Royal Air Force station - Recruit training station
Site history
Built
1939
In use
1939-1963
Royal Air Force Bridgnorth or more simply RAF Bridgnorth is a former Royal Air Force station, created after the outbreak of the Second World War on 6 November 1939,[1] at Stanmore, to the east of Bridgnorth, Shropshire, England. However, as RAF Stanmore Park already existed in Middlesex, it was named RAF Bridgnorth.[2] Although during its existence various static aeroplanes were displayed as gate guardians, RAF Bridgnorth never had a runway.[3]
The first unit stationed there was No. 4 Recruit Centre.[4] Their role was to carry out the basic training of new recruits in the RAF, originally designed for 2,000 recruits and 500 permanent staff.[5] In 1940 spare accommodation at Bridgnorth enabled it to be used as a transit and kitting out centre for troops returning from France. In August 1941 the Station was renamed No. 1 Women's Auxiliary Air Force Depot involved with the training of WAAF recruits.[6] By September 1942 saw another change of name to the No. 1 Elementary Air Navigation School. Other changes subsequently took place as dictated by the needs of the war effort. From its inception until after the war, the station also had a 114-bed hospital.
Royal Air Force Bridgnorth or more simply RAFBridgnorth is a former Royal Air Force station, created after the outbreak of the Second World War on 6 November...
Bridgnorth is a town and civil parish in Shropshire, England. The River Severn splits it into High Town and Low Town, the upper town on the right bank...
Royal Air Force Bridlington, or more simply RAF Bridlington, was a Royal Air Force station located in Bridlington, East Riding of Yorkshire, England,...
well as RAF Cosford. The district was formed on 1 April 1974, under the Local Government Act 1972. The district covered the former Bridgnorth Rural District...
plaque on a house in East Castle Street, Bridgnorth, notes his residence there during his ministry at RAFBridgnorth and his honour. An inscription in the...
1964 RAF Swinderby changed its role to that of recruit training when No.7 School of Recruit Training, formerly at RAFBridgnorth, opened at RAF Swinderby...
intakes officially ended in May 1941, and training was transferred to RAFBridgnorth in Shropshire, but training there did not come on stream officially...
This list of former RAF stations includes most of the stations, airfields and administrative headquarters previously used by the Royal Air Force. They...
Faville". Air of Authority – A History of RAF Organisation. Retrieved 30 May 2015. "RAFBridgnorth". Bridgnorth Journal. 1957. Retrieved 30 May 2015....
the Royal Air Force (RAF) in 1940. He was initially posted to RAF Abingdon as a ground gunner, before being posted to RAFBridgnorth for general training...
training for air traffic controllers, moved to RAFBridgnorth on 15 November 1942 with the aircraft using RAF Bobbington. A detachment was left a Watchfield...
were dedicated medical care facilities at strategic locations to cater for RAF personnel. The hospitals were staffed by the medical branches of the Royal...
bomb-aimer. He passed the PNB scheme, in 50 Initial Training Wing at RAFBridgnorth, Shropshire. In 1947 he was demobbed from National Service, then commenced...
could be used instead (RAF Cowden in East Yorkshire used the Strike Command badge as it was an air weapons range, RAFBridgnorth used the badge of No....
Cardington Airfield, previously RAF Cardington, is a former Royal Air Force station in Bedfordshire, England, with a long and varied history, particularly...
is otherwise rural, containing market towns such as Oswestry (15,613), Bridgnorth (12,212) and Newport (11,387). For local government purposes the county...
Force was initially formed at Bridgnorth in 1947, then at Stanmore, next at Buckeburg in Germany, before finally settling at RAF Locking in 1949. During the...
8 km) north west of Wolverhampton and 10 miles (16 km) north east of Bridgnorth. It was open between 1941 and 1946 and was built on the site of a former...
wide-scale quarrying and associated activity. Men came from places such as Bridgnorth and Ludlow to work in the quarries, and the villages of Bedlam and Dhustone...
The original Perton lay upon the slopes of Perton ridge down to the Bridgnorth road. 'Perton' derived its name from 'Pear Town' in reference to a particular...