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RAF Coningsby

Royal Air Force Coningsby or RAF Coningsby (IATA: QCY, ICAO: EGXC), is a Royal Air Force (RAF) station located 13.7 kilometres (8.5 mi) south-west of Horncastle, and 15.8 kilometres (9.8 mi) north-west of Boston, in the East Lindsey district of Lincolnshire, England. It is a Main Operating Base of the RAF and home to three front-line Eurofighter Typhoon FGR4 units, No. 3 Squadron, No. 11 Squadron and No. 12 Squadron. In support of front-line units, No. 29 Squadron is the Typhoon Operational Conversion Unit and No. 41 Squadron is the Typhoon Test and Evaluation Squadron. Coningsby is also the home of the Battle of Britain Memorial Flight (BBMF) which operates a variety of historic RAF aircraft.

RAF Coningsby
Near Coningsby, Lincolnshire in England
A Eurofighter Typhoon takes off from RAF Coningsby.
Loyalty binds me[1]
RAF Coningsby
Shown within Lincolnshire
Coordinates53°05′35″N 000°09′58″W / 53.09306°N 0.16611°W / 53.09306; -0.16611Coordinates: 53°05′35″N 000°09′58″W / 53.09306°N 0.16611°W / 53.09306; -0.16611
TypeMain Operating Base
Area420 hectares (1,000 acres)[2]
Site information
OwnerMinistry of Defence
OperatorRoyal Air Force
Controlled byNo. 1 Group (Air Combat)
Open to
the public
Access to BBMF Hangar only
ConditionOperational
WebsiteOfficial website
Site history
Built1940 (1940)
In use1940 – present
Garrison information
Current
commander
Group Captain Billy Cooper
Occupants See Based units section for full list.
Airfield information
IdentifiersIATA: QCY, ICAO: EGXC, WMO: 03391
Elevation24 feet (7 m) AMSL
Runways
Direction Length and surface
07/25 2,744 metres (9,003 ft) Asphalt and Concrete
Source: RAF Coningsby Defence Aerodrome Manual[3]

History

Second World War

Plans for an airfield at Coningsby began in 1937 as part of the RAF's expansion plan. However progress in the compulsory purchase of the land was slow and delayed the start of work for two years.[4] The station opened during the Second World War on 4 November 1940 under No. 5 Group, part of RAF Bomber Command.[5][6][7] The first flying unit, No. 106 Squadron with the Handley Page Hampden medium bomber, arrived in February 1941, with active operations taking place the following month when four Hampdens bombed Cologne in Germany.[7] The squadron was joined in April 1941 by No. 97 Squadron equipped with Avro Manchester medium bombers.[6][5] In May 1942, aircraft from Coningsby participated in the 'Thousand Bomber' raid on Cologne.[7]

The original grass runways were found to be unsuitable for heavy bomber operations so the station was closed for nearly a year between September 1942 and August 1943, whilst paved runways were laid in preparation for accommodating such aircraft. At the same time further hangars were constructed.[4][5]

 
Three Avro Lancaster B.IIIs of No. 619 Squadron, airborne from RAF Coningsby whilst based there during 1944.

The first unit to return was the now-famous No. 617 'Dambusters' Squadron. Equipped with Avro Lancaster heavy bombers, the squadron was stationed at Coningsby from August 1943. Due to its specialist nature, the Dambusters carried out limited operations whilst at Coningsby, with the most notable being Operation Garlic, a failed raid targeting the Dortmund-Ems canal in Germany, when five out of the eight Lancasters on the mission failed to return home. As the squadron required more space, it moved to nearby RAF Woodhall Spa in January 1944, swapping places with another Lancaster unit, No. 619 Squadron, which itself later moved on to RAF Dunholme Lodge.[4][8]

Further Lancaster squadrons were based at Coningsby during the final months of the war, including No. 61 Squadron from RAF Skellingthorpe, No. 83 Squadron and No. 97 Squadron.[5]

Post war

Following the Second World War, Coningsby was home to the Mosquito-equipped No. 109 Squadron and No. 139 Squadron, then became part of No. 3 Group, with Boeing Washington aircraft from 1950. On 17 August 1953 52-year-old Air Vice-Marshal William Brook, the Air Officer Commanding of No. 3 Group, took off from the base in a Gloster Meteor, and crashed into a Dutch barn at Bradley, Staffordshire.[9]

Jet aircraft

The airfield received its first jet aircraft—the English Electric Canberra—in 1953.[10] During 1956, the station expanded with the runway being extended.[10] Avro Vulcans arrived in 1962, then transferred to RAF Cottesmore in November 1964.[10]

From 1964 to 1966, the station had been initially designated to receive the proposed RAF strike aircraft, the advanced BAC TSR-2,[10] which was cancelled in April 1965 by the Labour Government. The TSR2 was planned to join No. 40 Squadron at Coningsby in 1968 to replace the Canberra.[11]

Phantoms

The TSR2's intended replacement—the American General Dynamics F-111 Aardvark—was shelved on 16 January 1968[12] when its costs overshot the UK's budget (it would have cost £425m for 50 aircraft). The TSR2 had large development costs, whereas the F-111 (also known as Tactical Fighter Experimental, or TFX) could be bought off the shelf. Coningsby was planned to get the F-111K, the RAF version of the F-111; also in the 1966 Defence White Paper, it was intended that the Anglo-French AFVG, later the UKVG, would replace the TSR2 (it did eventually as the Panavia Tornado). 50 F-111Ks were planned with 100 AFVGs (to enter service by 1970); Denis Healey claimed the F-111s and AFVGs would be cheaper than the TSR2 programme (158 aircraft) by £700m. As Minister of Aviation throughout 1965, the Labour MP Roy Jenkins had also wanted to similarly cancel the Olympus-powered Concorde, but the 1962 Anglo-French treaty imposed prohibitively steep financial penalties for cancellation; the Hawker Siddeley P.1154 and HS.681 were cancelled at the same time.[13]

AFVGs were also planned to replace the Buccaneer in the Royal Navy—Tornados were never flown by the Royal Navy, as the carriers for them, the CVA-01s, were cancelled. But the Royal Navy did operate fourteen Phantoms on HMS Ark Royal, until the new smaller carriers entered service—48 Phantoms had been designated for the Fleet Air Arm, with twenty of these ending up at RAF Leuchars, and Ark Royal's Phantoms ended up at Leuchars in 1978. HMS Eagle was never converted to Phantom use as it was deemed too expensive, and the carrier was scrapped in January 1972, with its Sea Vixen aircraft. Another alternative considered by the Labour government in July 1965 for the TSR-2 was to order Rolls-Royce Spey-engined French Mirage IV aircraft, to be known as the Mirage IVS; it would have avionics from the TSR-2, and be partly made by BAC at Warton.[14]

 
Phantom FGR.2 XT895 from No. 6 Squadron, this was the first squadron to get operational Phantoms in May 1969 at Coningsby; No. 54(F) Squadron received the aircraft in September 1969; both squadrons were disbanded in 1974

Spey-engined Phantoms (the plane the government eventually bought, having been ordered in February 1964 for the Fleet Air Arm, instead of the P.1154) were chosen in 1966 for the station's future as with the scrapping of aircraft carriers the Phantoms were not needed for the Fleet Air Arm,[10] with all RAF Phantom training taking place on the airfield, and the station became part of Fighter Command[10] until December 1967, when it joined Air Support Command as the Phantoms were initially in a ground attack role. Phantoms first saw operational service with the Fleet Air Arm in 1970. The first Phantom FGR2 (Fighter/Ground attack/Reconnaissance) arrived at Coningsby on 23 August 1968, with the first aircrew OCU course (No. 228 OCU) beginning in October 1968. Air-defence Phantoms (FG1) also entered service in 1969 at RAF Leuchars. On 18 May 1970, a Phantom flew from the base non-stop to RAF Tengah in Singapore, covering 8,680 mi (13,970 km) in 14 hours and 14 minutes at an average speed of 602 mph (969 km/h). In April 1968, RAF Strike Command was formed and the airfield was transferred to No. 38 Group.[15]

No. 41(F) Squadron joined in April 1972, and stayed until 1977. The other ground-attack Phantom squadrons (four of them) were at RAF Bruggen. No. 111(F) Squadron replaced their Lightnings (from RAF Wattisham) with Phantoms from 1 October 1974. On 1 January 1975, No. 29(F) Squadron joined and stayed until 1987, when disbanded. On 1 November 1975, No. 23(F) Squadron joined until February 1976, when moved to RAF Wattisham. In March 1976, No. 56(F) Squadron joined until July 1976, then went to Wattisham.[16]

 
Panavia Tornado F3 ZE785 of No. 41 Squadron in July 2007.

The Phantom's role changed to air defence in October 1974 when the airfield transferred to No. 11 Group in Strike Command, when the SEPECAT Jaguar (situated in Norfolk) took over the ground attack role. No. 111(F) Squadron were the first to take the new air defence Phantoms. During 1975, the UK's air defence transferred to the Phantom FGR.2 from five squadrons of English Electric Lightnings. The UK was covered by NATO Early Warning Area 12. Three Sector Operations Centres were at RAF Buchan, Boulmer and Neatishead; in the 1960s, the UK had the Linesman/Mediator radar system, which was obsolete by the 1970s. No. 29(F) Squadron formed with Phantoms at Coningsby on 1 January 1975; until then the Phantom FG.1 had been operating with the Royal Navy only. On 3 March 1975, a Phantom crashed into a nearby house, with both pilot and navigator ejecting. The Queen visited the station on 30 June 1976.[17]

Tornados

Panavia Tornado F3 squadrons began to form from November 1984, namely No. 229 OCU/No. 65 Squadron.[18] Tornado training took place until April 1987, when the Phantoms left (to RAF Leuchars) and Coningsby had the first (No. 29(F) Squadron) Tornado air defence squadron.[19] To accommodate these new aircraft, extensive hardened aircraft shelters (HAS) and support facilities were built.[18] No. 5 Squadron arrived in January 1988, having previously operated the English Electric Lightning.[20]

During the Gulf War, Tornados from Coningsby were based for three months at Dhahran International Airport to participate in Operation Granby. Tornado engines were serviced on the northern section of the former RAF Woodhall Spa, denoted as RAF Woodhall.[21][22]

Jaguars

 
SEPECAT Jaguar GR.3A XX119 was the last Jaguar to arrive at RAF Cosford from Coningsby on 2 July 2007.

With the running down of RAF Coltishall in Norfolk, No. 6 Squadron relocated with their SEPECAT Jaguars to Coningsby on 1 April 2006, where it was planned they would operate from until October 2007.[23] However, on 25 April 2007 it was announced by the Ministry of Defence that the Jaguars would be withdrawn from service on 30 April.[24] May 2007 saw No. 6 Squadron flying their Jaguars to RAF Cosford where they would be utilised by No. 1 SoTT.[25] No. 6 Squadron disbanded on 31 May 2007.[26] Deliveries continued in June and July, with the last Jaguar to arrive at Cosford from Coningsby being XX119 on 2 July 2007.[23]

Eurofighter Typhoon

 
A Eurofighter Typhoon from No. 3(F) Squadron takes off in 2008.

Coningsby was the first airfield to receive the Phantoms,[10] the Tornado ADV[10] and was the first to receive its replacement, the Eurofighter Typhoon. Typhoon arrived in May 2005 with No. 17 Squadron, after the RAF first publicly displayed the aircraft at Coningsby in December 2004.[27] No. 3(F) Squadron moved to RAF Coningsby where it became the first operational front line RAF Typhoon squadron in July 2007[28] and No. 11(F) Squadron became operational at RAF Coningsby shortly thereafter.[29]

No. 12 Squadron reactivated in July 2018 and is temporarily integrating Qatar Emiri Air Force air and ground crews in order to provide training and support as part of the Qatari purchase of twenty-four Typhoons from the UK.[30]

In October 2019, RAF Coningsby signed a twinning agreement with Fighter Wing 73 (Jagdgeschwader 73) of the German Air Force (Luftwaffe) to enhance opportunities to meet and train with one another. The wing, based at Laage in north-eastern Germany, also operates the Eurofighter Typhoon.[31]

Role and operations

RAF Coningsby's mission statement is 'To develop the future, deliver the present and commemorate the past of the Royal Air Force's combat air power.'[32] The station is home to nearly 3,000 military personnel, civil servants, and contractors.[33] BAE Systems Military Air Solutions, who produce the Typhoon, are also stationed on the airfield with the contract to maintain the aircraft.[34]

Command

The station commander is Group Captain Billy Cooper[35]The station's Honorary Air Commandant is William, Prince of Wales.[36] The station is under the command of No. 1 Group (Air Combat).[37]

Typhoon operations

The Eurofighter Typhoon FGR4 provides the RAF with a multi-role combat capability for air policing, peace support and high intensity conflict. RAF Coningsby is the home to three front-line Typhoon units, No. 3(F) Squadron and No. 11 Squadron as well as No. 12 Squadron which is a joint RAF/Qatar Emiri Air Force squadron. They are accompanied by No. 29 Squadron which is the Typhoon Operational Conversion Unit which trains new crews.[38]

Quick Reaction Alert

Since June 2007, Coningsby's Typhoons have been responsible for maintaining the Quick Reaction Alert (Interceptor) South mission (QRA(I)S). Aircraft and crews are held at a high state of readiness, 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, to respond to unidentified aircraft approaching UK airspace. QRA missions range from civilian airliners which have stopped responding to air traffic control, to intercepting Russian aircraft such as the Tupolev Tu-95 Bear and Tu-160 Blackjack.[39]

Test and Evaluation

The fourth Typhoon unit is No. 41 (Test and Evaluation) Squadron which is part of the Air Warfare Centre. The squadron develops operational tactics and evaluates new avionics and weapons systems. Formerly the Fast Jet and Weapons Operational Evaluation Unit (FJWOEU), it is a merger of the Strike Attack OEU (previously based at MOD Boscombe Down), the Tornado F3 OEU (previously based at RAF Waddington) and the Air-Guided Weapons OEU (previously based at RAF Valley).[40]

Battle of Britain Memorial Flight

Coningsby has been home of the Battle of Britain Memorial Flight (BBMF) and the associated visitor centre since March 1976 when it arrived from RAF Coltishall.[10][41] The BBMF operate one of two remaining airworthy Avro Lancaster bombers in the world, alongside; six Spitfires of various types; two Hurricanes; a Dakota and two Chipmunks, the latter type being used for pilot training.[42]

Force Protection

No. 7 Force Protection Wing Headquarters provides operational planning, command and control to two RAF Regiment field squadrons attached to the wing, No. 63 (Queen's Colour) Squadron (based at RAF Northolt) and No. 2623 (East Anglian) Squadron (RAuxAF) (based at RAF Honington) whose purpose is to protect RAF bases at home and abroad from ground attack.[43] Part of No. 4 RAF Police Squadron, under the command of No. 2 RAF Police & Security Wing at RAF Waddington, is also based at the station and provides policing, security and guarding.[44]

Air Land Integration (ALI) Cell

No. 7 Force Protection Wing includes the Air Land Integration (ALI) Cell, which provides a forward air control capability. The ALI Cell trains and provides Joint Terminal Attack Controllers (JTACS) and Tactical Air Controller Parties (TACPS) to support RAF and joint operations. The ALI Cell moved to Coningsby from RAF Honington in Suffolk and came under the control off the wing in June 2018.[45]

Expeditionary Air Wing

No. 121 Expeditionary Air Wing was formed at Coningsby on 1 April 2006 to create a deployable air force structure.[46][47]

Based units

 
Lancaster PA474 seen in 1988

Flying and major non-flying units based at RAF Coningsby.[48][49]

Royal Air Force

No. 1 Group (Air Combat)

No. 2 Group (Air Combat Support)

British Army

Royal Engineers

Heritage

Station badge and motto

RAF Coningsby's badge, awarded in December 1958, features a depiction of Tattershall Castle. The local landmark, dating from the 15th century, is about 1 kilometre (0.62 mi) north-west of the station.[51]

The station's motto is Loyalty binds me.[51]

Gate guardians

Two preserved aircraft are located at the main gate of RAF Coningsby and act as gate guardians for the station. The first is McDonnell Douglas F-4M Phantom FGR.2 'XT891' wearing No. 41 Squadron markings and the second Panavia Tornado F3 'ZE760' in No .5 Squadron markings.[52][53]

Within the No. 3 Squadron hardened aircraft shelter (HAS) complex, Hawker Siddeley Harrier GR.3 'XW924' is on display and within the No.11 Squadron HAS complex is English Electric Lightning F.6 'XT753'. A further Lightning F.6, 'XS897' (wearing 'XP765') is preserved in the No. 29 Squadron site.[52]

Incidents and accidents

1974 Norfolk mid-air collision: On 9 August 1974, the station commander 42-year-old Group Captain David Blucke, and his navigator Flight Lieutenant Terence Kirkland (aged 28 and from Derry), were killed whilst piloting the Phantom XV493 of 41 Squadron. Flying at low level, it hit a Piper Pawnee crop-spraying plane (from Southend-on-Sea) over Fordham, Norfolk, near Downham Market. Blucke was son of Air Vice-Marshal Robert Blucke who was known for the 1935 Daventry Experiment.[54]

List of Station Commanders

 
BBMF Hangar

The following Station Commanders are listed in the rank held at the time of appointment:

  • Group Captain Bob Judson (2004–2006)
  • Group Captain Stuart Atha DSO (2006–2008)
  • Group Captain J J Hitchcock (2008–2010)
  • Group Captain Martin Sampson DSO (2010–2012)
  • Group Captain Johnny Stringer (2012–2014)
  • Group Captain Jez Attridge OBE (2014–2016)
  • Group Captain Mike Baulkwill (2016–2018)
  • Group Captain Mark Flewin (2018–2020)[55]
  • Group Captain Matt Peterson (2020–2022)[56]
  • Group Captain Billy Cooper (2022–present)[35]

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ Pine, L.G. (1983). A dictionary of mottoes (1 ed.). London: Routledge & Kegan Paul. p. 131. ISBN 0-7100-9339-X.
  2. ^ "Defence Estates Development Plan 2009 – Annex A". GOV.UK. Ministry of Defence. 3 July 2009. p. 18. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
  3. ^ "RAF Coningsby Defence Aerodrome Manual" (PDF). Royal Air Force. Military Aviation Authority. 29 June 2017. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
  4. ^ a b c . Royal Air Force Bomber Command 60th Anniversary. 6 April 2005. Archived from the original on 6 April 2011. Retrieved 17 March 2019.
  5. ^ a b c d Marriott 1997, p. 76.
  6. ^ a b Halpenny, Bruce Barrymore Action Stations: Wartime Military Airfields of Lincolnshire and the East Midlands v. 2, page 64
  7. ^ a b c . RAF Coningsby. Archived from the original on 22 July 2015. Retrieved 17 March 2019.
  8. ^ Halpenny, Bruce Barrymore Action Stations: Wartime Military Airfields of Lincolnshire and the East Midlands v. 2. Page ?
  9. ^ Grounds, Eric (2015). The Quiet Australian: The story of Teddy Hudleston, the RAF's troubleshooter for 20 years. Mereo Books. ISBN 978-1861514783.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i Halpenny, Bruce Barrymore Action Stations: Wartime Military Airfields of Lincolnshire and the East Midlands v. 2. Page 67.
  11. ^ McLelland, Tim (2010). TSR2: Britain's Lost Cold War Strike Aircraft. Ian Allan. p. 115. ISBN 978-1-906537-19-7.
  12. ^ "DEFENCE (Hansard, 4 March 1968)". api.parliament.uk.
  13. ^ Wood 1975, p. 224.
  14. ^ "F.111 Aircraft (Hansard, 13 December 1965)". api.parliament.uk.
  15. ^ Darling, p. 91
  16. ^ "56 Squadron History". 56 Squadron – Home of the Firebirds. Retrieved 6 December 2018.
  17. ^ "The Queen Leaves For Raf Coningsby". Shutterstock. Retrieved 4 July 2019.
  18. ^ a b Halpenny, Bruce Barrymore Action Stations: Wartime Military Airfields of Lincolnshire and the East Midlands v. 2. Page 221.
  19. ^ Halpenny, Bruce Barrymore Action Stations: Wartime Military Airfields of Lincolnshire and the East Midlands v. 2. Page 222.
  20. ^ "History". Tornado Data. Retrieved 4 July 2017.
  21. ^ Historic England. "RAF Woodhall Spa, Tattershall Thorpe (1432038)". Research records (formerly PastScape). Retrieved 28 May 2013.
  22. ^ "Thorpe Camp". Retrieved 28 May 2013.
  23. ^ a b "SEPECAT Jaguar – History". Thunder and Lightnings. Retrieved 15 October 2021.
  24. ^ Dennis, Andrew (20 February 2019). "Jaguar: The Accidental Cold War Warrior". Royal Air Force Museum. Retrieved 15 October 2021.
  25. ^ "The End of Jaguar Operations, RAF Coningsby". Target Aviation Photography. Retrieved 15 October 2021.
  26. ^ "2003 – 2007". 6 Squadron Association. 13 January 2017. Retrieved 15 October 2021.
  27. ^ . BAE Systems plc. 1 April 2005. Archived from the original on 11 March 2006. Retrieved 17 October 2006.
  28. ^ "Typhoon Goes Operational". Ministry of Defence. 11 July 2007. Retrieved 7 June 2019.
  29. ^ RAF Coningsby squadrons retrieved 29 December 2008
  30. ^ "Joint UK-Qatari Typhoon squadron stands up as defence relationship deepens". GOV.UK. Ministry of Defence. 24 July 2018. Retrieved 24 July 2018.
  31. ^ "RAF Coningsby Twinned with German Eurofighter Wing". Royal Air Force. 17 October 2019. Retrieved 22 October 2019.
  32. ^ . RAF Coningsby. Archived from the original on 3 July 2017. Retrieved 4 March 2019.
  33. ^ "RAF Coningsby – The Station". Royal Air Force. Retrieved 4 March 2019.
  34. ^ "Eurofighter contract secures jobs". BBC. 4 March 2009. Retrieved 4 July 2019.
  35. ^ a b "Station Commander Handover". Royal Air Force. 7 October 2022. Retrieved 17 April 2023.
  36. ^ . Rafregt.org.uk. Archived from the original on 2 February 2009. Retrieved 15 October 2008.
  37. ^ "No 1 Group". Royal Air Force. Retrieved 17 March 2019.
  38. ^ "RAF Coningsby". Royal Air Force. Retrieved 16 September 2020.
  39. ^ "RAF Coningsby: At the Cutting Edge of the Typhoon Force". Forces.net. 17 April 2019. Retrieved 4 July 2019.
  40. ^ "Eurofighter Typhoon enhancement programme: our crucial role". Qinetiq. 19 January 2018. Retrieved 29 June 2019.
  41. ^ Battle of Britain Memorial Flight Visitor Centre
  42. ^ "Prince William takes to skies at Battle of Britain memorial". BBC. 22 September 2015. Retrieved 4 July 2017.
  43. ^ "Force Protection". Royal Air Force. Retrieved 20 October 2018.
  44. ^ "4 RAF Police (Typhoon) Squadron". Royal Air Force. Retrieved 18 April 2023.
  45. ^ "Air Land Integration (ALI) Cell" (PDF). One to One - the RAF Coningsby Journal. Issue 2: 7. 2018.
  46. ^ Cotter 2008, p. 33.
  47. ^ . Royal Air Force. 17 September 2015. Archived from the original on 1 January 2018. Retrieved 16 July 2017.
  48. ^ "RAF Coningsby – Who's Based Here". Royal Air Force. Retrieved 18 April 2023.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  49. ^ "An introduction to...20 Works Group Royal Engineers" (PDF). Wittering View. Lance Publishing Ltd.: 18 Spring 2015.
  50. ^ "FOI(A) regarding current RAF 'Forces'" (PDF). What do they know?. 14 June 2021. Retrieved 14 June 2021.
  51. ^ a b "RAF Coningsby". RAF Heraldry Trust. Retrieved 17 March 2019.
  52. ^ a b "RAF Coningsby, Lincolnshire". Demobbed - Out of Service British Military Aircraft. February 2019. Retrieved 17 March 2019.
  53. ^ "Preserved Aircraft Information". Bomber County Aviation Resource. Retrieved 17 March 2019.
  54. ^ "Collision over Norfolk". Flight International. IPC Transport Press Ltd. 106 (3413): 146. 15 August 1974.
  55. ^ "RAF Coningsby Welcomes New Station Commander". Forces Network. 18 October 2018. Retrieved 17 March 2019.
  56. ^ "Group Captain Matt Peterson in command at RAF Coningsby", Horncastle News, 7 May 2020, retrieved 4 October 2020

Bibliography

External links

  • Official website  
  • OnetoOne Online – RAF Coningsby station magazine
  • RAF Coningsby Defence Aerodrome Manual
  • UK Military Aeronautical Information Publication – Coningsby (EGXC)

coningsby, royal, force, coningsby, iata, icao, egxc, royal, force, station, located, kilometres, south, west, horncastle, kilometres, north, west, boston, east, lindsey, district, lincolnshire, england, main, operating, base, home, three, front, line, eurofig. Royal Air Force Coningsby or RAF Coningsby IATA QCY ICAO EGXC is a Royal Air Force RAF station located 13 7 kilometres 8 5 mi south west of Horncastle and 15 8 kilometres 9 8 mi north west of Boston in the East Lindsey district of Lincolnshire England It is a Main Operating Base of the RAF and home to three front line Eurofighter Typhoon FGR4 units No 3 Squadron No 11 Squadron and No 12 Squadron In support of front line units No 29 Squadron is the Typhoon Operational Conversion Unit and No 41 Squadron is the Typhoon Test and Evaluation Squadron Coningsby is also the home of the Battle of Britain Memorial Flight BBMF which operates a variety of historic RAF aircraft RAF ConingsbyNear Coningsby Lincolnshire in EnglandA Eurofighter Typhoon takes off from RAF Coningsby Loyalty binds me 1 RAF ConingsbyShown within LincolnshireCoordinates53 05 35 N 000 09 58 W 53 09306 N 0 16611 W 53 09306 0 16611 Coordinates 53 05 35 N 000 09 58 W 53 09306 N 0 16611 W 53 09306 0 16611TypeMain Operating BaseArea420 hectares 1 000 acres 2 Site informationOwnerMinistry of DefenceOperatorRoyal Air ForceControlled byNo 1 Group Air Combat Open tothe publicAccess to BBMF Hangar onlyConditionOperationalWebsiteOfficial websiteSite historyBuilt1940 1940 In use1940 presentGarrison informationCurrentcommanderGroup Captain Billy CooperOccupantsNo 3 Squadron No 11 Squadron No 12 Squadron No 29 Squadron OCU No 41 Test and Evaluation Squadron Battle of Britain Memorial FlightSee Based units section for full list Airfield informationIdentifiersIATA QCY ICAO EGXC WMO 03391Elevation24 feet 7 m AMSLRunwaysDirection Length and surface07 25 2 744 metres 9 003 ft Asphalt and ConcreteSource RAF Coningsby Defence Aerodrome Manual 3 Contents 1 History 1 1 Second World War 1 2 Post war 1 3 Jet aircraft 1 4 Phantoms 1 5 Tornados 1 6 Jaguars 1 7 Eurofighter Typhoon 2 Role and operations 2 1 Command 2 2 Typhoon operations 2 2 1 Quick Reaction Alert 2 2 2 Test and Evaluation 2 3 Battle of Britain Memorial Flight 2 4 Force Protection 2 4 1 Air Land Integration ALI Cell 2 5 Expeditionary Air Wing 3 Based units 3 1 Royal Air Force 3 2 British Army 4 Heritage 4 1 Station badge and motto 4 2 Gate guardians 5 Incidents and accidents 6 List of Station Commanders 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Citations 8 2 Bibliography 9 External linksHistory EditSecond World War Edit Plans for an airfield at Coningsby began in 1937 as part of the RAF s expansion plan However progress in the compulsory purchase of the land was slow and delayed the start of work for two years 4 The station opened during the Second World War on 4 November 1940 under No 5 Group part of RAF Bomber Command 5 6 7 The first flying unit No 106 Squadron with the Handley Page Hampden medium bomber arrived in February 1941 with active operations taking place the following month when four Hampdens bombed Cologne in Germany 7 The squadron was joined in April 1941 by No 97 Squadron equipped with Avro Manchester medium bombers 6 5 In May 1942 aircraft from Coningsby participated in the Thousand Bomber raid on Cologne 7 The original grass runways were found to be unsuitable for heavy bomber operations so the station was closed for nearly a year between September 1942 and August 1943 whilst paved runways were laid in preparation for accommodating such aircraft At the same time further hangars were constructed 4 5 Three Avro Lancaster B IIIs of No 619 Squadron airborne from RAF Coningsby whilst based there during 1944 The first unit to return was the now famous No 617 Dambusters Squadron Equipped with Avro Lancaster heavy bombers the squadron was stationed at Coningsby from August 1943 Due to its specialist nature the Dambusters carried out limited operations whilst at Coningsby with the most notable being Operation Garlic a failed raid targeting the Dortmund Ems canal in Germany when five out of the eight Lancasters on the mission failed to return home As the squadron required more space it moved to nearby RAF Woodhall Spa in January 1944 swapping places with another Lancaster unit No 619 Squadron which itself later moved on to RAF Dunholme Lodge 4 8 Further Lancaster squadrons were based at Coningsby during the final months of the war including No 61 Squadron from RAF Skellingthorpe No 83 Squadron and No 97 Squadron 5 Post war Edit Following the Second World War Coningsby was home to the Mosquito equipped No 109 Squadron and No 139 Squadron then became part of No 3 Group with Boeing Washington aircraft from 1950 On 17 August 1953 52 year old Air Vice Marshal William Brook the Air Officer Commanding of No 3 Group took off from the base in a Gloster Meteor and crashed into a Dutch barn at Bradley Staffordshire 9 Jet aircraft Edit The airfield received its first jet aircraft the English Electric Canberra in 1953 10 During 1956 the station expanded with the runway being extended 10 Avro Vulcans arrived in 1962 then transferred to RAF Cottesmore in November 1964 10 From 1964 to 1966 the station had been initially designated to receive the proposed RAF strike aircraft the advanced BAC TSR 2 10 which was cancelled in April 1965 by the Labour Government The TSR2 was planned to join No 40 Squadron at Coningsby in 1968 to replace the Canberra 11 Phantoms Edit See also McDonnell Douglas F 4 Phantom II in UK service The TSR2 s intended replacement the American General Dynamics F 111 Aardvark was shelved on 16 January 1968 12 when its costs overshot the UK s budget it would have cost 425m for 50 aircraft The TSR2 had large development costs whereas the F 111 also known as Tactical Fighter Experimental or TFX could be bought off the shelf Coningsby was planned to get the F 111K the RAF version of the F 111 also in the 1966 Defence White Paper it was intended that the Anglo French AFVG later the UKVG would replace the TSR2 it did eventually as the Panavia Tornado 50 F 111Ks were planned with 100 AFVGs to enter service by 1970 Denis Healey claimed the F 111s and AFVGs would be cheaper than the TSR2 programme 158 aircraft by 700m As Minister of Aviation throughout 1965 the Labour MP Roy Jenkins had also wanted to similarly cancel the Olympus powered Concorde but the 1962 Anglo French treaty imposed prohibitively steep financial penalties for cancellation the Hawker Siddeley P 1154 and HS 681 were cancelled at the same time 13 AFVGs were also planned to replace the Buccaneer in the Royal Navy Tornados were never flown by the Royal Navy as the carriers for them the CVA 01s were cancelled But the Royal Navy did operate fourteen Phantoms on HMS Ark Royal until the new smaller carriers entered service 48 Phantoms had been designated for the Fleet Air Arm with twenty of these ending up at RAF Leuchars and Ark Royal s Phantoms ended up at Leuchars in 1978 HMS Eagle was never converted to Phantom use as it was deemed too expensive and the carrier was scrapped in January 1972 with its Sea Vixen aircraft Another alternative considered by the Labour government in July 1965 for the TSR 2 was to order Rolls Royce Spey engined French Mirage IV aircraft to be known as the Mirage IVS it would have avionics from the TSR 2 and be partly made by BAC at Warton 14 Phantom FGR 2 XT895 from No 6 Squadron this was the first squadron to get operational Phantoms in May 1969 at Coningsby No 54 F Squadron received the aircraft in September 1969 both squadrons were disbanded in 1974 Spey engined Phantoms the plane the government eventually bought having been ordered in February 1964 for the Fleet Air Arm instead of the P 1154 were chosen in 1966 for the station s future as with the scrapping of aircraft carriers the Phantoms were not needed for the Fleet Air Arm 10 with all RAF Phantom training taking place on the airfield and the station became part of Fighter Command 10 until December 1967 when it joined Air Support Command as the Phantoms were initially in a ground attack role Phantoms first saw operational service with the Fleet Air Arm in 1970 The first Phantom FGR2 Fighter Ground attack Reconnaissance arrived at Coningsby on 23 August 1968 with the first aircrew OCU course No 228 OCU beginning in October 1968 Air defence Phantoms FG1 also entered service in 1969 at RAF Leuchars On 18 May 1970 a Phantom flew from the base non stop to RAF Tengah in Singapore covering 8 680 mi 13 970 km in 14 hours and 14 minutes at an average speed of 602 mph 969 km h In April 1968 RAF Strike Command was formed and the airfield was transferred to No 38 Group 15 No 41 F Squadron joined in April 1972 and stayed until 1977 The other ground attack Phantom squadrons four of them were at RAF Bruggen No 111 F Squadron replaced their Lightnings from RAF Wattisham with Phantoms from 1 October 1974 On 1 January 1975 No 29 F Squadron joined and stayed until 1987 when disbanded On 1 November 1975 No 23 F Squadron joined until February 1976 when moved to RAF Wattisham In March 1976 No 56 F Squadron joined until July 1976 then went to Wattisham 16 Panavia Tornado F3 ZE785 of No 41 Squadron in July 2007 The Phantom s role changed to air defence in October 1974 when the airfield transferred to No 11 Group in Strike Command when the SEPECAT Jaguar situated in Norfolk took over the ground attack role No 111 F Squadron were the first to take the new air defence Phantoms During 1975 the UK s air defence transferred to the Phantom FGR 2 from five squadrons of English Electric Lightnings The UK was covered by NATO Early Warning Area 12 Three Sector Operations Centres were at RAF Buchan Boulmer and Neatishead in the 1960s the UK had the Linesman Mediator radar system which was obsolete by the 1970s No 29 F Squadron formed with Phantoms at Coningsby on 1 January 1975 until then the Phantom FG 1 had been operating with the Royal Navy only On 3 March 1975 a Phantom crashed into a nearby house with both pilot and navigator ejecting The Queen visited the station on 30 June 1976 17 Tornados Edit Panavia Tornado F3 squadrons began to form from November 1984 namely No 229 OCU No 65 Squadron 18 Tornado training took place until April 1987 when the Phantoms left to RAF Leuchars and Coningsby had the first No 29 F Squadron Tornado air defence squadron 19 To accommodate these new aircraft extensive hardened aircraft shelters HAS and support facilities were built 18 No 5 Squadron arrived in January 1988 having previously operated the English Electric Lightning 20 During the Gulf War Tornados from Coningsby were based for three months at Dhahran International Airport to participate in Operation Granby Tornado engines were serviced on the northern section of the former RAF Woodhall Spa denoted as RAF Woodhall 21 22 Jaguars Edit SEPECAT Jaguar GR 3A XX119 was the last Jaguar to arrive at RAF Cosford from Coningsby on 2 July 2007 With the running down of RAF Coltishall in Norfolk No 6 Squadron relocated with their SEPECAT Jaguars to Coningsby on 1 April 2006 where it was planned they would operate from until October 2007 23 However on 25 April 2007 it was announced by the Ministry of Defence that the Jaguars would be withdrawn from service on 30 April 24 May 2007 saw No 6 Squadron flying their Jaguars to RAF Cosford where they would be utilised by No 1 SoTT 25 No 6 Squadron disbanded on 31 May 2007 26 Deliveries continued in June and July with the last Jaguar to arrive at Cosford from Coningsby being XX119 on 2 July 2007 23 Eurofighter Typhoon Edit A Eurofighter Typhoon from No 3 F Squadron takes off in 2008 Coningsby was the first airfield to receive the Phantoms 10 the Tornado ADV 10 and was the first to receive its replacement the Eurofighter Typhoon Typhoon arrived in May 2005 with No 17 Squadron after the RAF first publicly displayed the aircraft at Coningsby in December 2004 27 No 3 F Squadron moved to RAF Coningsby where it became the first operational front line RAF Typhoon squadron in July 2007 28 and No 11 F Squadron became operational at RAF Coningsby shortly thereafter 29 No 12 Squadron reactivated in July 2018 and is temporarily integrating Qatar Emiri Air Force air and ground crews in order to provide training and support as part of the Qatari purchase of twenty four Typhoons from the UK 30 In October 2019 RAF Coningsby signed a twinning agreement with Fighter Wing 73 Jagdgeschwader 73 of the German Air Force Luftwaffe to enhance opportunities to meet and train with one another The wing based at Laage in north eastern Germany also operates the Eurofighter Typhoon 31 Role and operations EditRAF Coningsby s mission statement is To develop the future deliver the present and commemorate the past of the Royal Air Force s combat air power 32 The station is home to nearly 3 000 military personnel civil servants and contractors 33 BAE Systems Military Air Solutions who produce the Typhoon are also stationed on the airfield with the contract to maintain the aircraft 34 Command Edit The station commander is Group Captain Billy Cooper 35 The station s Honorary Air Commandant is William Prince of Wales 36 The station is under the command of No 1 Group Air Combat 37 Typhoon operations Edit A No 11 Squadron Eurofighter Typhoon outside a hardened aircraft shelter at Coningsby The Eurofighter Typhoon FGR4 provides the RAF with a multi role combat capability for air policing peace support and high intensity conflict RAF Coningsby is the home to three front line Typhoon units No 3 F Squadron and No 11 Squadron as well as No 12 Squadron which is a joint RAF Qatar Emiri Air Force squadron They are accompanied by No 29 Squadron which is the Typhoon Operational Conversion Unit which trains new crews 38 Quick Reaction Alert Edit Since June 2007 Coningsby s Typhoons have been responsible for maintaining the Quick Reaction Alert Interceptor South mission QRA I S Aircraft and crews are held at a high state of readiness 24 hours a day 365 days a year to respond to unidentified aircraft approaching UK airspace QRA missions range from civilian airliners which have stopped responding to air traffic control to intercepting Russian aircraft such as the Tupolev Tu 95 Bear and Tu 160 Blackjack 39 Test and Evaluation Edit The fourth Typhoon unit is No 41 Test and Evaluation Squadron which is part of the Air Warfare Centre The squadron develops operational tactics and evaluates new avionics and weapons systems Formerly the Fast Jet and Weapons Operational Evaluation Unit FJWOEU it is a merger of the Strike Attack OEU previously based at MOD Boscombe Down the Tornado F3 OEU previously based at RAF Waddington and the Air Guided Weapons OEU previously based at RAF Valley 40 Battle of Britain Memorial Flight Edit Spitfire Mk IX MK356 inside the Battle of Britain Memorial Flight hangar Coningsby has been home of the Battle of Britain Memorial Flight BBMF and the associated visitor centre since March 1976 when it arrived from RAF Coltishall 10 41 The BBMF operate one of two remaining airworthy Avro Lancaster bombers in the world alongside six Spitfires of various types two Hurricanes a Dakota and two Chipmunks the latter type being used for pilot training 42 Force Protection Edit No 7 Force Protection Wing Headquarters provides operational planning command and control to two RAF Regiment field squadrons attached to the wing No 63 Queen s Colour Squadron based at RAF Northolt and No 2623 East Anglian Squadron RAuxAF based at RAF Honington whose purpose is to protect RAF bases at home and abroad from ground attack 43 Part of No 4 RAF Police Squadron under the command of No 2 RAF Police amp Security Wing at RAF Waddington is also based at the station and provides policing security and guarding 44 Air Land Integration ALI Cell Edit No 7 Force Protection Wing includes the Air Land Integration ALI Cell which provides a forward air control capability The ALI Cell trains and provides Joint Terminal Attack Controllers JTACS and Tactical Air Controller Parties TACPS to support RAF and joint operations The ALI Cell moved to Coningsby from RAF Honington in Suffolk and came under the control off the wing in June 2018 45 Expeditionary Air Wing Edit No 121 Expeditionary Air Wing was formed at Coningsby on 1 April 2006 to create a deployable air force structure 46 47 Based units Edit Lancaster PA474 seen in 1988Flying and major non flying units based at RAF Coningsby 48 49 Royal Air Force Edit No 1 Group Air Combat Combat Air Force Headquarters Combat Air Force 50 No 3 Fighter Squadron Typhoon FGR4 No 11 F Squadron Typhoon FGR4 No 12 Squadron Typhoon FGR4 No 29 Squadron Typhoon FGR4 Typhoon Display Team Air and Space Warfare Centre No 41 Test and Evaluation Squadron Typhoon FGR4 Battle of Britain Memorial Flight BBMF Spitfire Hurricane Lancaster Dakota and ChipmunkNo 2 Group Air Combat Support Air Security Force No 2 RAF Police amp Security Wing No 4 RAF Police Typhoon SquadronCombat and Readiness Force No 7 Force Protection Wing Headquarters No 7 Force Protection Wing Air Land Integration ALI CellBritish Army Edit Royal Engineers 8 Engineer Brigade 170 Infrastructure Support Engineer Group 20 Works Group Air Support 532 Specialist Team Royal Engineers Airfields STRE Heritage EditStation badge and motto Edit RAF Coningsby s badge awarded in December 1958 features a depiction of Tattershall Castle The local landmark dating from the 15th century is about 1 kilometre 0 62 mi north west of the station 51 The station s motto is Loyalty binds me 51 Gate guardians Edit Two preserved aircraft are located at the main gate of RAF Coningsby and act as gate guardians for the station The first is McDonnell Douglas F 4M Phantom FGR 2 XT891 wearing No 41 Squadron markings and the second Panavia Tornado F3 ZE760 in No 5 Squadron markings 52 53 Within the No 3 Squadron hardened aircraft shelter HAS complex Hawker Siddeley Harrier GR 3 XW924 is on display and within the No 11 Squadron HAS complex is English Electric Lightning F 6 XT753 A further Lightning F 6 XS897 wearing XP765 is preserved in the No 29 Squadron site 52 Incidents and accidents Edit1974 Norfolk mid air collision On 9 August 1974 the station commander 42 year old Group Captain David Blucke and his navigator Flight Lieutenant Terence Kirkland aged 28 and from Derry were killed whilst piloting the Phantom XV493 of 41 Squadron Flying at low level it hit a Piper Pawnee crop spraying plane from Southend on Sea over Fordham Norfolk near Downham Market Blucke was son of Air Vice Marshal Robert Blucke who was known for the 1935 Daventry Experiment 54 List of Station Commanders EditThis list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items March 2019 BBMF Hangar Air Chief Marshal Sir Augustus Walker GCB 1951 1954 Air Commodore David Strong CB 1957 59 Air Vice Marshal Michael Le Bas CB CBE DSO AFC 1959 1961 Air Vice Marshal Frank Dodd CBE DFC 1961 1963 Air Chief Marshal Sir John Rogers KCB CBE 1967 1969 Group Captain David Robert Kidgell Blucke 1974 Air Vice Marshal Dennis Allison CB 1974 1976 Air Vice Marshal Derek Bryant CB OBE 1976 1978 Group Captain Christopher Sprent 1978 80 Air Chief Marshal Sir William Wratten CBE CB 1980 1982 Air Commodore Robert Bob Arnott CBE 1982 1984 Group Captain Mike Elsam 1984 1986 Air Marshal Sir Christopher Coville CB 1986 1988 Air Commodore Martin Widdowson 1988 1990 Air Marshal Clifford Spink CB CBE 1990 1993 Air Vice Marshal Peter Ruddock CBE 1999 2000The following Station Commanders are listed in the rank held at the time of appointment Group Captain Bob Judson 2004 2006 Group Captain Stuart Atha DSO 2006 2008 Group Captain J J Hitchcock 2008 2010 Group Captain Martin Sampson DSO 2010 2012 Group Captain Johnny Stringer 2012 2014 Group Captain Jez Attridge OBE 2014 2016 Group Captain Mike Baulkwill 2016 2018 Group Captain Mark Flewin 2018 2020 55 Group Captain Matt Peterson 2020 2022 56 Group Captain Billy Cooper 2022 present 35 See also EditList of Royal Air Force stationsReferences EditCitations Edit Pine L G 1983 A dictionary of mottoes 1 ed London Routledge amp Kegan Paul p 131 ISBN 0 7100 9339 X Defence Estates Development Plan 2009 Annex A GOV UK Ministry of Defence 3 July 2009 p 18 Retrieved 3 March 2019 RAF Coningsby Defence Aerodrome Manual PDF Royal Air Force Military Aviation Authority 29 June 2017 Retrieved 3 March 2019 a b c Bomber Command Coningsby Royal Air Force Bomber Command 60th Anniversary 6 April 2005 Archived from the original on 6 April 2011 Retrieved 17 March 2019 a b c d Marriott 1997 p 76 a b Halpenny Bruce Barrymore Action Stations Wartime Military Airfields of Lincolnshire and the East Midlands v 2 page 64 a b c History WWII to Phantoms RAF Coningsby Archived from the original on 22 July 2015 Retrieved 17 March 2019 Halpenny Bruce Barrymore Action Stations Wartime Military Airfields of Lincolnshire and the East Midlands v 2 Page Grounds Eric 2015 The Quiet Australian The story of Teddy Hudleston the RAF s troubleshooter for 20 years Mereo Books ISBN 978 1861514783 a b c d e f g h i Halpenny Bruce Barrymore Action Stations Wartime Military Airfields of Lincolnshire and the East Midlands v 2 Page 67 McLelland Tim 2010 TSR2 Britain s Lost Cold War Strike Aircraft Ian Allan p 115 ISBN 978 1 906537 19 7 DEFENCE Hansard 4 March 1968 api parliament uk Wood 1975 p 224 F 111 Aircraft Hansard 13 December 1965 api parliament uk Darling p 91 56 Squadron History 56 Squadron Home of the Firebirds Retrieved 6 December 2018 The Queen Leaves For Raf Coningsby Shutterstock Retrieved 4 July 2019 a b Halpenny Bruce Barrymore Action Stations Wartime Military Airfields of Lincolnshire and the East Midlands v 2 Page 221 Halpenny Bruce Barrymore Action Stations Wartime Military Airfields of Lincolnshire and the East Midlands v 2 Page 222 History Tornado Data Retrieved 4 July 2017 Historic England RAF Woodhall Spa Tattershall Thorpe 1432038 Research records formerly PastScape Retrieved 28 May 2013 Thorpe Camp Retrieved 28 May 2013 a b SEPECAT Jaguar History Thunder and Lightnings Retrieved 15 October 2021 Dennis Andrew 20 February 2019 Jaguar The Accidental Cold War Warrior Royal Air Force Museum Retrieved 15 October 2021 The End of Jaguar Operations RAF Coningsby Target Aviation Photography Retrieved 15 October 2021 2003 2007 6 Squadron Association 13 January 2017 Retrieved 15 October 2021 BAE Systems bids farewell to 17 R Sqn as they head for new home at RAF Coningsby BAE Systems plc 1 April 2005 Archived from the original on 11 March 2006 Retrieved 17 October 2006 Typhoon Goes Operational Ministry of Defence 11 July 2007 Retrieved 7 June 2019 RAF Coningsby squadrons retrieved 29 December 2008 Joint UK Qatari Typhoon squadron stands up as defence relationship deepens GOV UK Ministry of Defence 24 July 2018 Retrieved 24 July 2018 RAF Coningsby Twinned with German Eurofighter Wing Royal Air Force 17 October 2019 Retrieved 22 October 2019 About us RAF Coningsby Archived from the original on 3 July 2017 Retrieved 4 March 2019 RAF Coningsby The Station Royal Air Force Retrieved 4 March 2019 Eurofighter contract secures jobs BBC 4 March 2009 Retrieved 4 July 2019 a b Station Commander Handover Royal Air Force 7 October 2022 Retrieved 17 April 2023 RAF Regiment Association Official Site Rafregt org uk Archived from the original on 2 February 2009 Retrieved 15 October 2008 No 1 Group Royal Air Force Retrieved 17 March 2019 RAF Coningsby Royal Air Force Retrieved 16 September 2020 RAF Coningsby At the Cutting Edge of the Typhoon Force Forces net 17 April 2019 Retrieved 4 July 2019 Eurofighter Typhoon enhancement programme our crucial role Qinetiq 19 January 2018 Retrieved 29 June 2019 Battle of Britain Memorial Flight Visitor Centre Prince William takes to skies at Battle of Britain memorial BBC 22 September 2015 Retrieved 4 July 2017 Force Protection Royal Air Force Retrieved 20 October 2018 4 RAF Police Typhoon Squadron Royal Air Force Retrieved 18 April 2023 Air Land Integration ALI Cell PDF One to One the RAF Coningsby Journal Issue 2 7 2018 Cotter 2008 p 33 121 Expeditionary Air Wing Training Royal Air Force 17 September 2015 Archived from the original on 1 January 2018 Retrieved 16 July 2017 RAF Coningsby Who s Based Here Royal Air Force Retrieved 18 April 2023 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link An introduction to 20 Works Group Royal Engineers PDF Wittering View Lance Publishing Ltd 18 Spring 2015 FOI A regarding current RAF Forces PDF What do they know 14 June 2021 Retrieved 14 June 2021 a b RAF Coningsby RAF Heraldry Trust Retrieved 17 March 2019 a b RAF Coningsby Lincolnshire Demobbed Out of Service British Military Aircraft February 2019 Retrieved 17 March 2019 Preserved Aircraft Information Bomber County Aviation Resource Retrieved 17 March 2019 Collision over Norfolk Flight International IPC Transport Press Ltd 106 3413 146 15 August 1974 RAF Coningsby Welcomes New Station Commander Forces Network 18 October 2018 Retrieved 17 March 2019 Group Captain Matt Peterson in command at RAF Coningsby Horncastle News 7 May 2020 retrieved 4 October 2020 Bibliography Edit Cotter Jarrod 2008 Royal Air Force celebrating 90 years Stamford UK Key Publishing Ltd ISBN 978 0 946219 11 7 Darling Kev 2012 RAF Strike Command 1968 2007 Aircraft Men and Action Pen amp Sword ISBN 978 1848848986 Bruce Barrymore Halpenny 1991 Action Stations Wartime Military Airfields of Lincolnshire and the East Midlands v 2 Patrick Stephens ISBN 978 1852604059 Marriott Leo 1997 British Military Airfields Then and Now Shepperton Surrey Ian Allan Publishing ISBN 978 0 7110 2515 8 Wood Derek 1975 Project Cancelled London Macdonald and Jane s ISBN 0 356 85109 5 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to RAF Coningsby Official website OnetoOne Online RAF Coningsby station magazine RAF Coningsby Defence Aerodrome Manual UK Military Aeronautical Information Publication Coningsby EGXC Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title RAF Coningsby amp oldid 1150539757, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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