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RAF Hawkinge - The RAF s Wartime Frontline Airfield; From Dunkirk to the Battle of Britain and D-Day (Hardcover)
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RAF Hawkinge - The RAF s Wartime Frontline Airfield; From Dunkirk to the Battle of Britain and D-Day (Hardcover)
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As the nearest RAF station to Occupied Europe, the airfield at
Hawkinge in Kent found itself quite literally on the frontline
during the Second World War. However, Hawkinge's association with
British military aviation began more than two decades earlier,
during the First World War. Already a pre-war airfield, it was in
1915 that the land was requisitioned for use by the Royal Fling
Corps. The first personnel arrived a few months later to serve at
was initially named Folkestone Field. Mainly used as a base for
transporting aircraft across to France and the Western Front, a
name change to Hawkinge Aeroplane Dispatch Station soon followed,
at which point its remit also included the transportation of
supplies to troops in France and Belgium. It was following the
re-organisation of the RAF in 1923 that Hawkinge underwent the next
stage in its development. New hangars and operations buildings were
erected, with water and communications systems installed. The
airfield's role changed to that of training for both RAF and the
Army; 25 Squadron was the first full squadron to be based at
Hawkinge. In the first months of the Second World War, airfield was
re-designated as a Fighter Station in No.11 Group, following which
the first Hurricanes from 3 Squadron arrived on 19 December 1939.
Throughout the Battle of France and into the Dunkirk evacuation
Hawkinge played a vital role providing around the clock air-cover
for Allied forces. But it was in the summer of 1940 that Hawkinge
endured its finest hour'. The first Luftwaffe attack on Hawkinge
occurred on 12 August. Despite widespread damage, the grass runways
were quickly repaired, ensuring that the Spitfires and Hurricanes
which used it as a forward base were soon operating again. Despite
the Luftwaffe's best efforts, Hawkinge remained operational
throughout the war. As the RAF went on the offensive in 1941,
Hawkinge had a vital part to play in maintaining these missions
against Goering's forces - both as a location to refuel on the way
out, or a place of refuge on the return, both for fighters and
bombers alike, including those of the USAAF following America's
entry into the war. Following the war, the fighter base was
officially closed on 3 September 1945. In 1964 the Ministry of
Defence sold the land, although for a short while in 1968, memories
of the war were invoked with the airfield's use in the making of
the classic film Battle of Britain. Only a small corner of the
original site has survived and is today home to the renowned Kent
Battle of Britain Museum.
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