Established in June 1945 as the Air Documents Research Center (ADRC), the agency’s original mission was to collect German air documents. The documents collected were divided into three categories: those that would assist the war in the Pacific theater, those of immediate intelligence interest to the United States or British forces, and those of interest for future research.
In 1945, the ADRC relocated its operations in London, United Kingdom to the Wright-Patterson Air Force Base (AFB) in Dayton, Ohio where it was renamed Air Documents Division (ADD). The ADD staff cataloged captured documents and translated a small number of reports deemed as high-priority research.
In 1948, the secretaries of the U.S. Navy and U.S. Air Force reorganized ADD into the Central Air Documents Office (CADO), broadened its mission to include collecting, processing and disseminating information for use within military regulations. The organization has since evolved—in name and mission—to become the central resource for DoD- and government-funded scientific, technical, engineering and business related information for the DoD community.
1945 – The U.S. Army Air Corps, the U.S. Navy and the British Air Ministry establish the Air Documents Research Center (ADRC) in London. ADRC becomes the Air Document Division (ADD) of the Intelligence (T-2) Department of the Headquarters, Air Technical Services, Army Air Force at Wright Field, Dayton, Ohio.
1948 – ADD becomes the Central Air Documents Office (CADO) where scientific and technical reports are collected, processed, and distributed.
1951 - The Armed Services Technical Information Agency (ASTIA) is established.
1952 - CADO is renamed ASTIA. ASTIA takes over CADO’s operations for document collection.
1958 - ASTIA moves from Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio to Arlington Hall Station, in Arlington, Virginia.
1963 - ASTIA is renamed the Defense Documentation Center for Science and Technical Information (DDC), becomes a DoD Field Activity of the Defense Supply Agency (DSA) and moves to Cameron Station, in Alexandria, Virginia.
1972 - The Defense Research, Development, Test and Evaluation Online System (DROLS) becomes operational.
1979 - DDC changes its name officially to the Defense Technical Information Center (DTIC).
1980 - DoD Information Analysis Center (IAC) program is added to DTIC's mission.
1983 - DTIC assumes responsibility for the Manpower and Training Research Information System (MATRIS).
1991 - DTIC is transferred from the Defense Logistics Agency (DLA) (formerly DSA) to the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisitions in order to expand its mission in fulfilling the needs of the broader acquisition community.
1994 - DTIC begins offering products and services via the Internet.
1995 - DTIC moves to its current location in the Andrew T. McNamara Headquarters Complex, Fort Belvoir, Virginia.
1997 - Defense Reform Initiative transfers oversight of DTIC to the Director, Defense Information Systems Agency (DISA).
1998 - DTIC is transferred from the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense to DISA.
2003 - DTIC initiates Private STINET (Scientific and Technical Information Network).
2004 - DTIC is established as a DoD Field Activity and is realigned under the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology and Logistics (USD (AT&L;)), reporting to the Director, Defense Research & Engineering (DDR&E;).
2008 - DTIC Online is launched to offer DTIC customers a comprehensive website to search and access DoD scientific and technical information.
2010 - DTIC celebrates 65 years of meeting the Scientific and Technical Information needs of the DoD community in support of the Warfighter.
2013 - DTIC launches the R&E; Gateway and DoDTechSpace to facilitate increased collaboration within the DoD.
2014 - DTIC celebrates ten years as a DoD Field Activity. It as part of the Assistant Secretary of Defense Research and Engineering (ASD(R&E;)) is focused on the primary goal to ensure that Warfighters today and tomorrow have superior technology capabilities for their missions.
DTIC launches the International Agreements Database (IADB) to provide access to DoD R&E-related; agreements with international partners.
Completing the largest IAC re-organization in DTIC’s history, ASD(R&E;) establishes the foundation for a leaner, more efficient, and more synergistic IAC system.
2015 - DTIC unveils the DoD Investment Budget Search (R-2s and P-40s) tool to provide an easier way to locate information in the DoD Investment Budgets including Research, Development, Test and Evaluation (RDT&E;) and Procurement data.
DoD Gateway to Public Access search introduces an early beta site for the Department of Defense in cooperation with the Department of Energy.
2016 – The DoD Grant Awards tool is established by DTIC on behalf of the DoD to view and download descriptive abstracts on DoD-funded grants that dates back to December 2014.
DTIC launches PubDefense, DoD's public access website which contains an initial collection of DoD-funded published journal articles and accepted manuscripts.
2017 – DTIC releases its new Strategic Plan 2017-2021, Excellence in Action.
IADB’s latest version provides a more intuitive search to over 4,100 existing and past DoD (U.S. Army, U.S. Navy, U.S. Air Force, DTRA, DARPA, and the Defense Forensics and Biometrics Agency (DFBA)) international armaments and cooperation agreements.
DTIC integrates the Office of the Director of National Intelligence/Intelligence Advanced Research Projects Activity (ODNI/IARPA)-funded published journal articles and accepted manuscripts into PubDefense.