WW II Airfields in Britain
One caller today expressed interest in visiting WW II airfields
in England. You advised her to check out the Imperial War
Museum in London, which hopefully will lead her to discover the
Air Museum at RAF Duxford, 90 minutes north of London near
Oxford.
Duxford is a beautifully preserved WW II base, complete with
hangers and auxillary buildings. It houses the best collection
of historic WW II aircraft in Europe, possibly the world, as
well as some modern planes. It also hosts the 8th Air Force
museum, which just opened last year and is home to a B-17 Flying
Fortress, P-51, P-47 as well as modern jets such as the F-111
and the not so modern B-52.
Duxford played a role in the Battle of Britain (Douglas Bader
flew out of Duxford) and supported American fighters after
1942. It is not easily accessed by public transport, but can be
very easily reached by car. There are some bus tours out of
London. Duxford also hosts some terrific WW II air shows several
times a year.
Once at Duxford, you can continue further north into East Anglia
and see the still-active bases at RAF Lakenheath and RAF
Mildenhall, which are still used by the USAF and retain much of
their WW II character. Both of these were US Bomber bases
during the war. There's no museum, however, so one can only
rely on one's imagination.
In London itself, you can visit the Battle of Britain/Royal
Bomber Commmand Museums, located on what used to be a large
airbase at Hendon, north of the city. You can reach this by the
Tube (underground), although it is a bit of a walk from the
station.
The museum has excellent information about life at the air
stations during the battle, and a tremendous collection of
historic aircraft. But there is not much of a base left, so
there's not much to see of the grounds.
Other sites near London include RAF Northholt, directly off the
M40 west of London--it was an important fighter station during
the battle. Nearby there is a monument to the Polish fliers who
flew out of Northholt and died in the battle. South-south east
of London is Biggin Hill, which saw the brunt of German bomber
attacks because it was the biggest RAF fighter base between
London and Dover. Biggin Hill still operates as a commercial
field.
North of London, off the M25 Circular, is the Mosquito Museum,
an incredibly small facility down a muddy road where the fast
Mosquito bomber ("the wooden wonder") was developed. The
original plane is still there.
Finally, somewhere near Dover is another Battle of Britain
museum, but I can't say what's there.
A last suggestion--before going to England to tour the WW II
airbases, take in a couple of the movies that center on the
air war. The "Battle of Britain", with Michael Cane,
Christopher Plumber, Robert Shaw, Lawrence Olivier, etc., is
superb. "12 O'Clock High" w/Gregory Peck is excellent and the
story is built around an American who goes back to revisit his
old air station, and relives the war. More recent efforts from
the BBC include "A Piece of Cake" and "When We Were One", and
they are also worthwhile.
-James
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