973 - 1974 learning sheet metal repair. Only remember the dorms (three story brick), chow hall ( had to walk to and from) and the classes held in the hanger. they drove us by buss to class except when it snowed then we marched to and from class. There were a lot fewer trees than I remember but I also never saw very much of the base then I was off to Travis AFB.
The museum was great, drove my big truck onto the base to check out the museum. Talked to the old guides inside, they just never had a lot of traffic to keep it open. Same for the museum at old Forbes AFB/Topeka Kansas.
i was in training at Chanute from September 1969 to December 1969. I didn't recognize anything in the video. They must have torn down all the 1930's vintage wooden barracks.
In the military, "dormitories" are called "barracks". The low income housing was once Air Force enlisted family housing. Briefly, in the 1990's, United Airlines flirted with placing a maintenance base at Chanute, but it never materialized. The demise of the museum was a great loss for aviation enthusiast and historians. It contained many, now rare aircraft, from the Cold War era. But they couldn't raise enough money to keep it going, and the aircraft were disbursed to other museums around the country.
Brent I think the B-58 and B-36 went to the museum at Castle AFB in California, which was my first duty station after Chanute... I still remember that B-58 sitting there... Jan 71...
You are out of step with Air Force lingo... they were called barracks as you said but the correct terminology was Dormitory... we just had to do it different than the Army I guess.. when I was at Chanute the barracks was called a dorm but we used old terms also... like the guys that took a shift during the night walking around and making sure the dorm was ok... the shift was about 3 hours long and everyone got the "privilege" pulling that duty... they were called barracks guards.... who knew
My uncle was stationed there in the 60's and 70's. When I was in college at Champaign in the 70's, I used to frequent a really good hotdog stand on Rte. 45 in Rantoul. No, I never went into the strip of porno shops that also lined Rte. 45. The most notable monument was an old fighter jet set up on a pedestal right outside the base. In later years, I occasionally went back to visit U of Ill., and remember when the base was closing and that jet was being dismantled. Rantoul withered after that.
I was stationed at Ratoul in 1960-1961 for technical school for the GAM-77 Nuclear Cruise missile. We were in the original wooden barracks which were originally condemed in 1950's. A really cold and snowy winter convinced me that I wanted to be stationed in Florida. Ended up at Eglin AFB (Ft. Walton) doing R&D on Skybolt ALBM then Pactrick AFB (Cocoa Beach) on Minuteman. thanks for the memories. Best duty ever.
21:40 Good ol Lincoln's Challenge Academy ( know a few people who went and work here). Fitting for a Military School to be place on a retired Air Base to use the land.
I was stationed there in 65 getting my training as an aircraft fuel system technician. I was amazed as I was watching the video that I have absolutely no recollection of the place. I can't remember what my barracks looked like or which buildings my classrooms were in. I do remember crawling in the wing cell of a B-52. Not a place for someone with claustrophobia. We had one "slightly" overweight guy get stuck in the entry hatch. Took a while to get him out. The B-52 must have been in one of the big hangars on the flight line. Still have the picture of my graduating class with the B-58 Hustler as the backdrop.
Rantoul never fails to have a windy day. My husband was Air Force and we were in Rantoul from 84-93. He got out of the military in 88 and went to work for Beech Aerospace ( Raytheon ) from 88-92. Our son was born in the hospital on that base. We moved back home to Michigan in 93 and I can honestly say I don’t miss Rantouls wind and storms. Sad to see what it’s become.
In 1978-79 I was a Boy Scout leader for a Troop in Momence Illinois. Our Troop visited this air base. The leader and scouts stayed overnight in one of the dorms (you would not believe how hard those mattresses were!) It was very impressive. At that time the base was basically used as a training center.
My almost 92 year old father in law was stationed at Chanute many, many years ago for technical training. I found a Chanute AFB challenge coin at a flea market in PA a few years back. Bought it and gave it to him.
Okay more... growing up here and knowing what these neighborhoods were... they are NOW low end complexes. But they were originally housing for military staff. Various levels... apartment type for young single men, housing for small families. etc. Back in the 90s, this was all under the gates of the base. You could not even get to these neighborhoods without access though the main gates. Back in the day,. like the entire south east 1/3 of Rantoul was not accessible by non military staff.
I went to jet engine mechanic school there in 1990 really sad to see it now. Had a good time there, @ 11:30 the big empty field used to have a building called White Hall and it was one of the biggest structures on the base. I also while i was there for training, the locals did not like all of the airman running around there. But the minute they heard the base was going to close they changed there tune pretty quick I was told.
I lived in Champaign-Urbana in the 70s and 80s. What we didn't like were the temporary young airmen their for training. They gave the rest of the Air Force a bad name.
19:45 to 19:55 is the old phone center on the left, which was a pavilion with rows and rows of pay phones to allow the troops a place to phone home. Long distance calling was very expensive back in the '70s, so if you called too often and/or talked too long your family's phone bill back home would look like the national debt. I saved up as much change as I could during the week in anticipation of being able to make two phone calls on Sunday afternoons - one to my family and the other to my girlfriend back home. Those phone call opportunities were so slow to arrive and all too quick to pass by, then it was back to having to wait another week. My squadron was right across the street from the phone center, where that new light colored building now sits.
I was there for about 4 months in 1958 learning how to maintain and repair J-47 jet engines (for F-86 planes). I got in to Rantoul once. Wasn't worth the walk. We were housed in WW2 barracks. We walked or were marched where ever we went. No public transportation. No money to spend. No down time except on Sundays. The best places I found to go to on base were the Airmen's club located at the proximate center of the base to listen to Slim Whitman sing love songs or to the off-base Baptist Airmen's center for free cake and coke. Because of the cold weather in November, I bought one of the best civiliam jackets that I have ever owned from a little men's store about a half mile from the main gate. I wish I had kept it. It cost me 16 bucks. I nearly froze my butt off when we were marched to the old Hangars (the ones with the round roofs) to get our instructions and take qualification tests (as jet engine mechs). We wore fatigues and fatigue jackes (sort of like a heavy shirt). The most iteresting thing that I remember about being there was the static exhibits of R-4360 gas reciprocating engineslike the ones that were used on the airplanes that dropped the bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. I couldn't believe the size of those engines - monsters. I can't say that I have fond memories of Chanute, but it was the first time I had traveled more that a few dozwn miles from where I was born. I was transferred there after completing basic training in San Antonio, TX, - Lackland AFB. What fun ! I wouldn't care to repeat any of it. I did my 6 years in the Air National Guard while the Viet Nam war was getting started and when offered the opportunity to re-up for two more, I said no thanks and good-bye to Warrant Officer Smith. I have had a good life and it was sad to see what now exists of that base after it was decommissioned.
Lived on base in the late 60's...was a beautifully maintained facility. Great place to live and grow up when young. If you wanted something different Champaign/Urbana was very close.
"re-purposing" a Air Force Base is very difficult.... its easy to say end homelessness and housing for the poor, but we all know the area would quickly degenerate into a lawless ghetto. The State and local Government are being very careful about its future use. I was in the USAF and the bases I was at were beautiful and well maintained.... simple reason... DISCIPLINE.
I’m from the Chicago suburbs originally and had a couple buddies from high school based at Chanute in the mid-80s. Another friend attended U of I. So I would go down there for a weekend and visit them all. Champaign-Urbana was a fun college town back then. I’m surprised that they left all those buildings vacant after the closure.
I was a fire equipment salesman in Illinois in the late '70s and early '80's. Actually made sales calls at the base. For a time, they were a main training center for aircraft fire fighting. They had an aircraft skeleton with sprayers to create huge fuel fires for crews to extinguish. I can remember many times being thirty miles or more away and seeing black columns of smoke stretching up into the atmosphere from those burns.
Iwas stationed there in 1986 and it was a decent place but our schedule was brutal and the winters are the coldest I have ever experienced with the cold and very strong winds. The base would post color coded signs to warn of freezing temps and frostbite danger. We had many days they deemed too cold to hold classes because the march at 5 am took 45-50 minutes each way so we would stay in our dorms and study, clean the dorm and order several pizzas for lunch. When it finally warmed up a bit we tossed around frisbees and a football on the quad. I remember the food at the dining hall was really good and we ate well.
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Being an Air Force vet, it breaks my heart to see an Air Force base in shambles.
Pretty sad to see this now. I was stationed there in 1988 right after Boot camp from Lackland AFB in San Antonio, Texas, I was 21 years old. I got my Jet Engine mechanic training there. The dorms was pretty good. I had good memories of Chanute AFB and Rantoul. Thank you for posting this video.
1990 jet mech also i remember how cold it was when i was there .
Hi Danny. 1965. 43250. Then Williams field, AZ, Hahn AFB, Germany, Upper Heyford, England. All of which are now closed.
@@raycornelius5532 I went there in 1989. Good memories.
I was there from September 86 through June 87. Got my Aircraft Instruments training there. Also saw Top Gun there about 6 times. Great memories of that place.
I was there in '67 going through A/C electrical repairman (42330) school. Waitlisted for school, so we lived in one of the old quonset huts till start of school. then into the dorm. Always waited for "Pizza Pop" to come through selling pizza and soda pop in the evenings. From there, went to Ramstein AFB in Germany, and Try all over Europe and North Africa, then to Kincheloe AFB (SAC) on the UP in Michigan. Not much in Rantoul. but we always went to Champaign-Urbana for fun and games.
Chanute may be gone, but it's not forgotten. It will always live in the memories of us who were stationed there.
Me too! Jet Engine Mechanic 1982
That's where I went to Tech School at (Fire Protection), 1988
Chanute AFB was my birthplace! In late autumn 1963. This was the last place my dad was stationed before he retired from the service and entered civilian life. Dad had told me we lived on Symington Road in the base housing area. I barely remember our days there now. But Rantoul looks like a nice quiet community. Rest In Peace, Mom and Dad! You are missed! 🇺🇸 🇺🇸
I too was born on this AFB, IN Nov 62.
Wasn’t Chuck Yeager there briefly ? I remember him breaking the sound barrier over Wilmington,Il in 62 or 63, we had the Joliet Arsenal , but they said he took off from Rantoul, shook our grade school building when he did it!
@@pamkammann1176 That's a good question. I'll have to look that up. Myself, I was born in late autumn 1963. My dad probably would have known.
@@MisterMikeTexas it was something I’ll never forget ! I don’t remember though if he was just passing through or if he was stationed there briefly or what.
I was born there in Nov 1963. All I know is that my father was trained to be some kind of missile mechanic there. I know more about Chanute from this video than I’ve ever known before about my birthplace.
I was stationed at Chanute after Boot camp as a Aircraft Environmental Systems mechanic from 81-82....I remember those long marching days to and from the dorm to school. There was a "static" display of a B-58 Hustler I can never forget about that. I didn't do much roaming around because "tech"school was very difficult so I spent the majority of my time studying. My time served in the USAF was a very exciting experience if you desire a lifelong experience join the USAF in the aircraft mechanical field.
I was there in 86. I'll never forget the B58. Awesome aircraft. I remember they had good dining halls there.
I was a environmental mechanic stationed there
9:55: Low end apartment complexes are actually former base housing, mostly enlisted. Duplexes and multiplexes, two-story units.
It is sad. I spent 3 years at Chanute from 84-87. Bought my first car there and had many great memories.
Instructor?
I was stationed there Dec 84 to March 85. Damn it was cold. Was trained to be a maintenance scheduling specialist. Dorm I was in was near one of the gates. You went out the gate and there was Hardee's and motel. The dorm was a new build that was only half completed.
I was there from Dec 84-Apr 85 for AGE School. Stayed in Faktor Hall.
I was born on Chanute base in November of 62. It broke this town and alot of hearts when this base was shut down.
Stayed at the 72nd side of the dinning hall. A.G.E. marching to school in the winter wind some of the lighter students knocked sideways from the wind.
Back in the fall of 1987, there was a comic book store just outside 1 of the gates. There was also a musical instrument store. They sold guitars and amps. The man that worked there made and recorded his own music. His music was very American like John mellencamp. Most of the people on base and off base were poor. E-1 pay was around $550 a month. Minus $100 for the G.I. bill. It was a good place to start for people out of high school.
Was just there a month ago. Stayed in Paxton for a few days. Was so different than back home and I loved it. Went to that Walmart as well. Thanks for sharing I didn’t know this about Rantoul
I grew up in Paxton!! Been to Rantoul many times
Shame to see the base abandoned and half gone and run down.
I went there in 1985 for training as a Navy Aerographer's Mate (Weather man).
All branches of the military did their weather school there.
I was stationed there in 1983, trained for Parachute and Survival Equipment specialist. Met my first husband there, he was a Marine, training for Communications and Electronics specialist. There were many students from all branches there. I still have my graduation photo where we posed in front of a large aircraft.
i was at Chanute 81 for aircraft structural repair (sheetmetal) so you and I were sister shops. When i was at Eielson AK i was the shop chief for the SE shop. Packing parachutes really sucked.
I am 82 now and was stationed at Chanute from 1958 to 1962. I, with my late wife lived there my last year in the Air Force. Looks unkept from my days there. Sad!
I was station there when it was Chanute AFB. Was one of the last active duty to leave. Was great place , many Airmen went thru Technical School.
Just saw your post today. Little late. 😄Thanks for sharing! I was commander of the 71st Student Squadron (the building you referred to as being the Chanute Transition Center). I was stationed there from 1979-1983.
If you take a left at the 9:36 mark there are two blocks of housing. That’s were I lived as a kid from about 1982-1993. Alan Ritchson lived across the from me. He played Thad in Blue Mountain State and he is now playing Jack Reacher. For me those were the good old days.
So many of your videos are so familiar to us since we grew up in Central IL! Actually like riding along with you in those places and are surprised by how little they've actually changed since we moved out of state! Can't wait for more!
Based at Chanute AFB in 1970 (32551 Avionic Instrument Systems Specialist). I'm from Michigan so the cold winter didn't bother me much. I was quartered in the old wooden barracks across the street from the new brick dorms where the mechanics and fire fighters were quartered. I enjoyed the eclectic vibe the base had. There were newer buildings scattered among the original structures. i.e. the mess hall and the brick dorms. There were also cool historical objects there as well. Like a B-36 on the flight line that we marched by on the way to classes. And a B-58 Hustler on a pedestal. I think is was by the chapel. Chanute AFB is part of my history I fondly recall. Thanks for the flashback.
I was in the same classes in early 1972
Born and raised there. Worked on base from 89 until the day it closed. Like so many others left when it closed. Close to the HQ was housing Senoir Officer row and Senior NCO housing. Wonder if the golf course is still there. Many fond memories. Drove around there about same time you did. Broke my heart to see it now. I like to remember it when it was alive and vibrant. Thanks for the video.
Lots of memories. Was stationed there from 87 - 93. Worked at the hospital
I worked with you at the hospital. We played on the hospital softball team together. Fun times!
I remember you ken, how in the hell are you?
I was there in 1975 for the welding class. Chanute AFB was so cold in winter. Had to march 3 miles in the snow to get to welding school. It got over 50- below zero in winter.
Nice video. I was at Chanute Tech School 1965-66. I didn't recognize anything, knowing I was there over 50 years ago. Lived in old WW2 wooden barracks then. By the way the word Corps is pronounced Core.
I was probably sleep deprived when I recorded the VO's. Had a bad habit of doing that for a while haha.
@@ChrisHarden LOL , corpse is more appropriate sadly !
they were a fire hazard and were being burned for training in 84
I spent a few months at Chanute in 1984, loved the dining hall, I think it was called Faktour Hall.
Helped truck away debree from White Hall. Most of the apartments used to be base housing. Lincolns Challenge is in the new building on the base. The missle was the original location for the west gate entry. That blocked off driveway was the old hospital that has since been bought.
From what Mom and Dad told me, we lived in a four-plex on Symington. I remember it was a two-story townhouse with basement. I need to look at our old photos to jog my memory some more.
Great video. Most of the bldgs I remember are gone. I was there '68 for 3 Level Trg in Aircraft Environmental Sys. Again, in '71 for 7 Level School. Born and raised in Joliet, Morris, and Coal City, 170 MI to North, approx, I was home almost every weekend. Visited many times after my '73 Discharge.
It was ATC HQ, and was an air museum for a while. They even had an aero club for a spell. Don't look the same. I couldn't watch whole vid...broke my heart!
So sad, was there in 1986 and had the time of my young life. RIP my old friend.
My dad was there when Pearl Harbor was bombed. 1941.
Became a propeller specialist and trainer.
We went back there while the museum was open.
He commented that very few buildings were left from that time. And they had very few planes there.
From there to Lincoln NB to England where he worked on Jimmie Stewart's B17.
Both of my sons went to Lincoln's Challange and they loved it .
I did my training at Chanute AFB for Air Frame Repair in Summer of 1971 sure was great to see this video, I even think I seen the Hanger I had my training in. Thank you.
My deceased Husband and I were there beginning in 1986. He was an instructor. My son was born in the hospital there and my daughter attended her first year of school here. Wonderful memories. Sad to see it now
Me too. I learned how to be somewhat of an adult. I then went off to Travis AFB ~ Gateway to the Pacific. Worked on Lockheed C-141 & C-5A cargo aircraft. 😊 Did you know the C-5 could haul 100 Volkswagen Beetles or 1 million ping pong balls anywhere in the world?? Pretty cool I thought.
I was there from February through June 1986 going through aircraft electrical systems training. As I came from Hawaii, it was super cold there and very flat land. Had a very enjoyable time there.
I was at Chanute May to September 1990 for Air Force Technical Training school. Heavy Equipment mechanics.
I loved it there and sad to see it so run down.
09:54 "This part of town appears to be occupied by low end apartment complexes"
Actually, those buildings; typical post WW2 Military family housing complex, which were essentially apartments, and in later years converted to civilian apartment complexes. Lots of them were built across the country mainly due to the "Baby Boom." I grew up in such a complex, but not in that state.
They're actually still very nice on the insides and the the real estate company renting them out charges up the arse per month. The officer quarter buildings are still very nice inside and out. You can't touch one of those for less than $100k. It's ridiculous. Plus the deeds are all locked up with the AF and a battle with the village getting them. So anyone who actually buys them might as well plan on owning it until their death
I was stationed at Chanute AFB 89-91. I worked at the hospital. Sad to see the place now in such rough shape.
😀
Sad 😮 indeed
I was stationed here 1963. To the 50th to finish basic and do the two weeks of KP. I was then moved to the 54th training Sq.
I learned to be a Air Craft electrician. The barracks were of WW2 vintage two-story wooden with a 4 x 4 block of pristine linoleum near the front door for inspection. It was Heavily cleaned and polished with neutral shoe polish. This block was never stepped on. You know I liked the place. I went on to Forbes AFB in Topeka Ka. It was SAC base until we showed up with C130B
And so on ect. ect.
MSgt JA Hicks Ret.
I have driven past that missile so many times. My mom met my step dad, who was stationed at Chanute in the late 80's early 90's. I grew up in Paxton, just up the road from Rantoul.
Had a high school buddy with this same back story... he was a real hammerhead, had a mullet and lots of zits. Anyways, we used to smoke his step-dads Marlboros when he left his field jacket lying around. Good times!
As far as the "missile" he seemed to always have an acute awareness of long, hard objects... he went on to serve in the Navy on a submarine.
My Dad was career Army stationed at U of I as an ROTC instructor ‘61 to ‘64. We drove over to Chanute from Urbana once a month to buy groceries at the commissary. There was a wrecked B-17 left over from the war that they used for fire training. We always made a point of driving past it because we thought it was cool...and it was. If I remember correctly, they also had either an intact B-17 or a B-25 on display. I’m glad I got to see them as they’re pretty scarce now.
All those low end apartment complexes are former military family housing units. The 'dormitories' were Bachelor Enlisted Quarters (BEQ) or Bachelor Officer Quarters (BOQ). The duplexes and single family houses were officers family quarters. At 28:05 that interesting old house was, I think the medical dispensary for the family housing area at one time. The building at 30:00 looks to have been the base hospital before the new one was built at the SW section.
I grew up and still live near Rantoul. While Chanute was open Rantoul was a very vibrant community.
Paxton ?
As you drive up to the headquarters building, the Base flag pole is displayed prominently in the front yard. The pole was just under 80' tall. In 1971, both halyards (flag pole ropes) broke from wear and had to be replaced. The company I worked for at the time, Skywork? of Gibson City, IL. 22 miles NW, had the only aerial truck that could reach to the top of the pole. We were contracted to replace the halyards on an emergency immediate contract. I took the ropes (5/8'' parachute cord) up and threaded them thru the pulleys and then I painted the pole white epoxy on the way down with the Base furnishing all materials. We made the Base paper because of the importance of getting the Base flag flying again and that our aerial truck was a 1938 Pirsch retired fire truck.. I've got pictures if I knew how to get them on your site. Thanks for your video, brought back old memories.
Chris thx for taking us along on your excellent tour of Chanute and it's surrounding areas of Rantoul... I was in tech school there just over 50 years ago.. Dec of 70.. I was looking for my old barracks that was probably mixed in with those abandoned dorms.. So much has changed since I was there.. Sad to see how it has gone down hill... Well thx again for your excellent video and history of Chanute.. the most informative I've seen yet...Take care..
Hard to fathom that 50+ years has gone by since I went to teach school at Chanute. The ICBM was my view from my dorm, White Hall & Grissom Hall is where we attended electronics and missile training. Great video!
I went to tech school there in 1978. Learned electronics in White Hall and Minuteman II systems at Grissom Hall
I was there four months for tech school in '77 - '78 and my squadron was in the big brick building right beside the missile gate, which I think was officially called the west gate? Drive out that gate and hook a right to go into Rantoul, or a left to go to Champaign, both of which I did frequently in my off duty time just to get away from the barracks.
Thanks for sharing your video. Appreciate you having street signs in the lower right corner.
I first traveled with my Recuiter to Chanute in Early 1970 for my 1st Flight Physical prior to starting Officer Training School in May. While @ Chanute I slept in a WWII 2 story Open Bay Barracks.
I have returned to visit Rantoul & former Chanute Airfield many times since.
It’s been sad to see the old buildings on Base torn down and or abandoned.
But good to see some new uses of some buildings.
I got a tour of Chanute back in the 80’s from a married enlisted man. The ‘low income apartments’ you drove past, were where he lived with his family. Back in the day they were on-base family housing. His townhouse apartment had a utilitarian style about it, like you’d expect at a military base, but seemed comfortable enough. Those townhouses, and even the lawns at that housing complex were immaculately maintained back then. The duplex single story houses you drove past afterwards were other on-base housing for families, officers I think. Overall, back in that day, the base had a nice feel about it. Sort of a cross between a small town and a college campus. While no longer pristine, it is nice to see that despite being decommissioned decades ago, most buildings haven't been allowed to get rundown.
I trained as a fire fighter at Chanute in '86. This brought back a lot of memories.
Thanks for posting this. I was there at Chanute from May to July of 92 for my tech school for fire fighting. Some good memories. . The building you said was turned into a transition. Place for youth was where my dorm was.
I graduated from that transitional school for youth. Changed my life.
I was a NICU nurse in Urbana in the 80s, Chanute had a base hospital that delivered a lot of Airforce wives' babies. If the baby was having medical issues they would call us to transport the sick baby to our NICU. I've been there for just that reason but arriving inside an ambulance and in the dark so I can't identify what building was the base hospital back then. They were always glad to see us when we rolled in as they were not equipped to handle a sick baby.
its pretty easy to identify the hospital. it has a red medical cross on it.
I remember a few neighbors driving the 30 or 40 miles to Rantoul AFB for their non military jobs at the base. More then just Rantoul suffered when the base closed.
A J Kerr
I was there Dec 65 for jet engine training. I lived in Freeport, Il and we t home on weekends. My next pcs base was Sewart afb Smyrna, tn where i stayed until my tour of duty was up. I continued to work on airplanes for 48 years until i retired.
Keep up the great work!
Thanks!
I visited chanute many times before it closed. Some of the notable things that their dining facilities were some of the best in the Air Force! I Firefighting school was there along with aircraft maintenance school. They had one of the first F 15’s in the mechanic school that broke the climb record and subsequently tweaked the fuselage so bad they couldn’t remove one of the engines! Also the ICBM training was there with complete mock ups of the launch sites and missle control rooms, the “turn the key press a button” rooms for training the maint crew and launch crew. It was quite exceptional.
Wonder what was left in the basements of those hangars??
The former Savanna Illinois Army Depot has ground that is contaminated with unexploded munitions, so I kinda know about superfund sites of former government installations. The Army Depot was opened in 1917 and closed in about 1993 the same time as Chanute.
I was an AGE mech. I was there from Dec.86 to May 87. I remember one of my instructors SSGT. Luby. It was great times. I was from Chicago so I would go home almost every weekend! It's very sad to see the condition of the base. Amazing how the Government can let something go to waste!
The old saying, "Don't shoot em, Chanute em!"
Thank you for doing this blog I never heard of this city in Illinois good to see these small towns
Grew up in Bloomington-Normal (about an hour away) and remember the jets from this base giving us sonic booms on a pretty regular basis.
I was there for training the summer of 89. I think my dorm was the second one (the abandoned one) shown right in the beginning.
I stayed there for 6 months. My training class was he longest on the base. They called us furniture. Because to the other classes we were they when they got there and were still there after they left.
I have been to many of those places on my bicycle back then.
At the tine I arrived I had been in the AF just a touch longer than the average kid leaving Basic, so I had rank and was able to ride my bike to class and not have to get up so early or march to class.
17:39 The field where there are weird sidewalks.. There was a large field with about 15-20 static aircraft that you could walk to.
I have seen satellite photos of the base after it was closed that a lot of them were moved to outside of the hanger (probably this aeronautical museum you spoke of later in the video).
They had a huge B-36 there. One day it was missing. So I followed the deep wheel impressions to the runway. It had been purchased and they were ripping it apart.
It was purchased with the intention of flying it out because it was supposed to be in perfect condition. Once they got inside they found it to be stripped and large cable bundles were cut.
I have photos of inside that aircraft as I also helped disassemble parts of it. I still have some part of it.
Inside one of the hangers is an ICBM in an underground silo. That is where they trained the crews to work on the missile. One day the blast door was opened and I looked down the shaft and saw the missile.
You can see the blast door in that TV show Mysteries of the abandoned.
one day there was suddenly 2 B-52s on the runway. One tan and one green. A few days later they were crushed to little pieces in 2 different piles so the Russians could take satellite photos. It was part of some treaty between us and them.
Way out by the lake was the firefighter school. There was steel mock-ups of aircraft and helicopters. They would be covered in jet fuel and set ablaze. I wonder how they cleaned that up. As I rode my bike by all I could smell was diesel fuel.
I have a bunch of photos of that place.
Every Friday I would get a cab that could take my bike and I'd go to Champaign. Ride around to a mil surplus store. Go to a vintage diner for dinner and then to Green street and drink with the college kids. Then ride my bike back to base in the dark. I never learned how far that bike ride was.
BrockDog if your out there somewhere contact me!!
Okay., I must say more... All of the places you visit later are just base things... and have nothing to do with Rantoul. Rantoul has lost a crap load of people since the base closed, but the base (south east of the city) all has a similar road structure, etc. Its all government. You can see it in how the roads are laid. Not the the same as rest of city. There has been stuff trying to come in... etc. But its hard. It is a LOT of space. The place has amazing "abandoned" Elements that are fascinating. Like apocalyptic looking.
I got there in September 1986 and left in February 1987. I got trained in Aerospace Ground Equipment. I think the dorm that is being used as senior care is the one I was in. We used to take a Corky’s cab (15 passenger vans) to a bar called Tritos. One of my friends got a crappy tattoo in Rantoul while drunk!🤣 I have great memories from my time there! Chow hall food was really good!
I was stationed there in 1973. Sad to see what became of the place.
The building @ 21:19 is Lincoln's Challenge Academy. Its a state military school. Built within the last 5 years. I attended this school back in 2016. The empty field behind used to be the old facility. Looked alot like the other barracks. Before the new building you would've seen Cadets marching to and from alot of the buildings in the area that used to be our school/gym/ laundry area. I think the new building has everything under one roof now. Chanute Air Force Base was told to be one of the most haunted places in Illinois. Lots of good memories at this place.
-Cadet Panega Team 3 46-16
Lincoln’s Challenge is older than that, I went there in 2005, I was 15 fasho…Team 5 Bonecrushers. We use to sneak off campus & buy contraband from the gas station (cigarettes, candy, chips, etc), meet with the girls where they did laundry, I got all memories
My bad, I see you distinguished “new/old facilities” my apologies fam
Team 3 Wolf Pack, Class 18-03.
I was 16, it was 6 months of hell weeks and team punishment.
Brutal 11 hour days counting dots on a wall, and great food.
Front leaning rest position - MOVE!
@@apnollie439 Team 3 Wolf Pack, Class 18-03.
I was 16, it was 6 months of hell weeks and team punishment.
Brutal 11 hour days counting dots on a wall, and great food.
Front leaning rest position - MOVE!
I actually attended cycle 1 at LCP. I was removed from that cycle to return and graduate cycle 3 in 1995
That's some cool footage and knowledge about the base. I was stationed there in the 80s a couple of different times. That one building you just went by was the barracks that I stayed in the first time I was in Chanute. That Base also used to have the world's largest static airplane display in the world. They actually had the Enola Gay there.
I love your channel, born in garden city, finished school in St Clair shores. I left Michigan in 1981. I recognize the typical architecture of the former airforce base similar to kinchole ,upper peninsula and selfridge in MT Clemons, only base more modern by today's standards is Macdill down in Tampa, again great job on your channel! Your correct I have more money in my pockets since I left Illinois for Tennessee 😂👍
I was one of the thousands who went to school there during my aircraft electrician training days. I remember marching past a B-36 on static display. Anyone know what happened to the aircraft there? I also went to see Jethro Tull in Champagne/Urbana during my training days. oh yeah with REO speedwagon. They got booed by locals. LOL Many memories. The year was 1971 and in 1972 I went to U-tapao ,Thailand to participate for the next 19 months of the war maintaining B-52s and KC-135s.Thanks for stirring my gray matter.
THANK YOU for this! I am from Chicago, and Chanute was my technical school (Fuels Specialist) from Feb-Apr of 1986. I had fun for the short time that I was there! Thanks again!
(Key trivia: That senior center was MY dorm!)
(@ 26:15, that big building was the base hospital)
I was here in 2003.. They have a military school there. Lincoln's Challenge Academy ran by the Illinois Air National Guard. That is the new building that you saw. I was class 20-03. It's a beautiful program for adolescents ...
Very sad. Reminds me of Blytheville Air Force Base where I grew up in the 80's in Blytheville, Arkansas.
Closed down Blytheville AFB in Dec of 92, one of the last people there. Also grew up about 20 miles east of there. Sad to see many of the buildings falling in now.
Delta Air Lines junkyard now
At 26:11, that was the hospital as I recall. Stayed there overnight after having my wisdom teeth pulled in winter of 1973. Smaller bldg at the NW corner was the dental clinic.
dude you drive fast af. and dont even stop at the sign.
I was stationed there in 77-78 in the winter for aircraft evironmental mechanic training. Went to Germany after for 4.5 years. What a blast.
boy, does this bring back memories! stationed here for 3 months 1973 - 1974 learning sheet metal repair. Only remember the dorms (three story brick), chow hall ( had to walk to and from) and the classes held in the hanger. they drove us by buss to class except when it snowed then we marched to and from class. There were a lot fewer trees than I remember but I also never saw very much of the base then I was off to Travis AFB.
The museum was great, drove my big truck onto the base to check out the museum. Talked to the old guides inside, they just never had a lot of traffic to keep it open.
Same for the museum at old Forbes AFB/Topeka Kansas.
I was a student and later an instructor of electronics at Chanute AFB in 1968-69.
i was in training at Chanute from September 1969 to December 1969. I didn't recognize anything in the video. They must have torn down all the 1930's vintage wooden barracks.
I remember those barracks. They started to phase them out around Oct-Nov ‘71
In the military, "dormitories" are called "barracks".
The low income housing was once Air Force enlisted family housing.
Briefly, in the 1990's, United Airlines flirted with placing a maintenance base at Chanute, but it never materialized.
The demise of the museum was a great loss for aviation enthusiast and historians. It contained many, now rare aircraft, from the Cold War era. But they couldn't raise enough money to keep it going, and the aircraft were disbursed to other museums around the country.
And In The navy, stairways are called “ladders “. I know that because when I was in the navy, I fell down one on board a ship.
In the USAF they actually call them dormitories.
@@Inspadave that's true. I was there in '86. We called them dorms.
Brent I think the B-58 and B-36 went to the museum at Castle AFB in California, which was my first duty station after Chanute... I still remember that B-58 sitting there... Jan 71...
You are out of step with Air Force lingo... they were called barracks as you said but the correct terminology was Dormitory... we just had to do it different than the Army I guess.. when I was at Chanute the barracks was called a dorm but we used old terms also... like the guys that took a shift during the night walking around and making sure the dorm was ok... the shift was about 3 hours long and everyone got the "privilege" pulling that duty... they were called barracks guards.... who knew
My uncle was stationed there in the 60's and 70's. When I was in college at Champaign in the 70's, I used to frequent a really good hotdog stand on Rte. 45 in Rantoul. No, I never went into the strip of porno shops that also lined Rte. 45. The most notable monument was an old fighter jet set up on a pedestal right outside the base. In later years, I occasionally went back to visit U of Ill., and remember when the base was closing and that jet was being dismantled. Rantoul withered after that.
I was stationed at Ratoul in 1960-1961 for technical school for the GAM-77 Nuclear Cruise missile. We were in the original wooden barracks which were originally condemed in 1950's. A really cold and snowy winter convinced me that I wanted to be stationed in Florida. Ended up at Eglin AFB (Ft. Walton) doing R&D on Skybolt ALBM then Pactrick AFB (Cocoa Beach) on Minuteman. thanks for the memories. Best duty ever.
14:10 - I swear thats my old dorm on the left because it was just across from that little shoppette on the right.
3372 Training Squadron.
21:40 Good ol Lincoln's Challenge Academy ( know a few people who went and work here). Fitting for a Military School to be place on a retired Air Base to use the land.
I was stationed there in 65 getting my training as an aircraft fuel system technician. I was amazed as I was watching the video that I have absolutely no recollection of the place. I can't remember what my barracks looked like or which buildings my classrooms were in. I do remember crawling in the wing cell of a B-52. Not a place for someone with claustrophobia. We had one "slightly" overweight guy get stuck in the entry hatch. Took a while to get him out. The B-52 must have been in one of the big hangars on the flight line. Still have the picture of my graduating class with the B-58 Hustler as the backdrop.
I'm a huge fan of your videos. Thanks for posting!
Rantoul never fails to have a windy day. My husband was Air Force and we were in Rantoul from 84-93. He got out of the military in 88 and went to work for Beech Aerospace ( Raytheon ) from 88-92. Our son was born in the hospital on that base. We moved back home to Michigan in 93 and I can honestly say I don’t miss Rantouls wind and storms. Sad to see what it’s become.
In 1978-79 I was a Boy Scout leader for a Troop in Momence Illinois. Our Troop visited this air base. The leader and scouts stayed overnight in one of the dorms (you would not believe how hard those mattresses were!) It was very impressive. At that time the base was basically used as a training center.
Stationed there in 75 . Luckily I only had about 75 mile drive home in Indiana. Saved my sanity by going home on weekends
Heavy equipment mechanic school
My almost 92 year old father in law was stationed at Chanute many, many years ago for technical training. I found a Chanute AFB challenge coin at a flea market in PA a few years back. Bought it and gave it to him.
Okay more... growing up here and knowing what these neighborhoods were... they are NOW low end complexes. But they were originally housing for military staff. Various levels... apartment type for young single men, housing for small families. etc. Back in the 90s, this was all under the gates of the base. You could not even get to these neighborhoods without access though the main gates. Back in the day,. like the entire south east 1/3 of Rantoul was not accessible by non military staff.
I went to jet engine mechanic school there in 1990 really sad to see it now. Had a good time there, @ 11:30 the big empty field used to have a building called White Hall and it was one of the biggest structures on the base. I also while i was there for training, the locals did not like all of the airman running around there. But the minute they heard the base was going to close they changed there tune pretty quick I was told.
My father taught jet engine mechanic
Until hw retired and we left in 91
I lived in Champaign-Urbana in the 70s and 80s.
What we didn't like were the temporary young airmen their for training. They gave the rest of the Air Force a bad name.
This is so cool. I was stationed here in ‘82. A lot of memories!!
19:45 to 19:55 is the old phone center on the left, which was a pavilion with rows and rows of pay phones to allow the troops a place to phone home. Long distance calling was very expensive back in the '70s, so if you called too often and/or talked too long your family's phone bill back home would look like the national debt. I saved up as much change as I could during the week in anticipation of being able to make two phone calls on Sunday afternoons - one to my family and the other to my girlfriend back home. Those phone call opportunities were so slow to arrive and all too quick to pass by, then it was back to having to wait another week. My squadron was right across the street from the phone center, where that new light colored building now sits.
Wish you would have pointed out some of the major people places of the base. Things like the Hospital, BX an Commissary.
I was stationed there for school late 81-early 82; USN. Very fond memories of that time; thanks for the video!
I was there for about 4 months in 1958 learning how to maintain and repair J-47 jet engines (for F-86 planes). I got in to Rantoul once. Wasn't worth the walk. We were housed in WW2 barracks. We walked or were marched where ever we went. No public transportation. No money to spend. No down time except on Sundays. The best places I found to go to on base were the Airmen's club located at the proximate center of the base to listen to Slim Whitman sing love songs or to the off-base Baptist Airmen's center for free cake and coke. Because of the cold weather in November, I bought one of the best civiliam jackets that I have ever owned from a little men's store about a half mile from the main gate. I wish I had kept it. It cost me 16 bucks.
I nearly froze my butt off when we were marched to the old Hangars (the ones with the round roofs) to get our instructions and take qualification tests (as jet engine mechs). We wore fatigues and fatigue jackes (sort of like a heavy shirt). The most iteresting thing that I remember about being there was the static exhibits of R-4360 gas reciprocating engineslike the ones that were used on the airplanes that dropped the bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. I couldn't believe the size of those engines - monsters.
I can't say that I have fond memories of Chanute, but it was the first time I had traveled more that a few dozwn miles from where I was born. I was transferred there after completing basic training in San Antonio, TX, - Lackland AFB. What fun ! I wouldn't care to repeat any of it. I did my 6 years in the Air National Guard while the Viet Nam war was getting started and when offered the opportunity to re-up for two more, I said no thanks and good-bye to Warrant Officer Smith.
I have had a good life and it was sad to see what now exists of that base after it was decommissioned.
Lived on base in the late 60's...was a beautifully maintained facility. Great place to live and grow up when young. If you wanted something different Champaign/Urbana was very close.
"re-purposing" a Air Force Base is very difficult.... its easy to say end homelessness and housing for the poor, but we all know the area would quickly degenerate into a lawless ghetto. The State and local Government are being very careful about its future use.
I was in the USAF and the bases I was at were beautiful and well maintained.... simple reason... DISCIPLINE.
Wow. What should have been a stroll down memory lane is actually unrecognisable to me.
I’m from the Chicago suburbs originally and had a couple buddies from high school based at Chanute in the mid-80s. Another friend attended U of I. So I would go down there for a weekend and visit them all. Champaign-Urbana was a fun college town back then. I’m surprised that they left all those buildings vacant after the closure.
You deserve so many more subscribers and views... Hopefully your hard work will be rewarded.
Thank you, hopefully more videos can catch on soon
I was a fire equipment salesman in Illinois in the late '70s and early '80's. Actually made sales calls at the base. For a time, they were a main training center for aircraft fire fighting. They had an aircraft skeleton with sprayers to create huge fuel fires for crews to extinguish. I can remember many times being thirty miles or more away and seeing black columns of smoke stretching up into the atmosphere from those burns.
I did my USAF fire fighter training at Chanute AFB in 1973. Very enjoyable time and lots of really good people I met and trained with.
Iwas stationed there in 1986 and it was a decent place but our schedule was brutal and the winters are the coldest I have ever experienced with the cold and very strong winds. The base would post color coded signs to warn of freezing temps and frostbite danger. We had many days they deemed too cold to hold classes because the march at 5 am took 45-50 minutes each way so we would stay in our dorms and study, clean the dorm and order several pizzas for lunch. When it finally warmed up a bit we tossed around frisbees and a football on the quad. I remember the food at the dining hall was really good and we ate well.