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RAF Bruggen

Royal Air Force Brüggen, more commonly known as RAF Brüggen, (IATA: BGN, ICAO: EDUR)[3][4] in Germany was a major station of the Royal Air Force until 15 June 2001. It was situated next to the village of Elmpt, approximately 43 kilometres (27 mi) west of Düsseldorf on the Dutch-German border. The base was named after the village of Brüggen, the nearest rail depot. Construction began in mid-1952, which involved the clearing of forest and draining of marshland. The station became active in 1953 during the rapid expansion of NATO forces in Europe. The main paint shop situated next to the main runway was responsible for the surface finishing of all aircraft, ground equipment and RAF Regiment Rapier missile systems. In 2002, it was handed over to the British Army and renamed Javelin Barracks.

RAF Brüggen
Near Elmpt, North Rhine-Westphalia in Germany
Panavia Tornado GR1 of No. 17 squadron which was based at Brüggen.
To Seek and Strike[1]
RAF Brüggen
Shown within Germany
Coordinates51°12′00″N 6°7′46″E / 51.20000°N 6.12944°E / 51.20000; 6.12944Coordinates: 51°12′00″N 6°7′46″E / 51.20000°N 6.12944°E / 51.20000; 6.12944
TypeRoyal Air Force station
Site information
OwnerMinistry of Defence (UK)
OperatorRoyal Air Force
Controlled byBritish Forces Germany
Site history
BuiltJuly 1952 (1952-07) – May 1953[2]
Built byRAF Airfield Construction Branch
In useJune 1953 – 28 April 2002 (2002-04-28)
FateTransferred to British Army to become Javelin Barracks, Elmpt Station.
Airfield information
IdentifiersIATA: BGN, ICAO: EDUR
Elevation73 metres (240 ft) AMSL
Runways
Direction Length and surface
09/27 2,487 metres (8,159 ft) Asphalt

317 Supply and Transport Column

In 1953, the 317 Supply and Transport Column arrived at RAF Brüggen from Uetersen. This followed the decision to supply all RAF stations in Germany through the port of Antwerp. In 1954 the unit was redesignated as a Mechanical Transport Squadron and was responsible for equipping and supplying all RAF stations in Germany and The Netherlands. The unit remained at Brüggen until 1963, when it was amalgamated into the No. 431 Maintenance Unit RAF which continued to operate until 1993. The demise of 317 MT Squadron marked the end of an era, as it had been on the continent shortly after D-Day under its previous title of 317 Supply & Transport Column. It had built itself an enviable reputation and following the cessation of hostilities carried out convoys to Prague, Warsaw and Moscow. In the 1950 Review of the Royal Air Force, the unit was described as the Carter Paterson of the autobahns.[citation needed]

Throughout its life, 317 carried out a number of humanitarian operations; the first being medical supplies to Bergen-Belsen. This was followed in 1947 by Operation Woodpecker in which timber and peat were supplied to the civilian population of northern Germany[citation needed] in one of the coldest winters on record. This was followed by the return of displaced persons and POWs to their home towns and cities within the British Zone.[citation needed] They were called upon again at the start of the Berlin Airlift (Operation Plain Fare), and lastly, in the winter of 1962/3, the Squadron took a convoy of fuel trucks to the oil refineries in Rotterdam for heating oil which was delivered to hospitals in Germany during the great freeze when the canals were inoperable.

1954–1998 – Strike/attack role

 
Hardened Aircraft Shelter at RAF Bruggen, 1981

From c.1954 – 1957 the fighter squadrons at Bruggen were 67, 71E, 112 & 130, equipped initially with Canadair Sabre F.4s, later re-equipped with the Hawker Hunters. These squadrons were either redeployed or disbanded in 1957 with the arrival of 87 Squadron, equipped with Gloster Javelins.

The initial strike capability at RAF Brüggen was provided by the English Electric Canberra from the summer of 1957. From 1969 to 1975 the Phantom FGR.2 operated in the strike/attack role and was replaced[5] by the SEPECAT Jaguar from 9 April 1975. The squadron Jaguars were replaced by the Panavia Tornado GR.1 beginning on 13 June 1984. With a total of four Tornado GR.1 squadrons at Brüggen,[2] and 2 more at its nearby sister airbase RAF Laarbruch, Brüggen and Laarbruch formed the largest Tornado force in NATO. Hardened Aircraft Shelters were equipped with the U.S. Weapon Storage Security System (WS3), each able to store up to 4 WE.177 tactical nuclear bombs, for delivery by Tornado aircraft.[5]

1984 – Nuclear incident

On 4 September 2007, the British military admitted that there had been an accident with a nuclear weapon at RAF Brüggen on 2 May 1984.[6][7] The nuclear weapon fell from a transport truck, as the missile wasn't securely attached to the truck. The weapon was 8 times more powerful than the bomb that was dropped on Hiroshima in 1945. The casing was X-rayed after the incident, and found to have been undamaged. The six people who were responsible for the accident, received a reprimand for their actions in the incident.[8]

1998–2001 – Attack role

Following reunification of Germany, the RAF announced plans to reduce its presence in the country by half. One major part of this was the reduction of Tornado squadrons in Germany from seven to four, No.9, No.14, No.17 and No.31 squadrons. No.9, No.14 and No.31 squadrons took part in the Gulf War, and later operated from Bruggen during NATO's air operations in the Kosovo War, supported by Vickers VC10 tankers.

The decision to remove all RAF assets from Germany was taken in 1996. As a result of the Strategic Defence Review No. 17 Squadron disbanded on 31 March 1999 and began the gradual drawdown of the base. No. 14 Sqn relocated to RAF Lossiemouth in January 2001. A formal ceremony on 15 June officially ended a continuous Royal Air Force presence in Germany since World War II and all of the remaining Tornados had left for RAF Marham by 4 September 2001.

Brüggen squadrons

Handover to Army

With the Royal Air Force having no use for site of the former RAF Brüggen, the base was handed over to the British Army on 28 February 2002 to become Elmpt Station, Javelin Barracks. The 18-hole RAF Brüggen Golf Club became West Rhine Golf Club.

Former units

  • 7th Signal Regiment
  • 16th Signal Regiment
    • Support Squadron
    • 207 Signal Squadron
    • 230 Signal Squadron
    • 255 Signal Squadron
  • 628 Signal Troop
  • 1st Military Intelligence Battalion
    • HQ Company
    • Operations Support Company
    • 15 Military Intelligence Company
    • 16 Military Intelligence Company

Final closure

The barracks was closed in November 2015 and the site returned to German authorities. Since December 2015 the accommodation units have been used by the German government to house refugees.[9]

The 882 hectares (2,180 acres) area is currently owned by the Bundesanstalt für Immobilienaufgaben (BImA). In 2020 negotiations are under way to sell it to Entwicklungsgesellschaft "Energie- und Gewerbepark Elmpt" mbH (EGE), a company founded in 2016 with the objective of converting 150 hectares (370 acres) of the area into an energy and industry park.[10]

See also

References

  This article incorporates public domain material from the Air Force Historical Research Agency.

Citations

  1. ^ Pine, L G (1983). A Dictionary of mottoes. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul. p. 234. ISBN 0-7100-9339-X.
  2. ^ a b c d Jackson 1986, p. 20.
  3. ^ Airport information for BGN / EDUR at Great Circle Mapper.
  4. ^ Accident history for BGN / EDUR at Aviation Safety Network
  5. ^ a b Robert S. Norris and Hans M. Kristensen (November–December 2004), U.S. nuclear weapons in Europe, 1954–2004 (PDF), Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, retrieved 11 June 2009
  6. ^ GlobalSecurity.org British military confirms atomic bomb incident at base in Germany
  7. ^ TimesOnline.co.uk Britain drops nuclear bomb. Fortunately it doesn’t go off
  8. ^ "Incident at RAF Brüggen – A Viewpoint (MoD) – PDF" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 November 2012. Retrieved 9 November 2012.
  9. ^ "Britische Streitkräfte verlassen Niederkrüchten früher". Britenabzug (in German). Bundesanstalt für Immobilienaufgaben. Retrieved 8 February 2016.
  10. ^ https://www.ege-elmpt.de/

Bibliography

  • Jackson, P. (1986). Britain's Armed Forces Today: 4 RAF Germany. Shepperton, UK: Ian Allan. ISBN 0-7110-1579-1.

External links

  • BBC News – RAF ends 56 years in Germany
  • Last days at Bruggen from AirSceneUK.org.uk
  • RAF Brüggen at GlobalSecurity.org
  • RAF Brüggen, British Army Of the Rhine – Locations
  • 317 MT Sqn history

bruggen, this, article, uses, bare, urls, which, uninformative, vulnerable, link, please, consider, converting, them, full, citations, ensure, article, remains, verifiable, maintains, consistent, citation, style, several, templates, tools, available, assist, f. This article uses bare URLs which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting such as Reflinks documentation reFill documentation and Citation bot documentation August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Royal Air Force Bruggen more commonly known as RAF Bruggen IATA BGN ICAO EDUR 3 4 in Germany was a major station of the Royal Air Force until 15 June 2001 It was situated next to the village of Elmpt approximately 43 kilometres 27 mi west of Dusseldorf on the Dutch German border The base was named after the village of Bruggen the nearest rail depot Construction began in mid 1952 which involved the clearing of forest and draining of marshland The station became active in 1953 during the rapid expansion of NATO forces in Europe The main paint shop situated next to the main runway was responsible for the surface finishing of all aircraft ground equipment and RAF Regiment Rapier missile systems In 2002 it was handed over to the British Army and renamed Javelin Barracks RAF BruggenNear Elmpt North Rhine Westphalia in GermanyPanavia Tornado GR1 of No 17 squadron which was based at Bruggen To Seek and Strike 1 RAF BruggenShown within GermanyCoordinates51 12 00 N 6 7 46 E 51 20000 N 6 12944 E 51 20000 6 12944 Coordinates 51 12 00 N 6 7 46 E 51 20000 N 6 12944 E 51 20000 6 12944TypeRoyal Air Force stationSite informationOwnerMinistry of Defence UK OperatorRoyal Air ForceControlled byBritish Forces GermanySite historyBuiltJuly 1952 1952 07 May 1953 2 Built byRAF Airfield Construction BranchIn useJune 1953 28 April 2002 2002 04 28 FateTransferred to British Army to become Javelin Barracks Elmpt Station Airfield informationIdentifiersIATA BGN ICAO EDURElevation73 metres 240 ft AMSLRunwaysDirection Length and surface09 27 2 487 metres 8 159 ft Asphalt Contents 1 317 Supply and Transport Column 2 1954 1998 Strike attack role 2 1 1984 Nuclear incident 3 1998 2001 Attack role 4 Bruggen squadrons 5 Handover to Army 6 Final closure 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Citations 8 2 Bibliography 9 External links317 Supply and Transport Column EditIn 1953 the 317 Supply and Transport Column arrived at RAF Bruggen from Uetersen This followed the decision to supply all RAF stations in Germany through the port of Antwerp In 1954 the unit was redesignated as a Mechanical Transport Squadron and was responsible for equipping and supplying all RAF stations in Germany and The Netherlands The unit remained at Bruggen until 1963 when it was amalgamated into the No 431 Maintenance Unit RAF which continued to operate until 1993 The demise of 317 MT Squadron marked the end of an era as it had been on the continent shortly after D Day under its previous title of 317 Supply amp Transport Column It had built itself an enviable reputation and following the cessation of hostilities carried out convoys to Prague Warsaw and Moscow In the 1950 Review of the Royal Air Force the unit was described as the Carter Paterson of the autobahns citation needed Throughout its life 317 carried out a number of humanitarian operations the first being medical supplies to Bergen Belsen This was followed in 1947 by Operation Woodpecker in which timber and peat were supplied to the civilian population of northern Germany citation needed in one of the coldest winters on record This was followed by the return of displaced persons and POWs to their home towns and cities within the British Zone citation needed They were called upon again at the start of the Berlin Airlift Operation Plain Fare and lastly in the winter of 1962 3 the Squadron took a convoy of fuel trucks to the oil refineries in Rotterdam for heating oil which was delivered to hospitals in Germany during the great freeze when the canals were inoperable 1954 1998 Strike attack role Edit Hardened Aircraft Shelter at RAF Bruggen 1981 From c 1954 1957 the fighter squadrons at Bruggen were 67 71E 112 amp 130 equipped initially with Canadair Sabre F 4s later re equipped with the Hawker Hunters These squadrons were either redeployed or disbanded in 1957 with the arrival of 87 Squadron equipped with Gloster Javelins The initial strike capability at RAF Bruggen was provided by the English Electric Canberra from the summer of 1957 From 1969 to 1975 the Phantom FGR 2 operated in the strike attack role and was replaced 5 by the SEPECAT Jaguar from 9 April 1975 The squadron Jaguars were replaced by the Panavia Tornado GR 1 beginning on 13 June 1984 With a total of four Tornado GR 1 squadrons at Bruggen 2 and 2 more at its nearby sister airbase RAF Laarbruch Bruggen and Laarbruch formed the largest Tornado force in NATO Hardened Aircraft Shelters were equipped with the U S Weapon Storage Security System WS3 each able to store up to 4 WE 177 tactical nuclear bombs for delivery by Tornado aircraft 5 1984 Nuclear incident Edit On 4 September 2007 the British military admitted that there had been an accident with a nuclear weapon at RAF Bruggen on 2 May 1984 6 7 The nuclear weapon fell from a transport truck as the missile wasn t securely attached to the truck The weapon was 8 times more powerful than the bomb that was dropped on Hiroshima in 1945 The casing was X rayed after the incident and found to have been undamaged The six people who were responsible for the accident received a reprimand for their actions in the incident 8 1998 2001 Attack role EditFollowing reunification of Germany the RAF announced plans to reduce its presence in the country by half One major part of this was the reduction of Tornado squadrons in Germany from seven to four No 9 No 14 No 17 and No 31 squadrons No 9 No 14 and No 31 squadrons took part in the Gulf War and later operated from Bruggen during NATO s air operations in the Kosovo War supported by Vickers VC10 tankers The decision to remove all RAF assets from Germany was taken in 1996 As a result of the Strategic Defence Review No 17 Squadron disbanded on 31 March 1999 and began the gradual drawdown of the base No 14 Sqn relocated to RAF Lossiemouth in January 2001 A formal ceremony on 15 June officially ended a continuous Royal Air Force presence in Germany since World War II and all of the remaining Tornados had left for RAF Marham by 4 September 2001 Bruggen squadrons EditNo 9 Squadron RAF 1 October 1986 July 2001 operating Panavia Tornado GR 1 GR 4 No 14 Squadron RAF operating Phantom FGR 2 SEPECAT Jaguar GR 1 T 2 Panavia Tornado GR 4 No 17 Squadron RAF operating Phantom FGR 2 SEPECAT Jaguar GR 1 T 2 Panavia Tornado GR 1 1985 99 No 20 Squadron RAF operating SEPECAT Jaguar GR 1 T 2 No 25 Squadron RAF operating Bloodhound missiles No 31 Squadron RAF operating Phantom FGR 2 SEPECAT Jaguar GR 1 T 2 Panavia Tornado GR 1 GR 4 No 67 Squadron RAF 1954 1957 operating Canadair Sabre F 4s and later Hawker Hunters No 71 Squadron RAF 1954 1957 operating Canadair Sabre F 4s and later Hawker Hunters No 80 Squadron RAF operating English Electric Canberra PR 7 up to 1969 No 87 Squadron RAF 1957 1961 operating Gloster Javelin FAW 1 No 112 Squadron RAF 1954 1957 operating Canadair Sabre F 4s and later Hawker Hunters No 130 Squadron RAF 1954 1957 operating Canadair Sabre F 4s and later Hawker Hunters No 213 Squadron RAF 1957 1969 operating English Electric Canberra B I 6 No 37 Squadron RAF Regiment operating Rapier 2 No 431 Maintenance Unit RAF 431 MU 2 Handover to Army EditWith the Royal Air Force having no use for site of the former RAF Bruggen the base was handed over to the British Army on 28 February 2002 to become Elmpt Station Javelin Barracks The 18 hole RAF Bruggen Golf Club became West Rhine Golf Club Former units 7th Signal Regiment 16th Signal Regiment Support Squadron 207 Signal Squadron 230 Signal Squadron 255 Signal Squadron 628 Signal Troop 1st Military Intelligence Battalion HQ Company Operations Support Company 15 Military Intelligence Company 16 Military Intelligence CompanyFinal closure EditThe barracks was closed in November 2015 and the site returned to German authorities Since December 2015 the accommodation units have been used by the German government to house refugees 9 The 882 hectares 2 180 acres area is currently owned by the Bundesanstalt fur Immobilienaufgaben BImA In 2020 negotiations are under way to sell it to Entwicklungsgesellschaft Energie und Gewerbepark Elmpt mbH EGE a company founded in 2016 with the objective of converting 150 hectares 370 acres of the area into an energy and industry park 10 See also EditAdvanced Landing Ground List of aircraft of the Royal Air Force List of former Royal Air Force stations List of Royal Air Force aircraft squadronsReferences Edit This article incorporates public domain material from the Air Force Historical Research Agency Citations Edit Pine L G 1983 A Dictionary of mottoes London Routledge amp Kegan Paul p 234 ISBN 0 7100 9339 X a b c d Jackson 1986 p 20 Airport information for BGN EDUR at Great Circle Mapper Accident history for BGN EDUR at Aviation Safety Network a b Robert S Norris and Hans M Kristensen November December 2004 U S nuclear weapons in Europe 1954 2004 PDF Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists retrieved 11 June 2009 GlobalSecurity org British military confirms atomic bomb incident at base in Germany TimesOnline co uk Britain drops nuclear bomb Fortunately it doesn t go off Incident at RAF Bruggen A Viewpoint MoD PDF PDF Archived PDF from the original on 9 November 2012 Retrieved 9 November 2012 Britische Streitkrafte verlassen Niederkruchten fruher Britenabzug in German Bundesanstalt fur Immobilienaufgaben Retrieved 8 February 2016 https www ege elmpt de Bibliography Edit Jackson P 1986 Britain s Armed Forces Today 4 RAF Germany Shepperton UK Ian Allan ISBN 0 7110 1579 1 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to RAF Bruggen BBC News RAF ends 56 years in Germany Last days at Bruggen from AirSceneUK org uk RAF Bruggen at GlobalSecurity org RAF Bruggen British Army Of the Rhine Locations 317 MT Sqn history Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title RAF Bruggen amp oldid 1137498155, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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