RAF Tilstock, Shropshire, December 2016

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HughieD

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1. The History Bit
RAF Tilstock is a former World War II airfield, located in Shropshire. It is three miles south of Whitchurch and about 2 miles west the village of Tilstock, located near the junction of the A41 and A49. It became operational on 28th August, 1942 under the command of No. 93 group of Bomber Command. The site was also known as Prees Heath.

During World War I Tilstock was a trench warfare training camp for around 25,000 soldiers. In addition to a hospital it was home, at various points in time, for elements of the 11th, 14th, 16th and 17th Reserve Brigades of the Training Reserve. Prees Heath was also used as a dispersal camp post-1918 for troops disembarking at Liverpool for demobilsation.

Construction of the airfield was finished by mid 1942, and it was referred to as 'Whitchurch Heath' until 1st June 1943 when it became known as RAF Tilstock. It had the classic RAF three concrete runway 'star' arrangement. From 1st September 1942 until 21th January 1946, the airfield was used by the RAF's No. 81 Operational Training Unit and No. 1665 Heavy Conversion Unit. They specialised in the training of pilots and crews for flying Whitley, Stirling and Halifax bombers. In 1946 it became home to Polish Army families who lived in the corrugated metal nissen huts along the with communal ablution blocks and a number of concrete huts. During the 1950s, Auster AOP.6 'spotter' aircraft of No. 663 Squadron (pictured below) used the facilities of the otherwise non-operational airfield during weekends for liaison flights with Royal Artillery units.

31129156024_d34641718a_b.jpgAuster_AOP.6_VW993_B_663_Tilstock_28.09.52_edited-3 by HughieDW, on Flickr

As mentioned earlier, the airfield is still used today during weekends for skydiving. As far back as 1964 it was home to the Manchester Skydivers. In 1967 it became Manchester Free Fall Club (MFFC) run by the ex-para and Club Chief Instructor, Norman Law. Over the next three decades the club was run as a local members club at weekends with a mixture of regular club jumpers and first time jumpers keen to experience sport parachuting to raise funds for charity. A section of the original airfield is still partially used as a parachute centre but the watch office and most of the other buildings are now falling into disrepair.

2. The Explore
Very relaxed and enjoyable explore on a misty and damp December morn. The thing that surprised me the most was just how good this place was and lacking in graff/vandalism given its easy access and proximity to the A41. Spent a good hour or so wandering around. The watch tower is sealed up so didn’t bother going over to this and couldn’t find the Battle HQ but there was plenty of other stuff to nosey around. There was this quintessentially British feeling exploring old blast trenches covered by a carpet of oak leaves that really appealed to me.

3. The Pictures

30773986694_e3bcd91c70_b.jpgimg9108 by HughieDW, on Flickr

30805709283_bb37cdf8c0_b.jpgimg9109 by HughieDW, on Flickr

30805681653_8fa1957d53_b.jpgimg9110 by HughieDW, on Flickr

31578156606_002df8ed2b_b.jpgimg9111 by HughieDW, on Flickr

31468591192_de71c53421_b.jpgimg9112 by HughieDW, on Flickr

31468547402_5b68f0d865_b.jpgimg9114 by HughieDW, on Flickr

31468497992_0da98fc59b_b.jpgimg9115 by HughieDW, on Flickr

31242722320_aa305c95de_b.jpgimg9120 by HughieDW, on Flickr

The famous car is a 1954 Sunbeam Talbot 90, which appears to have lost a few pieces in recent years (EDIT: duff gen - don't think it is that make)

31577902556_7a2328b529_b.jpgimg9131 by HughieDW, on Flickr

31578015546_898c33789e_b.jpgimg9125 by HughieDW, on Flickr

30805485793_605a3ae8f3_b.jpgimg9126 by HughieDW, on Flickr

30773685784_bd0a142182_b.jpgimg9134 by HughieDW, on Flickr

Loved the symmetry of this shot of one of the lesser-good condition nissen huts:

31468312902_2003937ec1_b.jpgimg9137 by HughieDW, on Flickr

31242450960_d33f21d54f_b.jpgimg9138bw by HughieDW, on Flickr

30773592194_0e42b8fe70_b.jpgimg9139 by HughieDW, on Flickr

31242416110_4cdb02a137_b.jpgimg9140 by HughieDW, on Flickr

Loved this old wall painted sign:

30773520674_83bf808fa2_b.jpgimg9141 by HughieDW, on Flickr

31468153722_579674d99b_b.jpgimg9145 by HughieDW, on Flickr

31468124552_a7848b7dd5_b.jpgimg9147 by HughieDW, on Flickr

31499166531_f1d64d2882_b.jpgimg9150 by HughieDW, on Flickr

31577595976_a0ac7f53e5_b.jpgimg9151 by HughieDW, on Flickr

Just up from the nissen huts is the decontamination block and some concrete huts:

30805039293_fe89944d8a_b.jpgimg9156 by HughieDW, on Flickr

31577453196_157e9ee9eb_b.jpgimg9164 by HughieDW, on Flickr

31468034892_5298881a63_b.jpgimg9158 by HughieDW, on Flickr

…and the one piece of graff I saw:

31242160840_69be4b2034_b.jpgimg9161 by HughieDW, on Flickr

And some more blast trenches:

31467916752_554dd3a678_b.jpgimg9166 by HughieDW, on Flickr

31242036580_81f494a54c_b.jpgimg9167 by HughieDW, on Flickr

And finally this tightly sealed building:

30804864263_de5c797faa_b.jpgimg9169 by HughieDW, on Flickr

Thanks for looking!
 
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I'll be passing there next Saturday might call in and have a look. Great pic's.

Sent from my Lenovo A7600-F using Tapatalk
 
Nice one Hughie. You may very well be correct about the car being a Sunbeam - Inner dash panel has many similarities, gear change on column is OK and the base of the windscreen pressing at back of the engine compartment, has the bonnet hinge mounting holes pierced in the correct location. Even the remains of the steering wheel points to the car being a Sunbeam.
 
Great shots Hugh, the car is a Sunbeam, I remember it many years ago still completely intact. The BHQ is on the other side of the Airfield just of the island A41/53, down a small lane.The OPS Block you took a photo of in the dark still has remnants of the OPS Blackboard and the PBX inside in situ, also there are a few Stanton Shelters in the area you was you can go into, nice 50 men blast shelters, and the last image looks like the Standby set house
Regards Ian
 
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Great shots Hugh, the car is a Sunbeam, I remember it many years ago still completely intact. The BHQ is on the other side of the Airfield just of the island A41/53, down a small lane.The OPS Block you took a photo of in the dark still has remnants of the OPS Blackboard and the PBX inside in situ, also there are a few Stanton Shelters in the area you was you can go into,
Regards Ian

Cheers for the info Ian. Quite a lot to see here in that case!
 
Some very interesting shots there, love the one with the small broken windows with the trees in the background and the quarter of a steering wheel!
 

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