词条 | RAF Skellingthorpe |
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|unit_name = Royal Air Force Skellingthorpe |dates = 1941–1952 |country = United Kingdom |command_structure = RAF Bomber Command |type = Flying station |role = Bomber Station |garrison = Lincoln, England |colors = |colors_label = Royal Air Force Ensign |equipment = Handley Page Hampden, Avro Manchester, Avro Lancaster }} Royal Air Force Skellingthorpe or more simply RAF Skellingthorpe is a former Royal Air Force station which was operational during the Second World War. It was located in the city of Lincoln, England. It was known as "Skelly" by the RAF personnel serving there. HistorySecond World WarRAF Skellingthorpe opened in 1941 on a field previously called Black Moor, approximately {{convert|2+1/2|mi|km|0}} south-east from the village of Skellingthorpe under the control of RAF Bomber Command The airfield consisted of the standard pattern of three runways, with one Type B1 and two Type T2 hangars. Nissen huts were used for accommodation. No. 50 Squadron RAF, equipped with Hampdens, was the first squadron based at Skellingthorpe, with the first detachment of personnel arriving shortly before the runways were complete. They were followed by No. 455 Squadron RAAF (also flying Hampdens), however this squadron moved to RAF Wigsley shortly afterwards. The 50 Squadron Hampdens were replaced with Avro Manchesters in April 1942, then, in June 1942, Skellingthorpe was closed for runway extensions to cope with the Squadron's conversion to new Avro Lancaster aircraft. In November 1943 a further bomber squadron, No. 61 Squadron RAF operating Avro Lancasters, arrived at Skellingthorpe, and remained until February 1944 after which it transferred to RAF Coningsby in order for accommodation to be built on the Doddington Road side of Skellingthorpe airfield. 463 Squadron RAAF moved to RAF Skellingthorpe on 3 July 1945 with Lancaster Mks I and III from RAF Waddington. During the war the tally of bombers lost or failed to return from Skellingthorpe reached 208: 15 Hampdens, six Manchesters and 187 Lancasters. In 1981, former Chief of the Air Staff, Marshal of the Royal Air Force Sir Michael Beetham, who had flown Lancasters from Skellingthorpe during the war, unveiled a memorial on the site to commemorate the 1,984 men killed flying from the airfield during the Second World War.[1] PostwarAfter the end of the Second World War, RAF Skellingthorpe was the base for No. 58 Maintenance Unit RAF, with salvaged crashed aircraft stored at the base. UnitsThe following units were also here at some point:[2] {{columns-list|colwidth=30em|
}} Current useThe Birchwood Estate was built on the airfield in the 1970s, and the A46 Lincoln Bypass was built on it in 1986. Today that site is known as Birchwood. The local public house, The Black Swan, was named after the R/T call{{elucidate|date=July 2013}} sign of the airfield. Exhibition and museumA Heritage Room at the Community Centre in Skellingthorpe holds a public exhibition of photographs showing the history of RAF Skellingthorpe and Squadrons based there, and is part of the North Kesteven Airfield Trail. A small public museum, part of Birchwood Community Centre in Lincoln, commemorates Nos. 50 and 61 Squadrons. Included in the museum is squadron aircraft memorabilia, photographs and records. The 50 and 61 Squadron Books of Remembrance are also held there. ReferencesCitations1. ^{{cite web|title = Marshal of the RAF Sir Michael Beetham - obituary|url = https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/11957795/Marshal-of-the-RAF-Sir-Michael-Beetham-obituary.html|work= Telegraph|accessdate = 28 October 2015}} 2. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.abct.org.uk/airfields/airfield-finder/skellingthorpe/ |title=Skellingthorpe |publisher=Airfields of Britain Conservation Trust|accessdate=10 February 2016}} Bibliography
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4 : Royal Air Force stations in Lincolnshire|Military units and formations established in 1941|Museums in Lincoln, England|Military aviation museums in England |
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