
Our first map of Clark Field, (fire damaged),
circa 1994
On April 15 1948 the first Philippine president, Manuel A. Roxas, died of a heart attack after speaking at the old Kelly Theater.
In May 1949 the facilities at Fort Stotsenberg and Clark Field were transferred to the U.S. Air Force, and from then on the entire base became known as Clark Air Base. The Air Force consolidated all its cemeteries, moving them to the current location near the main gate.
Clark entered the Vietnam War effort in March 1964 as KC-135 tankers staged from Clark and refueled fighters enroute to Laos. Tragically on May 11, a C-135B (serial 61-0332 of the 1501 ATW, 44 ATS, Travis AFB) carrying an Air Force band from Hawaii crashed in heavy rain 1500 ft short of Clark's runway 02, killing 79 (including 1 American on the ground in a taxi).
In1966 6-story Chambers Hall building (now the Holiday Inn Clark), containing over 300 rooms for bachelor and transient officers, was opened. The Rusk-Ramos agreement was signed September 16 revising the 1947 Military Bases Agreement to expire in 25 years…..1991!
In August 1968 attacks against American servicemen led to both Clark and Angeles being placed on curfew . Demonstrations flared to a boiling point on October 4.
Filipino employees went on strike March 3 1971, the walkout lasting three days. Another 15 day strike followed on July 25, and anti-American sentiment was at a peak. In1972 President Ferdinand Marcos declared martial law which remained in place until 1981.
The first group of Vietnam POWs arrived February 12, 1973, and in 1975 Clark serves as a staging point for Vietnamese fleeing the North Vietnamese invasion. The first planeload, consisting of orphans, arrived April 5. As many as 2,000 refugees at a time were housed in a tent city in the Bamboo Bowl during April and May. A total of 30,082 refugees and 1565 orphans were processed through Clark.
On December 25 1978, hundreds of politicians rallied against Marcos in a carefully-written statement seeking to remove American military presence from the Philippines.
A revised 1947 Military Bases Agreement was ratified on January 7 1979 transferring command and security of Clark and other American bases to the Philippine government. The size of the Clark reservation was reduced from 156,204 acres to 131,000 acres, with the base itself remaining at 9155 acres.
On March 25, Clark's suffered its third major labor strike.
On January 17 1981 Martial Law ends.
The Military Bases Agreement was revised further in 1983. Starting October 3, unionised Filipino employees went on strike for four days over pay issues.
On March 12, 1984 the U.S. was permitted to begin flying its flag at the base cemetery.
On February 25 1986 President Marcos is forced out of office. Helicopters from Clark's 31 ARRS pick him up at his Presidential palace, and flew him to Clark where he transferred to a C-9A and was flown to Hawaii.
On March 22 at 9 p.m., civilian employees went on strike, forming large picket lines outside the main gates of all American bases in the Philippines. Ultimately the strikers blocked Clark's gates on March 25, preventing anyone from getting on or off base except those who were resourceful enough to sneak across base fences. The 3 CSG commander placed Angeles bars off-limits to servicemen, which pitted strikers against local merchants. Finally after a scuffle between strikers and merchants the strike was broken at 4:30 pm on March 30. The strikes organizers in Manila accused the unscrupulous Australian and American bar owners of paying the rent-a-mob pickets to return home - obviously sour grapes as the bar owners had deeper pockets!
On September 16 the new nationalist government rejected extension of the Military Bases Agreement.
On October 28 1987 three servicemen were killed in simultaneous attacks near Clark AB by teams of the New People's Army (NPA) brandishing .45 caliber pistols. Which prompted more housing to be built on Clark. Air Force personnel were no longer to be housed in the subdivisions outside the base.
On September 26 1989, shortly before Vice President Quayle's visit to Clark, NPA terrorists killed Ford Aerospace employees William Thompson and Donald Buchner at a roadblock near Camp O'Donnell. Terrorist tension reached a climax in December.
Clark's worst earthquake occurred at at 3:26 pm on July 16, 1990. It registered magnitude 7.6 and was centered about 80 miles northeast of the base. Baguio was devastated, with over 2000 killed and a million homeless. It is thought that the quake re-opened Pinatubo.
In April 1991 pilots reported smoke rising from Mount Pinatubo, and by June it was clear that a major volcanic eruption was imminent. Evacuation of Clark AB began on June 10. The first major eruption hit June 12. By June 14, the base was buried under a cover of volcanic ash. The biggest eruption followed at 5:55 am on June 15 just as Typhoon Yunya was making its approach.
The Philippine Senate rejected an extension of the Military Bases Agreement, and it expired on September 16, and the U.S. Air Force formally transferred Clark in its entirety to the Philippines on November 26, ending its century-long presence in the region.
On October 1st 1992 the U.S. Navy withdrew the last of its forces from Subic Bay.
President Fidel Ramos approved the Clark Special Economic Zone on April 3rd, 1993 and established the Clark Development Corporation, and in 1995
The Clark International Airport Corporation was established to manage the airfield facilities. By 1996 air services to Hong Kong began.