- Bicester Airfield
Bicester Aerodrome, formerly RAF Bicester, is an airfield on the
outskirts of the English town ofBicester inOxfordshire . The RAF left in 2004.The airfield consists of 400
acres (1.5 km²) of well-drained short-mown grass, with three nominal runways (not marked) of 06/24, 13/31, 18/36, each 1,000 metres long. The field is bumpy in places due to collapsingfield drain s, requiring care on the part of pilots operating aircraft in those areas.History
Flying first took place on the site in 1911 when a Lt H.R.P Reynolds landed a
Bristol Boxkite biplane on the field. Organised flying began in 1916 when a Training Depot was established. In January 1917 theRoyal Flying Corps moved into the site, then 180 acres (0.7 km²), with the 118 night bomber squadron arriving.Canvas hangar s were used before more substantial aircraft sheds were built.In November 1918,
No. 44 Training Station Depot arrived, followed by 5 Squadron in 1919, flyingBristol Fighter s returning fromFrance , having flown in theFirst World War . All the squadrons disbanded by 1920, and the airfield was closed in 1920 after being used briefly as a clearing centre for repatriated soldiers.In 1925 work began on redeveloping the site as a
bomber station, and flying began again in January 1928. A range of large RAF bombers operated from the field, including theVickers Virginia . Other aircraft includedHawker Horsley s and, in 1935,Hawker Hart s arrived. In November 1932, the only RAF squadron ofBoulton Paul Sidestrand s arrived, replaced by Overstrands in 1936.Development of the station continued throughout this period, with many new buildings being erected.
World War II
In 1937/1938 two squadrons of the new
Bristol Blenheim bomber arrive, followed by two more squadrons in 1939 with Spitfires and withAvro Anson support aircraft, forming theNo 1 Camouflage Unit . The aircraft were used for training, with no operationalsortie s being flown from the field.Later in 1939 the first
Handley Page Halifax was assembled at Bicester, and the type made itsmaiden flight at the field on 25 October that year, flying toBoscombe Down . The type went on to become the first four-engined bomber to drop bombs onGermany inWorld War II .Throughout the war RAF Bicester was used as a training centre, becoming home to the
13 Operational Training Unit in June 1943, flying Spitfires and Mosquitos as well as Blenheims. Although no offensive missions were flown, flights were not without risk. On 6 December 1941, a Blenheim stalled on take-off, killing all three crew members. Just four days later a second Blenheim crashed in an identical accident, again with no surivors.War-time units
*No 1 Camouflage Unit
*13 OTU
*135 Squadron
*308 Squadron
*403 Squadron
*457 Squadron
*605 SquadronPost-war
At the end of 1944 Bicester became a non-flying unit, used for maintenance, and later as a Motor Transport depot. In 1953
71 Maintenance Unit arrived, who salvaged, repaired, and then transported damaged aircraft.Windrushers Gliding Club arrived in 1956 having moved from Little Rissington, andgliding began at the field. TheRAF Gliding and Soaring Association began using the site in 1963, eventually merging with Windrushers Gliding Club. In 1966 1 LAA Squadron RAF Regiment arrived from RAAF Butterworth, Malaysia along with 26 LAA Squadron RAF Regiment− from Changi, Singapore.The RAF ceased to use the airfield as a military base in 1976, but still maintained staff there to run the gliding training operation as adventurous training for servicemen. These courses were intended to develop teamwork and self-sufficiency among the servicemen by putting them in unfamiliar situations, such as sports which involved a small risk factor. However, in the mid-1980s the
USAF briefly used the Technical and Domestic Area for storage.Today
The Ministry of Defence still owns part of the site, which is used for army training. In June 2004 the RAF Gliding and Soaring Association moved to
RAF Halton . The main use of the site is now civilian gliding, being home to both a newly-reformed (July 2004) Windrushers Gliding Club, and also theOxford University Gliding Club .The airfield is one of the finest examples of an unmodified pre-war RAF station still almost completely in existence with many
listed building s. The brick 1934 "Fort" type 1959/34control tower survives, as do the two C-type and two A-type aircraft hangars.Plans were developed in the late 1990s to develop the airfield for housing and industry, but they were abandoned due to strong local opposition and the historic nature of the site. In 2002,
Cherwell District Council listed the area as aConservation area .References
* [http://www.wartimememories.co.uk/airfields/bicester.html The Wartime Memories Project - RAF Bicester]
* [http://windrushers.org.uk/airfield_history.htm Windrushers Gliding Club - Bicester Airfield history]
* [http://www.pixture.co.uk/Airfields/Pages/Bicester.htm WW2 Airfields of Oxfordshire - Bicester]
* [http://www.rafmuseum.org.uk/london/exhibitions/not-quite-extinct/vickers-virginia.cfm RAF Museum - Vickers Virginia]
* [http://www.controltowers.co.uk/B/bicester.htm Controltowers.co.uk - Bicester]
* [http://www.vryork.com/airmuseum/source/rear_gunner.html VR York (Halifax bomber information]
* [http://www.bc-heritage.org/bicester Bomber Command Heritage - Save RAF Bicester Campaign]
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