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RNAS Stretton (HMS Blackcap)

Coordinates: 53°20′42″N 2°31′31″W / 53.34500°N 2.52528°W / 53.34500; -2.52528
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Royal Navy Air Station Stretton

HMS Blackcap
Part of Fleet Air Arm (FAA)
Near Warrington, Cheshire, England
RNAS Stretton
Current site of RNAS Stretton
Coordinates53°20′42″N 2°31′31″W / 53.34500°N 2.52528°W / 53.34500; -2.52528
TypeNaval Air Station
Site history
Built1942
In use1942–1958

Royal Naval Air Station Stretton (HMS Blackcap), was an airfield in the village of Appleton Thorn, close to the village of Stretton, south of Warrington, in Cheshire, England.

The airfield was southwest of junction 9 of the present-day M56 motorway.

World War II

RNAS Stretton was originally planned as a Royal Air Force night-fighter station to protect Liverpool and Manchester from Luftwaffe air raids during the Second World War. But changes in German tactics meant that the airfield was not required, so it was transferred to the Admiralty on completion; three runways and numerous hangars had been built.

HMS Blackcap was commissioned on 1 June 1942 and forty-one Fleet Air Arm Squadrons were based there for varying periods, some aircraft being flown directly to and from aircraft carriers operating in the Irish Sea and other nearby waters.

Fairey Aviation used two large A1 (aircraft production) hangars on the northeast edge of the airfield for the modification, repair and flight-testing of Barracudas, Fireflies and Fulmars before they were dispatched to their operational squadrons. From 1944 HMS Blackcap was also used as an Aircraft Maintenance Yard, a large hangar complex being constructed to the northwest of the airfield for this activity.

Post-war operations

At the end of the war American Naval Aircraft were flown into Blackcap to be broken up for disposal. The Aircraft Maintenance Yard meant that the airfield continued to operate and, at its peak, handled one third of all Fleet Air Arm Aircraft and all its spare engines.

Seafire F.XVIIs of 1831 Squadron RNVR at Stretton in 1950

In 1947 the Fleet Air Arm decided to form Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve Squadrons. The first to be based at Stretton was 1831 Naval Air Squadron, a fighter squadron, which was reformed here on 1 June 1947, initially equipped with Supermarine Seafire fighters and a single North American Harvard trainer.[1]

Fairey Firefly T.3 of 1841 Squadron in September 1952

It was joined on 18 August 1952 by 1841 Naval Air Squadron, an anti-submarine squadron equipped with the Fairey Firefly. Together, these Squadrons comprised the Fleet Air Arm's Northern Air Division which was formed at Stretton on 1 June 1952 and disbanded there on 10 March 1957 together with its constituent units.

767 Naval Air Squadron who operated Supermarine Attackers was also based in Stretton. One notable incident included an Attacker FB Mk.1, WA535 which crashed on 5 February 1953 near Winwick, killing Commissioned Pilot RE Collingwood (aged 22). A second fatal accident took place on 10 November 1955 in an Attacker FB Mk2 WP281 172ST which crashed near RNAS Stretton while avoiding a collision with a Percival Sea Prince. The pilot was Lt Cmdr CJ Lavender DSC (aged 34). He is commemorated in the churchyard at Appleton Thorn.

The last squadron based at HMS Blackcap was 728B Naval Air Squadron, formed on 13 January 1958 to operate Fairey Firefly U.8 target drones. The squadron moved in February 1958 to HMS Falcon, Hal Far, Malta.[2]

The airfield was closed on 4 November 1958.[3]

Personnel

WRNS' checking a Vought Chesapeake at RNAS Stretton, 1943.

On 31 May 1943 three WRNS ratings and three Naval Airmen were killed as the truck in which they were travelling lost control and overturned.[4] The Wrens were returning from a local dance to the wrennery at HMS Blackcap.

Five of the deceased were buried by their families in their home towns, WREN Anne McCormick, aged 29, was buried by the Royal Navy with full military honours, in the graveyard of the local church – St Cross Church, Appleton Thorn.

The Manchester branch of the Fleet Air Arm Association continue to celebrate the life of Anne McCormick in the annual remembrance service held at St Cross Church in June.

There are a total of 11 'war graves' in St Cross churchyard, of personnel from HMS Blackcap, including those of two Free Dutch Naval Officers serving in the Fleet Air Arm.[5]

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ Williams Aeroplane Monthly December 1979, p. 627.
  2. ^ Ferguson 2008, p. 202.
  3. ^ Ferguson 2008, p. 203.
  4. ^ "In Memoriam – Wren Anne McCormick". Royal Navy Research Archive. Retrieved 4 April 2008.
  5. ^ "Dutch War Graves Appleton Thorn". Retrieved 25 November 2019.

Bibliography

  • Ferguson, Aldon. Cheshire Airfields in the Second World War, Newbury, UK: Countryside Books, 2008. ISBN 978-1-85306-927-7.
  • Smith, David J., Action Stations – 3 – Wales & the North-West, Patrick Stephens, Cambridge, 1981, ISBN 0-85059-485-5
  • Surtivant, Ray. The Squadrons of the Fleet Air Arm, Air-Britain, Tonbridge, 1994, ISBN 0-85130-223-8
  • Williams, Ray. "The Navy's Northern Reservists: Part One". Aeroplane Monthly, December 1979, Vol. 7, No. 12. pp. 627–631