RAF SCAMPTON


'RAF Scampton' is a Royal Air Force station situated north of Lincoln in England, near the village of Scampton, on the site of an old World War I landing field.

Contents
World War II
Postwar
Recent developments
Reference Source
See also
External links

World War II


The Dambusters, 617 Squadron, were first formed at RAF Scampton. It was from Scampton that Wing Commander Guy Gibson, in Operation Chastise, led the attack on the dams in the Ruhr Valley. An operation for which Gibson was awarded the Victoria Cross. The grave of Gibson's dog "Nigger" can still be seen.

Postwar


For many years a bomber was gate guardian at Scampton, along with the large bouncing and Grand Slam bombs they had carried, but this first Lancaster was moved to the RAF museum at Hendon. Later, another restored Lancaster, repatriated from a French island in the South Pacific, took its place. This later Lancaster, ''Just Jane NX611'', is now at the Lincolnshire Aviation Heritage Centre at the former RAF East Kirkby.
In the late 1950s, due to rebuilding work, the gate guardian – then a Grand Slam bomb – had to be moved. Efforts to lift it with a crane proved futile, as it was heavier than expected. Upon closer examination, it was discovered to be still filled with live explosives. It was cautiously trucked away and detonated on a test range. It is unclear when or how a live bomb managed to be put on display, but it seems that it was in place for well over a decade.
Scampton is also famous as being the home of the Vulcan Bomber during the Cold War period of the 1950s and 60s. Vulcans were the launch platform for the UK's airborne nuclear deterrent, primarily through the carriage of Blue Steel missiles and WE.177 bombs. It was because of the Vulcans that Scampton got permission to divert an almost 2,000 year old Roman road from its straight north/south track in order to extend the runway. You can still see the eastward bulge in the A15 road due north of Lincoln.

Recent developments


The RAF Central Flying School (CFS) moved to Scampton, and the base was home to Red Arrows aerobatic team. In the mid 1990s, Scampton was mothballed under the Front Line First programme, with the CFS moving to nearby RAF Cranwell. Scampton, however, continued to be used as overflow from RAF Waddington. More recently, the Red Arrows moved back to Scampton to free up space at Cranwell, and they are the only permanent users of the airfield.
As part of a reorganisation, Air Combat Service Support units of 2 Group and personnel from RAF Boulmer and elsewhere were planning to move to Scampton, making its future more secure. However due to problems with money (there was none to do up the infrastructure) these units have moved to RAF Leeming in North Yorkshire instead, and Scampton will likely be disposed of by the end of the decade, except for the museum which will eventually house everything that was ever based in North Lincolnshire, including its current curator, Merv.
RAF Scampton is now the home of Control and Reporting Centre Scampton, the Number One Air Control Centre, the Mobile Met Unit in addition to RAFAT (Red Arrows). This then provides a heady mix of Fighter Controllers, Reservists and Aircrew. It has administrative control over a second site at what was RAF Kirton-in-Lindsey, 15-miles to the North of the Scampton site.

Reference Source



Bruce Barrymore Halpenny ''Action Stations: Wartime Military Airfields of Lincolnshire and the East Midlands v. 2'' (ISBN 978-0850594843)

See also



List of RAF stations

External links



RAF Scampton history



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