Vanguard Composite Squadron, New York Wing Civil Air Patrol

Vanguard Composite Squadron (NER-NY-390) is a squadron of the Civil Air Patrol, falling under direct jurisdiction of the Mid-Eastern Group territory of New York Wing. Vanguard Composite Squadrons headquarters is located at The Durham Elementary School in Durham, NY. The squadron consists of nearly 50 cadet and adult members from the counties of Albany, Columbia, and Greene.

Main Vision
Shortly after moving to the area from out of state, Sean Neal, who had been a part of the program for over 20 years had realized that there were no available squadrons in the rural area. At the time, the closest squadron within Mid-Eastern Group territory was about an hour north in Albany, NY. The closest squadron outside of Mid-Eastern Group territory was an hour south, located in Ulster County, NY. Susan Neal, the wife of Sean Neal, had two children that recently moved to the area as well, and it was very quickly discovered that there is not much to do outside of school.

Lt Col Anita Martin, Mid-Eastern Group commander was contacted and a meeting was set up about potentially opening a squadron to fill this big void. With successfully being able to recruit enough members, the squadron was officially charted on January 16, 2008, as a composite squadron.

First Year
In January 2008, the squadron was officially chartered in Freehold, NY, by Lt Col Sean E. Neal. Lt Col Neal was the first commander of the new charter, and his first two-year included a dramatic growth in membership, several successful training drills and two calls for rescue missions.

The Squadron as a whole has participated in training drills with the Greene County Sheriff’s Office, including a search and rescue operation in the middle of a rainy night. The team ground team searched a large field for a fake missing person and the drill was successfully completed. the Squadrons’s crowning achievement during this time, according to Squadron Commander Lt. Col. Sean Neal, was when it was called for two official search and rescue missions. In June 2009, a team from the squadron was activated to find a pilot and a plane which had suffered a hard landing in Freehold. A few months later in August, a team was activated again to search for a missing plane in the Adirondacks.

[[File:4f6b2edd1a874.image.jpg|thumb|293x293px|Recognition for 2008 (First Year) C/SSgt James Loring - Cadet of the Year

1st Lt. Garry Palmer - Senior Member of the Year

2nd Lt. Harvey Loring - Commanders Choice Award

Lt. Col Sean Neal, Squadron Commander (3rd from left) holding the award for being the 2008 Squadron of the Year in Mid-Eastern Group

Jump up^ ]]

Freehold, New York
Vanguard Composite Squadron was originally chartered out of the Freehold Community Center, which is adjacent to the Freehold Volunteer Fire Department. The meetings were held every Friday night from 7:00 PM to 9:00 PM.

Durham, New York
On November 25, 2016, The Squadron moved to the Durham Elementary School, which is currently being used as a community center operative under the Cairo-Durham School District. With this location change, the focus, goals, mission and vision of the squadron changed substantially. Moving from a drill and ceremonies focused squadron, they refocused on Emergency Services Training, Operational Management, and more Cadet Program services.

Original (2010-2016)
In 2010, a cadet by the name of Russell Jennings drafted the first idea of the squadron patch. The shield-style patch consisted of a red Fairchild 24R, modeling a WWII-Era Civil Air Patrol coastal patrol plane. The plane depicted in the photo is actually owned by the Neals, and it is constantly being used for historical purposes, as well as historical outreach throughout the nation. The symbology behind the patch represents the squadron partaking in annual WWII-Reenactments, where they represent Civil Air Patrol. Vanguard Composite Squadron was the first squadron in history to ever produce cadet reenactors. Also, they contribute the most certified reenactors to the Historical Outreach Program, annually.

New (2017-)
With the squadron relocation to Durham, it was decided to change the patch to follow Air Force heraldry. The new patch follows the same depiction of the original patch. What makes the patch unique is that it follows proper Air Force Heraldry. Typically, Squadrons have round patches with top and bottom rockers, where groups and higher echelons have shielded patches. The patch also depicts three white stars in the sky, symbolizing the three missions of the Civil Air Patrol—Emergency Services, Aerospace Education, and Cadet Programs. Half of the Mountains have snow on them, and half of them do not. This is referencing that the squadron is already ready to respond, no matter what the conditions may be. The dark blue sky indicates the same, whether it may be day or night.