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RAF Wickenby

Coordinates:53°19′01″N000°20′56″W / 53.31694°N 0.34889°W /53.31694; -0.34889
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Former Royal Air Force station in Lincolnshire, England
For civilian use of the airfield, seeWickenby Aerodrome.

RAF Wickenby
Holton cum Beckering,Lincolnshire in England
Site information
TypeSatellite station
CodeUI[1]
OwnerAir Ministry
OperatorRoyal Air Force
Controlled byRAF Bomber Command
*No. 1 Group RAF
Location
RAF Wickenby is located in Lincolnshire
RAF Wickenby
RAF Wickenby
Shown within Lincolnshire
Show map of Lincolnshire
RAF Wickenby is located in the United Kingdom
RAF Wickenby
RAF Wickenby
RAF Wickenby (the United Kingdom)
Show map of the United Kingdom
Coordinates53°19′01″N000°20′56″W / 53.31694°N 0.34889°W /53.31694; -0.34889
Site history
Built1941 (1941)/42
Built byJohn Laing & Son Ltd
In useSeptember 1942 – 1956 (1956)
Battles/warsEuropean theatre of World War II
Airfield information
IdentifiersICAO: EGNW
Elevation25 metres (82 ft)[1]AMSL
Runways
DirectionLength and surface
03/21530 metres (1,739 ft) Concrete
16/34497 metres (1,631 ft) Concrete
00/00 Concrete

Royal Air Force Wickenby, or more simplyRAF Wickenby, was a purpose-builtRoyal Air Force satellite station constructed late 1942 and early 1943. It lies halfway between Wickenby andHolton cum Beckering, to the south-east ofWickenby close to the B1399 inWest Lindsey, 8 NM (15 km; 9.2 mi) north-east ofLincoln,England.

Construction

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It had two T2 type hangars and one B1 type.[1] The B1 and one of the T2 hangars can still be seen on the airfield site. The T2 near the threshold of runway 21 was recently acquired by the airfield owners and after many years of industrial use is now, once more, anaircraft hangar.

The airfield covered about 600 acres (2.4 km2), and had the usual three runway configuration with perimeter track, hard standings, a brick watchtower and numerous brick and metal buildings for the aircrews and ground staff. A number of the buildings were to the east (Communal Site, Living Quarters,WAAF Quarters) and stretched to and beyond the Lissington road – a road travelled many an evening by the airmen and women who visited their favourite watering hole, theWhite Hart[2] atLissington. The Sick Quarters were to the south of the airfield together with a Communal Site and Living Quarters.

Residential units

[edit]
RAF Wickenby Memorial.

Wickenby was occupied in September 1942 byNo. 12 Squadron (a/c code PH) who brought with themVickers Wellington II/III's, but during the winter of 1942/3 they converted to theAvro Lancaster. The Squadron flew the Lancaster throughout the rest of the war. On 7 November 1943, C Flight was expanded to become626 Squadron (a/c code UM), also flying the Lancaster. Wickenby played a large part in the bomber offensive, taking part in many of the major raids including:Berlin,Munich,Nuremberg,Essen,Mailly-le-Camp, andCaen. Aircraft from Wickenby were also involved inmine-laying (gardening), and operationsManna andExodus. On 24 September 1945, 12 Squadron moved to a more permanent site atBinbrook.

Having spent its entire existence at Wickenby, 626 Squadron was disbanded on 14 October 1945. The base was later taken over by No. 93 Maintenance Unit[3] and subsequently No. 92 Maintenance Unit[4] who used the runways to dismantle ordnance until 1956 when the base was closed. Civil aviation and maintenance began in 1963, and the land was sold between 1964 and 1966. During the relatively short period of active service 1,080 people died from RAF Wickenby. This sacrifice is commemorated by the RAF Wickenby Memorial[5] in the form ofIcarus on an obelisk at the entrance to the airfield. The memorial was placed there by members of the Wickenby Register, an association of former 12/626 Squadron personnel and associate relatives.

Post-war use

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The north part of the former airfield is now known asWickenby Aerodrome, which is a grass and concrete airfield.[6] A road from Holton cum Beckering toSnelland[7] runs right over the former airfield. Companies based at the airfield are Thruster Aircraft who makemicrolight planes; Lincoln Flight who train pilots and conduct experience flights; and Rase Distribution – a haulage firm. Planes using the airfield have to make contact first with the control tower atRAF Waddington.

The Watch Office is the home of the RAF Wickenby Memorial Collection and the Wickenby Archive, a museum and collection of memorabilia and archive dedicated to the memory of the Squadrons who served here.

References

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Citations
  1. ^abcFalconer 2012, p. 214.
  2. ^"White Hart".12sqn.net. Archived fromthe original on 8 March 2014. Retrieved21 July 2015.
  3. ^"93 Maintenance Unit".RAF lincolnshire info. 2014. Retrieved21 July 2015.
  4. ^"92 Maintenance Unit".RAF lincolnshire info. 2014. Retrieved21 July 2015.
  5. ^Croft, Richard."RAF Wickenby Memorial".Geograph Britain and Ireland. Retrieved21 July 2015.
  6. ^Croft, Richard."Wickenby Airport".Geograph Britain and Ireland. Retrieved21 July 2015.
  7. ^Murray-Rust, Alan."Wickenby Airfield".Geograph Britain and Ireland. Retrieved21 July 2015.
Bibliography

External links

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