RAF Alma Park

Coordinates: 52°55′26″N 0°36′09″W / 52.92389°N 0.60250°W / 52.92389; -0.60250
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Royal Air Force Alma Park
Located Near Grantham, Lincolnshire, England
File:RAFRegtbadge.png
Crest of the RAF Regiment
Coordinates52°55′26″N 0°36′09″W / 52.92389°N 0.60250°W / 52.92389; -0.60250
TypeDisestablished Military Headquarters
(Non flying station)
Site information
OwnerPrivate ownership
Controlled byRoyal Air Force
ConditionDemolished and replaced by an extensive modern trading estate
Site history
Built18th century
(Converted for RAF use in Dec 1941)
In use1941 - 1946
Battles/warsWorld War II
Garrison information
GarrisonHeadquarters Royal Air Force Regiment

RAF Alma Park was a Royal Air Force corps headquarters and training facility during the Second World War and is notable as the birthplace of the Royal Air Force Regiment. Alma Park is located 2 miles (3.3 kilometres) north east of the centre of Grantham, Lincolnshire, England.

The headquarters were established in Alma House (an 18th-century stately home) and its grounds known as Alma Park. The site was requisitioned by the Air Ministry for the duration of the Second World War and operated between December 1941 and August 1946 when it closed.

Post-war, the original house and its grounds were demolished and the land is now in use as a modern trading estate, with only a few acres of open parkland remaining.

History

As early as the 1920s the RAF had formed small airfield defence units but traditionally the role of ground defence had predominantly been handled by detachments of regular army personnel. It became evident in the aftermath of the Dunkirk evacuation that the army did not have the resources, personnel or expertise to continue supporting the growing number of UK and overseas RAF airfields and the decision was taken to form a dedicated RAF defence force.

The search for a suitable headquarters and training site settled on Alma House in Grantham and the Air Ministry requisitioned the estate in the autumn of 1941.[1] The headquarters were established on 14 December, 1941, although the Corps of the RAF Regiment was not formally established until 1 February, 1942 under Royal Warrant from George VI.

During World War I in November 1915 the Alma Park estate, then known as Harrowby Camp, together with Belton Park had been a training centre for the Machine Gun Corps[2] and together the two adjoining estates had housed and trained 18,000 men.

Although some RAF Regiment training took place on the parkland at Alma Park the corps rapidly expanded to in excess of 66,000 personnel organised into 280 squadrons and there was not room to accommodate them onsite. The first RAF Regiment depot accommodation barracks were established instead at adjoining RAF Belton Park and nearby airfields at RAF Folkingham and RAF North Witham.

RAF Alma Park closed in 1946[3] along with RAF Belton Park and the headquarters and depot of the RAF Regiment were combined and relocated to RAF Catterick where they remained until 1994 when they relocated to its current home at RAF Honington.

Alma Park today

No trace of the original Alma House remains, having been demolished post-war. The majority of the site is now covered by the modern Alma Park Trading Estate although a small portion of the original open parkland remains as a rough heathland with pathways.

The prefabricated buildings at RAF Alma Park had remained in use as council living accommodation until the late 1960s when the area was designated as an area for light industry. In 1970 Barrats/Janes Ltd started building the Polygon Estate followed by Jelsons building on the Kenilworth Road side of Harrowby Lane in 1973.[4]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Alma Park (Alma House)". RAF Lincolnshire Info. Retrieved 22 October 2014.
  2. ^ MGC history
  3. ^ http://www.raf-lincolnshire.info/almapark/almapark.htm
  4. ^ Post war building

External links