RAF Bruntingthorpe

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RAF Bruntingthorpe

Ensign of the Royal Air Force.svg
RAF Bruntingthorpe - Boeing B47 parked.jpg
B-47 Stratojet of the 100th Bombardment Wing parked at RAF Bruntingthorpe, 1958
Summary
Airport typeRoyal Air Force station
OwnerAir Ministry
OperatorRoyal Air Force
United States Air Force
LocationBruntingthorpe, Leicestershire
Built1942 (1942)
In use1942-1962 (1962)
Elevation AMSL456 ft / 139 m
Coordinates52°29′49″N 001°06′48″W / 52.49694°N 1.11333°W / 52.49694; -1.11333
Map
RAF Bruntingthorpe is located in Leicestershire
RAF Bruntingthorpe
RAF Bruntingthorpe
Location in Leicestershire
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
00/00 0 0 Concrete
00/00 0 0 Concrete
00/00 0 0 Concrete

Royal Air Force Bruntingthorpe or more simply RAF Bruntingthorpe is a former Royal Air Force station located 4.2 miles (6.8 km) north east of Lutterworth, Leicestershire and 10 miles (16 km) south of Leicester, Leicestershire, England.

It was operational between 1942 and 1962 and it is currently known as Bruntingthorpe Aerodrome.

History[]

Royal Air Force use[]

The station was opened in November 1942 as the home of No. 29 Operational Training Unit RAF[1] operating the Vickers Wellington.

After the Second World War ended, the airfield was used to test Meteor jet fighters. It was placed into RAF care and maintenance status and remained unused until January 1957.[2]

United States Air Force use[]

On 13 November 1953, control of Bruntingthorpe was allocated to the United States Air Force, however the airfield remained unused for most of the decade.[3]

In 1955, a massive reconstruction plan was approved to transform the airfield and station into a Strategic Air Command (SAC) bomber base. The USAF planned to use Bruntingthorpe as an advanced "Reflex" base for forward deployment of the new Boeing B-47 Stratojet medium range nuclear bomber. SAC wanted to disperse its nuclear bomber force and have about half of its B-47s stationed at forward bases in Western Europe and North Africa. Because the borders of the Soviet Union and Warsaw Pact controlled areas were within the range of the B-47, the "Reflex" deployments would base the bombers for 90-day rotations of crews and aircraft.[3]

Emblem of the 3912th Air Base Squadron
Emblem of the 19th Tactical Reconnaissance Squadron

The wartime airfield's northeast/southwest runway was widened to 200 feet and increased in length from 6,000 to 10,800 feet in addition to a new parallel taxiway. To accommodate this, thirty-four farmlands were acquired to expand the size of the runway. In addition, a large dispersal area for aircraft parking, an underground refueling pipeline network and also the removal of the wartime crosswind runways.[3] The station area required a large number of administrative and service buildings, a new main hangar, a new control tower and other airfield support buildings. Personnel barracks and other buildings, such as officer housing and, recreation facilities.[3]

On 1 March 1957, RAF Bruntingthorpe was activated by Strategic Air Command. The base was placed under the command of the 3912th Air Base Squadron, 7th Air Division.[4] The first operational use of the base began in March 1958 when 43 B-47s of the 100th Bombardment Wing deployed from Pease AFB, New Hampshire arrived over a three-day period. The squadron participated in operational training missions until returning to the United States in November.[5] The 96th Bombardment Wing from Dyess AFB, Texas, deployed its B-47s during the summer of 1959.[6]

Following French President General de Gaulle's requirement for all foreign nuclear forces to leave France, there was a major readjustment of USAF deployments in Western Europe, and the B-47 deployments ended. On 1 September 1959, jurisdiction of Bruntingthorpe was transferred from SAC to the United States Air Forces in Europe (USAFE) and control of the facility was assigned to the 10th Tactical Reconnaissance Wing at RAF Alconbury, which had been moved from West Germany to England. The 10th TRW could not accommodate all four squadrons of the wing at Alconbury, so one was based at Bruntingthorpe, which became its satellite. The mission was changed to support Douglas RB-66B Destroyer Reconnaissance aircraft of the 19th Tactical Reconnaissance Squadron. The first B-66s arrived at the base on 26 August and by mid-September 18 were present. The squadron's activities consisted of taking high-resolution aerial photographs of Soviet and Warsaw Pact military forces and activities.[3]

The 19th TRS remained at Bruntingthorpe for almost three years until the summer of 1962. At that time, it was decided to forward deploy the squadron to the then-unused , France. The first aircraft departed for France on 22 July, with the final aircraft departing by the end of August. With the departure of the B-66s, the USAF turned over control of Bruntingthorpe to the British Ministry of Defence on 28 September, and this ended military use of the facility.[3]

Present day[]

With the departure of the USAF, the MoD decided to sell off parts of the facility and to demolish buildings that it judged were no longer of use, or those World War II buildings that remained but were determined to be in a poor condition. Nearly all of the barracks, recreational and social buildings were torn down, along with a World War II hangar. In addition the USAF control tower, the crash and rescue building along with some of the buildings used during Whittle's testing of the Meteor jet during the postwar era were removed. In 1965 a public auction of land formerly used for the USAF support area was conducted.[3]

Today, much of the former RAF airfield remains, including the 10,000' runway built in the 1950s. Many dispersal pads for jet bombers remain, the large USAF hangar is still in use, along with the aircraft parking ramp on the south side. The airfield is now known as Bruntingthorpe Aerodrome, and was, for a time the home of the only airworthy Avro Vulcan XH558, until the aircraft left at the start of the 2009 display season and is now based at Doncaster Sheffield Airport. It is also home to the several aircraft preservation groups including Buccaneer Aviation Group, Lightning Preservation Group who come together with other groups to present the Cold War Jets Collection Open days.

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Bruntingthorpe". Airfields of Britain Conservation Trust. Retrieved 12 July 2013.
  2. ^ ControlTowers.co.uk Bruntingthorpe
  3. ^ a b c d e f g bruntingthorpe.com history
  4. ^ AFHRA document 00425710, 7th Air Division. There is also a reference to the 3912 Air Base Group in Simon Duke's U.S. Military Forces and Installations in Europe, SIPRI, 1989, 315. It says the base was being maintained in the 1980s as a stand-by dispersal site.
  5. ^ AFHRA document 00453769 MANAGEMENT CONTROL DATA, NOV 58 100 BOMBARDMENT WING (BW), OPERATIONS DIRECTIVE 22-58, GRAND SLAM, 1 NOV 58
  6. ^ AFHRA Document 00453105 MESSAGE FROM 15 AIR FORCE, HASKELL GRAY MAINTENANCE EFFECTIVENESS AWARD, 22 JUL 59 96 BOMBARDMENT WING CREW INFORMATION REPORT, JUL 59 MESSAGE, REFLEX TASK FORCE AT BRUNTINGTHORPE, ENGLAND, 31 JUL 59

External links[]

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