Former RAF North Killingholme
United Kingdom /
England /
Goxhill /
World
/ United Kingdom
/ England
/ Goxhill
World / United Kingdom / England
Second World War 1939-1945, abandoned / shut down, RAF - Royal Air Force, interesting place, draw only border, closed / former military, historical layer / disappeared object
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Close by the Lincolnshire side of the Humber estuary, North Killingholme airfield was situated to the west of the village of that name on a low-lying area of farmland, and a mile from the site of the First World War seaplane base used in 1918 by the US Navy. The western boundary was the waterway known as Skitter Beck and the LNER Ulceby to Immingham line ran close to the southeast side, making it a somewhat confined site for a bomber station.
Built to Class A standard, work started in August 1942 with John Laing & Son Ltd as the main contractor with this £810,000 project. The three runways were 04-22 at 2,000 yards and 09-27 and 15-33 both at 1,400 yards. The 36 hardstandings were all loop type. A T2 hangar stood by the technical site, south of runway head 22, close to North Killingholme village. A second T2 was on the south-west side of the airfield, between runway heads 04 and 33. A B1 hangar was erected later for the Ministry of Aircraft Production contractor engineer's use.
Bomb stores were close to Skitter Beck between runway heads 15 and 09. The camp was to the east, between the village and that of Bass Garth, and consisted of single mess, communal, WAAF sites, six domestic and sick quarters, all dispersed in farmland. Accommodation availability was put at 1,939 males and 325 females.
Allocated for No. 1 Group use, the airfield with was occupied by No. 550 Squadron, which, six weeks after its formation, transferred from Grimsby early in January 1944. No. 550 was to be the only squadron associated North Killingholme, the stations mud and mists being its home until the squadron was disbanded at the end of October 1945. During 14 months of operations from this station, No. 550 flew some 190 raids with 58 Lancaster's failing to return and another four destroyed in crashes.
No further use was made of this airfield by the RAF although it remained in a reasonably complete state for the next 30 years. The hangars and many of the buildings were taken over for light industry and storage, mostly associated with the nearby port of Immingham. Runways provide container parks and also support poultry houses.
www.controltowers.co.uk/N/North_Killingholme.htm
www.raf-lincolnshire.info/nkillingholme/nkillingholme.h...
Built to Class A standard, work started in August 1942 with John Laing & Son Ltd as the main contractor with this £810,000 project. The three runways were 04-22 at 2,000 yards and 09-27 and 15-33 both at 1,400 yards. The 36 hardstandings were all loop type. A T2 hangar stood by the technical site, south of runway head 22, close to North Killingholme village. A second T2 was on the south-west side of the airfield, between runway heads 04 and 33. A B1 hangar was erected later for the Ministry of Aircraft Production contractor engineer's use.
Bomb stores were close to Skitter Beck between runway heads 15 and 09. The camp was to the east, between the village and that of Bass Garth, and consisted of single mess, communal, WAAF sites, six domestic and sick quarters, all dispersed in farmland. Accommodation availability was put at 1,939 males and 325 females.
Allocated for No. 1 Group use, the airfield with was occupied by No. 550 Squadron, which, six weeks after its formation, transferred from Grimsby early in January 1944. No. 550 was to be the only squadron associated North Killingholme, the stations mud and mists being its home until the squadron was disbanded at the end of October 1945. During 14 months of operations from this station, No. 550 flew some 190 raids with 58 Lancaster's failing to return and another four destroyed in crashes.
No further use was made of this airfield by the RAF although it remained in a reasonably complete state for the next 30 years. The hangars and many of the buildings were taken over for light industry and storage, mostly associated with the nearby port of Immingham. Runways provide container parks and also support poultry houses.
www.controltowers.co.uk/N/North_Killingholme.htm
www.raf-lincolnshire.info/nkillingholme/nkillingholme.h...
Wikipedia article: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RAF_North_Killingholme
Nearby cities:
Coordinates: 53°38'16"N -0°17'32"E
- Former RAF Hemswell 32 km
- Former RAF Holme-upon-Spalding Moor 37 km
- Former RAF Lissett 42 km
- Thorne Waste / Crowle Waste Nature Reserve (Humberhead Peatlands) 43 km
- West Moor 50 km
- Former RAF Sherburn-in-Elmet 64 km
- Castle Howard 70 km
- Battle of Towton, 1461 70 km
- RSPB Fairburn Ings 71 km
- Former RAF Marston Moor 77 km
- Humber Estuary 0.1 km
- ConocoPhillips - Humber Refinery 2.7 km
- Total - Lindsey Oil Refinery 3.3 km
- Immingham power plant 3.8 km
- Humber international terminal 5.5 km
- Nordic terminal 5.7 km
- George V dock 6.5 km
- Immingham Docks 6.5 km
- Mausoleum Woods 7.6 km
- Humberside International Airport 8.1 km