RAF Husbands Bosworth

Royal Air Force Husbands Bosworth or more simply RAF Husbands Bosworth is a former Royal Air Force station near the village of Husbands Bosworth in the county of Leicestershire, United Kingdom.[2]

RAF Husbands Bosworth

Aerial photograph of RAF Husbands Bosworth taken during the airfield's construction.[1]
Summary
Airport typeMilitary
OwnerAir Ministry
OperatorRoyal Air Force
LocationHusbands Bosworth, Leicestershire, United Kingdom
Built1942 (1942)
In use1943-1946 (1946)
Elevation AMSL112 ft / 34 m
Coordinates52°45′26″N 001°05′59″W
Map
RAF Husbands Bosworth
Location in Leicestershire
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
09/27 6,000 1,830 concrete
04/22 4,240 1,290 concrete
13/31 4,240 1,290 concrete
Operational dates.

History

Construction & layout

Land in the vicinity of the village of Husbands Bosworth had been earmarked for an airbase as early as 1941, offering a well-drained and level site. Construction of the airfield was undertaken by George Wimpey & Son and commenced in August 1942 with completion scheduled for March 1943 although it was not completed until October of that year, the cost of the construction is estimated as £805,000.[2] RAF Husbands Bosworth conformed to the layout of a typical RAF aerodrome, that is the specifications set by the British Air Ministry which called for three converging strips, each containing a concrete runway optimally placed (if practicable at the site) at 60 degree angles to each other in a triangular pattern.[3] Gravel used to level the land was brought to the site from Kilworth Wharf on the Grand Union Canal.[2]

Thirty six dispersal places were situated around the perimeter track in addition to which the bomb store was located on the northern edge of the airfield and four main hangars also formed part of the airfield infrastructure.[2]

Operational life

Although the final phases of construction were still being completed, the first RAF personnel arrived at the Station on 1 August 1943, when personnel from No. 14 Operational Training Unit (No.14 OTU) arrived from RAF Cottesmore subsequently being joined by additional personnel from RAF Saltby.[2] Operational flying commenced on 10 August when daylight operations were undertaken with the first night operations beginning on 17 August.[2]

RAF Husbands Boswell came under 92 Group RAF, and was initially a satellite airfield for RAF Market Harborough under the command of the parent Station.[2] The complement of aircraft on the Stations as of 1943 is listed as 61 Vickers Wellingtons, 4 Miles Martinets and an Avro Anson. The Wellingtons were the primary training aircraft by that time largely withdrawn from front-line operations, the Martinets would have been used for the target towing operations and the Anson would have served as the Station's communication aircraft.[2]

No. 85 Operational Training Unit

On 15 June 1944 No. 85 Operational Training Unit (No.85 OTU) was formed at RAF Husbands Bosworth.[4] The unit was formed from an element from No.14 OTU and was tasked with training crews to undertake night bombing operations. No.85 OTU was disbanded on 14 June 1945.[4][2]

Closure

Following the disbandment of No.85 OTU and the cessation of hostilities in 1945 activity on the Station was reduced to a minimum and in 1946 RAF Husbands Bosworth was decommissioned by the Royal Air Force.[2]

Current use

Today the former Royal Air Force Station is known as Husbands Bosworth Airfield and has been home to the Gliding Centre since 1965 and the East Midlands Air Support Unit since 1996.

Following the closure of the aerodrome the subsequent release of land by the British Government, the truncated Sibbertoft Road now lies on what once was the main east-west runway.[2]

gollark: No.
gollark: As previously stated, no and I don't want to.
gollark: I agree.
gollark: I also disagree with the people saying they should teach stuff like doing taxes; there are entirely too many random "life skills" and they change lots. They should probably teach stuff like the ability to look this up on the internet on demand, and to usefully work from this information, rather than specific things.
gollark: How DARE I not have done some particular hobby you like. I will fetch my time machine and immediately rectify this.

References

  1. "Royal Airforce Bomber Command 1942-1945". Imperial War Museum. Retrieved 19 April 2019.
  2. "Husbands Bosworth Aerodrome in WWII". Husbands Bosworth. 2019. Retrieved 19 April 2019.
  3. Francis, Paul; Flagg, Richard; Crisp, Graham. "Nine Thousand Miles of Concrete A review of Second World War temporary airfields in England" (PDF). Historic England. p. 6. Retrieved 19 September 2016.
  4. "Operational Training Units". Air of Authority - A History of RAF Organisations. rafweb.org. Retrieved 19 April 2019.
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