| RAF Waterbeach | |||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Waterbeach,Cambridgeshire in England | |||||||||||
1945 aerial photograph | |||||||||||
| Site information | |||||||||||
| Type | Royal Air Force station | ||||||||||
| Owner | Ministry of Defence | ||||||||||
| Operator | Royal Air Force | ||||||||||
| Controlled by | RAF Bomber Command (1941-45) *No. 3 Group RAF[1] RAF Transport Command (1945-50) RAF Fighter Command (1950-) *No. 11 Group RAF[2] RAF Training Command *No. 38 Group RAF[3] | ||||||||||
| Location | |||||||||||
| Coordinates | 52°16′28″N000°11′24″E / 52.27444°N 0.19000°E /52.27444; 0.19000 | ||||||||||
| Grid reference | TL495665[4] | ||||||||||
| Site history | |||||||||||
| Built | 1940 (1940) | ||||||||||
| In use | 11 January 1941 - 2013 (2013) | ||||||||||
| Battles/wars | European theatre of World War II Cold War | ||||||||||
| Airfield information | |||||||||||
| Elevation | 10 metres (33 ft)AMSL | ||||||||||
| |||||||||||
Royal Air Force Waterbeach or more simplyRAF Waterbeach is a formerRoyal Air Force station located inWaterbeach,Cambridgeshire which is about 5.5 miles (8.9 km) north ofCambridge, England. The site was transferred to theRoyal Engineers, part of theBritish Army, in 1966, asWaterbeach Barracks.
The airfield was built in 1940 on the northern edge of Waterbeach village and operated under the control ofRAF Bomber Command.[5] The original control tower and many RAF buildings, including several hangars, are still present.[6]
| Years | Unit | Aircraft | Variant | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1941-1942 | No. 99 Squadron RAF | Vickers Wellington | Ic, II | |
| 1941-1942 | No. 26 Conversion Flight RAF | Short Stirling | I | On 2 January 1942 it was upgraded to form 1651 CU |
| 1942–1943 | No. 1651 Conversion Unit RAF | Short Stirling | I, III | During 1942 it flew 49 operational sorties, with a loss of five aircraft |
| 1942 | 214 Squadron Conversion Flight RAF | Short Stirling | I | Two short stays April–May and August–October 1942 |
| 1943 | No. 1665 Heavy Conversion Unit RAF | Short Stirling | I | |
| 1943 | No. 1678 Heavy Conversion Unit RAF | Avro Lancaster | II | The training unit for No. 514 Squadron RAF |
| 1943-1945 | No. 514 Squadron RAF | Avro Lancaster | I, II and III | 437 aircrew were killed flying with 514 Squadron |
After theSecond World War,Consolidated Liberators andDouglas Dakotas fromRAF Transport Command flew from RAF Waterbeach.[7]
| Years | Unit | Aircraft | Variant | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1945-1946 | No. 59 Squadron RAF | Consolidated Liberator | B, C and GR | Carrying troops to and from India and the Far East |
| 1945-1946 | No. 220 Squadron RAF | Consolidated Liberator | C Mk V, VI and VIII | |
| 1946 | 1552 (BABS) Flight RAF | Airspeed Oxford | Training in Beam Approach Beacon System, March–July | |
| 1946-1947 | No. 51 Squadron RAF | Avro York | C | |
| 1947–1949 | No. 77 Squadron RAF | Douglas Dakota | Participated inOperation Plainfare, the Berlin Airlift | |
| 1947–1949 | No. 62 Squadron RAF | Douglas Dakota | Participated inOperation Plainfare, the Berlin Airlift | |
| 1947–1949 | No. 53 Squadron RAF | Douglas Dakota | Participated inOperation Plainfare, the Berlin Airlift | |
| 1947-1950 | No. 18 Squadron RAF | Douglas Dakota | Participated inOperation Plainfare, the Berlin Airlift | |
| 1949-1950 | No. 24 Squadron RAF | Avro Lancastrian Douglas Dakota Avro York | C2 C Mk IV C Mk I | Participated inOperation Plainfare and then European scheduled services |
RAF Fighter Command took over the base on 1 March 1950 and usedGloster Meteors,Supermarine Swifts,de Havilland Venoms,de Havilland Vampires andGloster Javelins. In additionHawker Hunter fighters arrived in May 1955 and, two years later, the prototypeEnglish Electric P1 (Lightning) visited RAF Waterbeach.[citation needed]
| Years | Unit | Aircraft | Variant | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1950-1959 | No. 56 Squadron RAF | Gloster Meteor Supermarine Swift Hawker Hunter | F4 and F8 F1 and F2 F5 and F8 | 27 Meteor F4s fromRAF Thorney Island arrived on 10 May 1950 |
| 1950-1958 | No. 63 Squadron RAF | Gloster Meteor Hawker Hunter | F4 and F8 F6a | |
| 1955-1957 | No. 253 Squadron RAF | de Havilland Venom de Havilland Vampire | NF2a T11 | |
| 1957-1958 | No. 153 Squadron RAF | Gloster Meteor Gloster Javelin | NF12 and 14 FAW 7 and 9 | |
| 1958-1961 | No. 25 Squadron RAF | Gloster Meteor Gloster Javelin | NF12 and 14 FAW 7 and 9 | |
| 1959-1961 | No. 46 Squadron RAF | Gloster Javelin | FAW 2 | |
| 1961-1962 | No. 64 Squadron RAF | Gloster Javelin | FAW 9 | |
| 1961-1963 | No. 1 Squadron RAF | Hawker Hunter | F6 and FGA9 | |
| 1961-1963 | No. 54 Squadron RAF | Hawker Hunter | FGA9 | Hunter XG264 was the last to leave RAF Waterbeach forRAF West Raynham on 8 August 1963 |
After the last RAF fixed-wing aircraft, fromNo. 54 Squadron RAF, left in August 1963,[8] the site was used by theAirfield Construction Branch RAF until 1966.[9]
In 1966 the station and airfield remained the property of theMinistry of Defence, but was transferred from the Royal Air Force to theRoyal Engineers, part of theBritish Army, asWaterbeach Barracks.[10] Until the closure of nearbyRAF Oakington in the early 1970s, the main runway at Waterbeach remained active, along with the control tower, and was used as a relief landing ground for Varsities used in the advanced pilot training role. The former airfield was used as a training area for troops, with occasional visits by helicopters and, in the past, by theHawker Siddeley Harrier.[11]