词条 | RAF Greencastle |
释义 |
| name = RAF Greencastle USAAF Station 237 | nativename = | nativename-a = | nativename-r = | image = Douglas A-20G Havoc.jpg | image-width = | caption = A-20G of the USAAF of the type flown from RAF Greencastle. | type = Military | built = {{Start date|1942}} | used = 1942-{{End date|1945}} | occupants = | owner = | operator = Royal Air Force United States Army Air Forces | city-served = | location = Kilkeel, County Down | elevation-f = {{Convert|50|m|disp=output number only|0}} | elevation-m = 50 | coordinates = {{coord|54|02|01|N|006|03|38|W|type:airport|display=inline,title}} | pushpin_map = Northern Ireland | pushpin_label = RAF Greencastle | pushpin_map_caption = Location in Northern Ireland | website = | metric-rwy = | r1-number = 00/00 | r1-length-f = 0 | r1-length-m = 0 | r1-surface =Concrete & wood chippings | r2-number = 00/00 | r2-length-f = 0 | r2-length-m = 0 | r2-surface = Concrete & wood chippings | r3-number = 00/00 | r3-length-f = 0 | r3-length-m = 0 | r3-surface = | footnotes = The airfield is now civilian ownership, derelict and largely dismantled. }} RAF Greencastle is a former Royal Air Force (RAF) station located {{Convert|2|mi}} south of the fishing village of Kilkeel and took in a large part of Cranfield Bay. It was opened as an RAF bomber Operational Training Unit (OTU) in April 1942 but it was almost immediately transferred to the United States Army Air Forces (USAAF) and renamed AAF Stn 237.[1] HistoryConstructionCommencement of Aerodrome Construction 12 January 1942. Consulting engineers; Messrs Landon-Every And Ferkin Ltd. Main contractor; Messrs A.M. Carmichael (Scotland).[2] Some of the best agricultural land in the area was vested. Compensation, considered by some to be totally inadequate, was offered, but not always accepted. In some cases households were asked to vacate their homes almost overnight. Some people refused to move out and the station was literally built around them in the townlands of - Derryoge, Dunavil, Ballynahatten, Cranfield, and Grange.[2] Air Ministry Compulsory Acquisition orders gave the occupiers three days to get out, without obligation on the Air Ministry to find them alternate accommodation. This short notice period only applied to houses that were sited where the runways were going to be built. Other home owners had more time to remove roofs and anything else that was salvageable. Most of the farmers had their lands cultivated and ploughed all ready for the planting of early potatoes. Sheds were full of boxes of sprouted Arran Pilots ready to be planted. (The early potato crop was important in this area of small (5-15 acres) family farms). Around 450 buildings were erected of various shapes and sizes and at a safe distance from the Ammunition & Bomb Stores and Runways (as per detailed schedule). A number of the foundations on the communal, living and other sites throughout the aerodrome which were excavated and concreted were never built upon. Others were partly erected. Also several construction site buildings were never used or lived in during the war years. Approximately 5 miles of water mains was laid to the aerodrome of 6"dia, class D pipe from the Silent Valley reservoir. Ownership of this was ceded to the local authority when the station was closed.[2] OperationsThe station was a satellite to RAF Langford Lodge (AAF Stn 597) and was established to handle the overflow from the extremely busy parent station.[3] From 1944 until the end of the war, salvage of both 8th and 9th AF war weary aircraft became an increasingly feverish aspect of work at both stations, as was the training of bomber crews. Air gunners were trained at RAF Greencastle by the USAAF where the 4th Gunnery & Tow Target Flight were located [1] with Douglas A-20 Havocs, Westland Lysanders and Vultee Vengeance A-35B's in the Consolidated B-24 Liberator gunnery school. From May until August 1944 was classed as the busiest period of WW2, output in July alone being 330 heavy bomber crews from Greencastle and Cluntoe Key Operational Dates
Visit by EisenhowerOn 17 May 1944 General Dwight D. Eisenhower flew into the station for an inspection. He was met by General Stafford LeRoy Irwin and viewed the 5th Infantry Division and Divisional artillery, which were drawn up on the airfield.[2] Current useThe airfield was returned to RAF control in 1945 and almost immediately closed down. In the 1960s the runways were broken up and the concrete used to construct boundary walls by the land owners.[4] Many of the buildings still exist but are in a derelict condition. The basic layout of the station can still be seen from above but the signature of the runways is gone. A caravan site occupies much of the southernmost portion. Cranfield Loyal Orange Lodge 907 recently unfurled a new banner with a memorial to the American Army in the Cranfield and Greencastle area. See also
References1. ^1 {{cite web|url=http://www.ulsteraviationsociety.org/#/usaaf-ni-3/4538119418|title=United States Military Aviation in Northern Ireland 1942-1945 pt3|publisher=Ulster Aviation Society|accessdate=16 October 2013}} 2. ^1 2 3 {{cite web|url=http://countydown.x10.mx/html/kilkeel17.htm|title=Ballymartin and Ballykeel|publisher=Raymonds County Down|accessdate=16 October 2013}} 3. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.ulsteraviationsociety.org/#/usaaf-in-northern-ireland/4537284067|title=United States Military Aviation in Northern Ireland 1942-1945|publisher=Ulster Aviation Society|accessdate=16 October 2013}} 4. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.abct.org.uk/airfields/greencastle-kilkeel |title=Greencastle (Kilkeel) |publisher=Airfields of Britain Conservation Trust|accessdate=16 October 2013}} External links{{Royal Air Force}} 9 : Military units and formations established in 1942|Royal Air Force stations in Northern Ireland|Buildings and structures in County Down|Military history of County Down|World War II sites in Northern Ireland|Royal Air Force stations of World War II in the United Kingdom|Military history of Northern Ireland|Military installations in Northern Ireland|Defunct airports in Northern Ireland |
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