- HMS Vulture II (Treligga Aerodrome)
HMS Vulture II was primarily an aerial bombing and gunnery range, 2km west of
Delabole ,Cornwall ,United Kingdom (gbmaprim|SX047848|SX 047 848), situated atTreligga . The station was a satellite to the fleet air arm baseRNAS St. Merryn (HMS Vulture) located nearPadstow ,Cornwall . Although HMS Vulture II had landing strips they were however rarely used. Unusually, the entire operation at HMS Vulture II was staffed by theWomen's Royal Naval Service .Uses
Before the
second world war HMS Vulture II was used as aglider site. However theAdmiralty requisitioned some 260 acres of land (betweenTregardock andBackways Cove ) in late 1939 for the purposes of constructing a bombing (air to ground) and gunnery (air to sea) range.It was decided that three grass landing strips would be marked out at HMS Vulture II (between
Tregonnick Tail andTreligga village, each around 580 metres long) so that if an aircraft sustained engine failure orricochet damage whilst firing on the range, it would be possible to land. This involved a lot of earth moving and heavy machinery was brought in to complete the work. To the north of the tower, the head of a valley was filled and levelled. The ground on the landing strips was considered too rough for normal take offs and landings. The landing strips were intended only for belly-landings (wheels-up), in an emergency. Later however the surface was improved and some traffic did use the landing strips.Planes Which Used HMS Vulture II
Squadrons using the range included the
Fighter Pool 748 Squadron , and theSchool of Air Combat 736 Squadron .*
Fairey Swordfish
*Fairey Albacore (drogue towing)
*Supermarine Seafire
*Supermarine Spitfire
*Fairey Barracuda
*Miles Master
*Fairey Firefly
*Hawker Hurricane
*Avro Lancaster
*Avro Shackleton
*Short Sunderland
*P-2 Neptune
*Fairey Gannet
*De Havilland Mosquito
*Hawker Sea Fury Buildings
Several buildings were constructed the most obvious being a 10 metre high brick control/observation tower in the middle of the area. Towards
backways cove and nearer the sea there was a heavily reinforced observation hut which housed quadrant equipment to record angle of dives and accuracy of attacks made by aircraft.Accommodation for the Wrens was built on the
Delabole side ofPort Gaverne and early in its life HMS Vulture II was unique in being run entirely by Wrens. Later the base was run by Fleet Air Arm personnel, some living on the site and some commuting from St Merryn.Off site were other associated buildings, at
Treligga Downs near the Poldark Inn, a building was used for counting holes indrogue targets . These were dropped by towing aircraft and retrieved by the Wrens, who laid them out on long tables and counted the holes. A reward of five shillings (25p) was offered to any member of the public who found a missing target. There was a further dive angle hut atTrebarwith village and targets were positioned inPort Isaac bay for air to sea attacks. Near the cliff atDannon Chapel is an observation tower which was used to gather hit information on these floating targets.HMS Vulture II Modelled on a Pacific Island
Later action moved to the Japanese war in the
Pacific HMS Vulture II was adapted to represent the typical lay-out of a Japanese held territory and was modelled on the island of Tarawa. Real and dummytanks , a bridge and a road convoy were located near one of the airstrips and a small railway was built to provide moving targets. By December 1944 squadron commanders and senior pilots destined for thepacific were using it for intensive training.The tanks which numbered at least 6 and possibly 10 arrived at
Delabole by rail and were driven through the village from the station toTrelliga , several front steps and gates and at least one small building were demolished by the tanks during this operation.Post World War II
After the war, the range continued in operation for the
School of Naval Air Warfare and was in great demand by squadrons detached toRNAS St Merryn for armament practice until the early 1950s. It has been recalled that Treligga was used as an air to ground rocket range and rocket firing became a daily occurrence. In particularFairey Gannet s using the range would continuously fire rockets from a release point near Trecarne Quarry for several hours and must have kept the ground crews atRNAS St Merryn busy in rapid reloading and turnaround since theseGannets could only carry 6 rockets.As naval use declined, it was also made available to theRAF and Shackleton squadrons from the base atRAF St Eval used it for air-to-ground firing at tanks fitted with recording equipment. But with the withdrawal of lying units fromRNAS St Merryn in 1954 and changes made to Shackletons during 1955, the range was closed at the end of that year and quickly reverted to farmland.Emergency Landing of a B-17 Flying Fortress
On
September 16 ,1943 an AmericanB-17 Flying Fortress was forced to make an emergency landing at HMS Vulture II. The pilot, Capt Jack Omohundro had ignored a red flare warning him to keep clear. The plane was chronically short of fuel and running on three engines after a raid onU-boat pens atNantes inFrance . Thebomber had left its formation to try and preserve what little fuel it had left. Spotting the tiny Treligga airstrip, he skillfully landed 'wheels-down' just 50 yards short of the Wrens quarters. When the Americans stepped out of their aircraft they were amazed to find HMS Vulture II entirely in the hands of Wrens. After a meal and a nights sleep, the B-17 had to be stripped down for a successful take-off out over the sea a skeleton crew then flew the B-17 to RAF coastal command station atRAF St Eval for full refuelling and a safety check.Crashes
There have been a number of air crashes whilst the range was in use. One occurred when a Seafire crashed into the railway embankment near Barton Farm at 2.00 pm on Thursday 1 November
1951 . The pilot was unfortunately killed. There have been other crashes near Barton Farm including aC-47 Skytrain carrying South African soldiers which was attempting a landing on one of the large fields to the north east of Barton Farm. Other crashes include a Swordfish inTrebarwith Valley, a further Swordfish at sea and possibly aBleinham near Tregonnick Farm.HMS Vulture II Today
Both the observation/control tower and the reinforced hut near the sea (towards Backways cove) are derelict but still standing as is the accommodation and service huts near
Treligga village. All are in remarkably good structural condition considerating their age and exposed position.External links
* [http://worldwar2airfields.fotopic.net/c234077.html Some photographs of what HMS Vulture II looks like today]
References
* The "Western Morning News" September 13, 2006 pages 28-29
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