RAF Boxted

RAF Boxted

Infobox Military Structure
name= Royal Air Force Station Boxted
USAAF Station 150
location= Located Near Langham, Essex, England
coordinates=coord|51|56|16|N|000|55|55|E|


caption= Boxted Airfield - 10 May 1946
type= Military Airfield
code=BX
built=1943
builder=
materials=
height=
used=1943-1947
demolished=
condition=
ownership=
controlledby=United States Army Air Forces
Royal Air Force
garrison=Eighth Air Force
Ninth Air Force
RAF Fighter Command
commanders=
occupants=
battles= European Theatre of World War II
Air Offensive, Europe July 1942 - May 1945 Location map|Essex
label =
lat = 51.94
long = 0.93
caption = Map showing the location of RAF Boxted within Essex.
float = right
background = white
width = 200

RAF Boxted (also known as Langham) is a former World War II airfield in England. The field is located west of the A12 road, three miles north of Colchester, and built almost entirely in the village of Langham in Essex.

The airfield was given the name Boxted, an adjoining village, because there already was an airfield by the name of Langham in north Norfolk. Boxted has the distinction of having been the base for the two most successful USAAF fighter groups in air-to-air combat.

USAAF use

Boxted was built as a heavy bomber base and was opened in 1943. Boxted's main runway was 2,000 yards long on a SW-NE axis and the two intersecting runways were 1,400 yards each in length. There were fifty hardstands, chiefly loops but with some frying-pan types. Tarmac and wood chips were applied to the concrete surface and Mark 11 airfield lighting was installed for the main runway. Two T2-type hangars were constructed, one on the south and one on the west side of the airfield. A single blister hangar was erected which occupied a dispersal area at the northern end of the airfield, which used a farmhouse as its administrative and headquarters building. Accommodation was provided for 2,900 persons and all temporary buildings were dispersed in fields and woods to the south of the airfield.

The airfield was used by the United States Army Air Force Eighth Air Force and Ninth Air Forces. Boxted was given USAAF designation Station 150 (BX).

386th Bombardment Group (Medium)

Although Boxted was scheduled to receive the 96th Bomb Group in June 1943, plans were changed and the B-17 Flying Fortress group went instead to RAF Snetterton Heath in Norfolk. In its place, the 386th Bombardment Group (Medium) was moved from Snetterton on 12 June to consolidate the Martin B-26 Marauder groups in Essex for operations. The group was assigned to the 3d Bomb Wing and flew both B-26B/C Marauder aircraft. Its operational squadrons were:

* 552d Bomb Squadron (RG)
* 553d Bomb Squadron (AN)
* 554th Bomb Squadron (RU)
* 555th Bomb Squadron (YA) The group flew its first mission on 20 July, with operations concentrating on airfields but also attacked marshalling yards and gun positions along the channel coast.

The group was transferred to RAF Great Dunmow on 24 September 1943.

354th Fighter Group

Construction work at Boxted was not finished until late 1943 when the airfield was turned over to the Ninth Air Force for use by the first fighter group to be equipped with the P-51B Mustang. However, the 354th Fighter Group, was under the operational control of the Eighth Fighter Command during its stay at Boxted, arriving from RAF Greenham Common on 13 November 1943 Its combat squadrons were:

* 353d Fighter Squadron (FT)
* 355th Fighter Squadron (GQ)
* 356th Fighter Squadron (AJ) The group provided long-range escort for US heavy bombers and received a Distinguished Unit Citation for its activities up to mid-May 1944 during which the 354th was instrumental in the development of the P-51 for use in long-range missions to escort heavy bombers on raids deep into enemy territory. As a result, priority for the Mustang was shifted from the Ninth to the Eighth Air Force, which converted 14 of its 15 fighter groups to the P-51. The 354th also gained the distinction of destroying more enemy aircraft in aerial combat than any other USAAF fighter group (701).

During that same period Colonel James H Howard won the Medal of Honor for his single-handed efforts to defend a bomber formation that was attacked by a large force of enemy planes while on a mission to Oschersleben, Germany on 11 January 1944. Colonel Howard attacked a formation of thirty German aircraft. Pressing home the attack for more than thirty minutes he destroyed three aircraft and. even when he was low on fuel and his ammunition was exhausted, he continued his aggressive tactics to protect the bombers.

In mid-April 1944, the 354th flew south to RAF Lashenden in Kent prior to moving to the Continent after the invasion of Normandy.

56th Fighter Group

With the departure of the 354th, its place was taken by the 56th Fighter Group which was transferred from RAF Halesworth on 19 April 1944 to enable that base to be converted to a heavy bomber installation. Its operational squadrons were:

* 61st Fighter Squadron (HV)
* 62d Fighter Squadron (LM)
* 63d Fighter Squadron (UN) Flying the P-47 Thunderbolt, the 56th Fighter Group was the most successful of the Eighth Air Force groups in air-to-air combat, and the second most successful in the USAAF with 665.5 (the 354th FG had 701 while the Pacific-based 49th FG had 664). It engaged in counter-air and interdictory missions during the invasion of Normandy in June 1944. Supported Allied forces for the breakthrough at St Lo in July. Participated in the Battle of the Bulge, December 1944-January 1945. Helped to defend the Remagen bridgehead against air attacks in March 1945.

While at Boxted, the group received a Distinguished Unit Citation for strikes against antiaircraft positions while supporting the airborne attack on Holland on September 18, 1944, an operation in which 16 P-47s were shot down or crashlanded in Allied territory.

The commander of the 61st FS, Lieutenant Colonel Francis Gabreski, destroyed his 28th enemy aircraft in air combat, a record unequalled by any American fighter pilot in Europe. On 20 July 1944, Gabreski had to make a belly landing in his P-47 Thunderbolt after his propellor clipped the ground while strafing an airfield near Koblenz, Germany. Although he avoided capture for five days before being finally arrested and interrogated by the Germans, he was greeted with the words: 'Hello Gabby, we've been waiting for you for a long time!'

The unit flew its last combat mission on 21 April 1945. After the war ended two unusual aircraft could be seen at Boxted - an FW-190A and an He-111H which had been 'acquired' by the 56th on the Continent to be used as personal transport.

The 56th remained at Boxted until October when it returned to Camp Kilmer, New Jersey, being deactivated on 18 October 1945.

5th Emergency Rescue Squadron

Originally designated as Detachment B of the 65th Fighter Wing, the 5th Emergency Rescue Squadron was activated at Boxted in May 1944. The squadron's mission was to perform air/sea rescue missions with war weary P-47 Thunderbolts transferred from other fighter groups.

The squadron's fuselage code was "5F".

The aircraft were modified to carry dinghies, marker buoys and flares on their bomb racks. The mission of the unit was to locate pilots who had bailed out over the North Sea and would drop liferafts and inform sea-based rescue units who would then pick up the pilots.

The unit moved to RAF Halesworth in January 1945.

RAF Fighter Command use

After the war, Boxted was taken over by RAF Fighter Command and used at first by de Havilland Mosquito night fighters and then, in 1946, by a Gloster Meteor jet squadron No. 234. By the end of that year, the flying units had moved on and work had begun on resurfacing the main runway.

However in view of its proximity to Colchester, over which the main runway approach lay, the Air Ministry decided to abandon plans to make Boxted a permanent fighter aerodrome and the work was never completed. It was closed on August 9, 1947.

Civil Use

With the end of military control, Boxted was briefly used for private flying but very little now remains on this site to identify it as a wartime airfield. The airfield was sold in 1963 and has almost been completely returned to agriculture. The control tower has been demolished and most of the remaining buildings are clustered around the south side of the airfield close to Langham Lodge.

The Northern side of the Airfield is due to be turned into new housing in early 2008.

ee also

* List of RAF stations
* USAAF Eighth Air Force - World War II
* 386th Air Expeditionary Wing
* 354th Fighter Wing
* 56th Fighter Group

References

* Freeman, Roger A. (1978) Airfields of the Eighth: Then and Now. After the Battle ISBN 0900913096
* Freeman, Roger A. (1991) The Mighty Eighth: The Colour Record. Cassell ISBN 0304357081
* Maurer, Maurer (1983). Air Force Combat Units Of World War II. Maxwell AFB, Alabama: Office of Air Force History. ISBN 0892010924.
* [http://mighty8thaf.preller.us/php/1Loc.php?Base=Boxted mighty8thaf.preller.us Boxted]
* [http://www.littlefriends.co.uk/56thfg.php 56th Fighter Group on www.littlefriends.co.uk]

External links

* [http://www.geograph.org.uk/gridref/TM0151830694 Photographs of RAF Boxted from the Geograph British Isles project]
* [http://mighty8thaf.preller.us/gallery/Boxted Boxted Airfield photo gallery]
* [http://www.boxted-airfield.com Boxted Airfield historical group]
* [http://www.354th.com 354th Fighter Group website]
* [http://www.airsceneuk.org.uk/oldstuff/2004/freeman/freeman.htm Living with the "Wolf Pack"]
* [http://www.boxted2006.co.uk/aerial.html Boxted Fly-in 2006]
* [http://www.multimap.com/map/photo.cgi?client=public&X=602500&Y=232500&width=700&height=400&gride=605000&gridn=235000&srec=0&coordsys=gb&db=freegaz&pc=&zm=0&scale=50000&multimap.x=285&multimap.y=337 Aerial Photo of RAF Boxted from Multimap.Com]
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NL0zpKRdwU4&feature=related Heores of the 354th Fighter Group (Video)]


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