Victorville, California·other George Air Force Base lies eight miles northwest of Victorville, California, approximately seventy-five miles northeast of Los Angeles in the high desert region. The facility was established in June 1941 as an Advanced Flying School during military buildup preceding American entry into World War II. The base was constructed to train military pilots in aerial combat, navigation, and formation flying essential to air superiority. Throughout World War II, the base prepared successive cohorts of pilots for combat deployment in European and Pacific theaters. The base also served as a research and development center for advanced aircraft configurations and experimental flight procedures. Following World War II, George Air Force Base continued operations through the Korean War and Vietnam War era, training pilots and maintaining advanced fighter aircraft throughout the Cold War period. The facility underwent continuous modernization and expansion, adding hangars, dormitories, administrative buildings, and specialized training facilities. At its peak operational period, the base employed thousands of military personnel and civilian contractors.
The base remained in continuous operation until December 1992, when it was officially closed and transferred to civilian authorities. Following closure, George Air Force Base rapidly deteriorated into an expansive urban ruin with hundreds of abandoned structures. Hospital buildings, residential barracks, administrative offices, and aircraft hangars fell into progressive decay. Windows shattered and remained unrepaired, exposing interiors to dust storms and harsh desert weather. Lead-based paint peeled from walls in toxic sheets, and vegetation native to the Mojave Desert invaded buildings and cracked pavement. The decomposition of the base proceeded visibly, transforming the once-vibrant military installation into a haunting landscape of abandonment.
The physical decay proceeded alongside intensifying paranormal phenomena that attracted paranormal investigators from across California. Investigators documented extraordinary levels of anomalous activity throughout the base, particularly concentrated in hospital buildings and former residential quarters. Apparitions of military personnel in period-appropriate uniforms manifested repeatedly, with witnesses describing soldiers, pilots, and support staff appearing as full-bodied spectral forms. Particularly disturbing were sightings of childlike figures appearing in doorways and empty hallways. Poltergeist activity intensified throughout the facility, with disembodied hands slamming doors violently. Cabinet doors opened and closed repeatedly, and investigators heard inexplicable footsteps suggesting military cadence and disciplined marching patterns. Loud banging noises erupted from walls without identifiable sources, and rocks were observed being hurled through the air by invisible forces. Disembodied voices echoed through halls, and portable electronic recording equipment consistently malfunctioned during investigations.
Some paranormal researchers speculated that the base harbored more sinister phenomena beyond conventional military hauntings, with allegations that satanic rituals had been performed, though these claims remained largely unsubstantiated. The prevailing interpretation among investigators was that the spirits of the base's long military history refused to accept the facility's decommissioning and abandonment, maintaining their presence and continuing their routines as if the base remained in active operational status.
Apparitions
EMF Anomalies
Disembodied Voices
Full-Body Apparitions
+2