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  • ...th those of Newport, Cardiff, Llandaff, Abergavenny, Caerphilly and Usk by force.<ref>{{cite web | publisher = The Bull Inn, Caerleon, June 2007 | url = htt ...ut on the other side, protected by meadow and woods, it was remarkable for royal palaces, so that it imitated Rome in the golden roofs of its buildings... F
    13 KB (2,035 words) - 17:30, 28 January 2016
  • ...he Americas, while the neighbouring town of Devonport grew as an important Royal Naval shipbuilding and dockyard town. The city's naval importance later led The eastern part of the Hoe is dominated by the Royal Citadel, while the western part provides open space for the townsfolk. In
    30 KB (4,675 words) - 16:43, 2 April 2016
  • ...stbury Park, the estate purchased by David Carnegie in 1857. The Royal Air Force took over the site in 1939 for the use of RAF Coastal Command which made us
    18 KB (2,707 words) - 08:59, 20 April 2017
  • ...lly avoided demolition in January 1930, after the visit by a member of the Royal Society of Arts to choose the buildings that should be conserved. The Great ...me a college in 1948 and included plaques with the crests of all Royal Air Force squadrons involved in the Battle of Britain as a memorial.<ref>Bowlt 1994,
    23 KB (3,664 words) - 19:27, 9 November 2016
  • ...stands. Uxbridge also houses the Battle of Britain Bunker, from where the air defence of the south-east was coordinated during the Battle of Britain. Sit ...ame="Cotton p.23"/> The town had been chosen as it was located between the Royal headquarters at [[Oxford]] and the Parliamentary stronghold of London.<ref>
    32 KB (4,924 words) - 10:50, 28 July 2016
  • The Saxa Vord Royal Air Force radar station closed in 2006, with the loss of more than 100 jobs.<ref>{{ci
    8 KB (1,292 words) - 19:51, 23 April 2019
  • ...ir Force is still one of the main employers in the area. The link with the air base also means that the population of Carterton continually fluctuates. Th
    3 KB (403 words) - 15:09, 17 March 2020
  • ...some organisations or territories associated with the UK and also used by Royal Navy Captain of Merchant Navy Ship || A blue field, with a Union Flag in th ...y, usually ships bearing the prefix ''HMS'' (but see blue ensign), and the Royal Yacht Squadron|| A red cross on a white field with the Union Flag in the ca
    21 KB (3,154 words) - 11:49, 17 November 2023
  • | align="center"|[[File:Royal Coat of Arms of the United Kingdom (HM Government).svg|40px]] ...nsion Island is used by both the Royal Air Force and the United States Air Force.
    20 KB (2,862 words) - 18:49, 9 April 2020
  • ...thought to have died in the blaze. The next day the pirates were met by a force led by the Lewes Prior. During the action, two knights, Sir John Fallisle, ...s the oldest man in the world and the last founder member of the Royal Air Force when he died in July 2009.
    6 KB (1,002 words) - 23:19, 30 November 2010
  • Penzance was granted a number of Royal Charters from 1512 onwards and incorporated in 1614.<ref>Penzance Charter o ...V's Silver Jubilee.<ref>Janet Smith; ''Liquid Assets - the lidos and open air swimming pools of Britain'' ISBN 0-9547445-0-0</ref> Penzance promenade its
    23 KB (3,808 words) - 13:57, 27 January 2016
  • ...he Treaty of Utrecht in 1713. It became an important base for the British Royal Navy, which for most of the colony's history drove the local economy and pr ...d who led the initial incursion into Iberia in advance of the main Moorish force in 711 under the command of Umayyad Caliph Al-Walid I.
    35 KB (5,292 words) - 14:35, 6 April 2020
  • ...rters was established here until the end of the War. Later, the Royal Air Force Technical Training Command billeted staff here (as 'Brampton Park'): the Co
    4 KB (638 words) - 12:44, 24 May 2018
  • ...Dependencies''' until 1 September 2009, when a new constitution came into force giving the three islands equal status within the territory.<ref>http://www. ...restoration of King Charles II in 1660, the East India Company received a Royal Charter giving it the sole right to fortify and colonise the island. The fo
    7 KB (1,098 words) - 23:05, 5 April 2020
  • ...eb|last=Forbes|first=Keith|title=Bermuda Climate and Weather|publisher=The Royal Gazette|url=http://www.bermuda-online.org/climateweather.htm|accessdate=28 ...d VI to colonise Virginia after two previous failures. The King granted a Royal Charter to the Virginia Company and in 1609, a company fleet left England u
    20 KB (3,116 words) - 23:39, 5 April 2020
  • ...vel by flying boats and during Second World War was an important naval and air station, especially providing antisubmarine warfare bases in the Battle of ...d, a joint facility of the [[United States Air Force]] and the [[Royal Air Force]] and of the [[BBC]] World Service Atlantic Relay Station. The island was u
    21 KB (3,264 words) - 22:13, 2 January 2011
  • ...north coast were noted, and the results of the survey were published by a Royal Navy hydrographer in 1781. The first permanent settler was Jonathan Lambert ...zabeth II, visited the islands in 1957 as part of a world tour onboard the royal yacht ''Britannia''.
    17 KB (2,663 words) - 20:44, 28 January 2013
  • ...Diego Garcia to the American military for the purposes of building a large air and naval base on the Island. The strategic location of the island was also ...ary, although a British garrison is maintained at all times, and Royal Air Force long range patrol aircraft are deployed there.
    6 KB (917 words) - 19:13, 5 September 2021
  • [[File:Royal Coat of Arms of the United Kingdom.svg|right|thumb|200px|The Royal Arms]] ...from the United Kingdom to create the Irish Free State, and so in 1927 the Royal and Parliamentary Titles Act 1927 changed Parliament's title to "the Parlia
    33 KB (5,004 words) - 07:34, 9 September 2022
  • The Lordship thereafter became a royal appointment, with a brief interruption when Henry de Beauchamp, 1st Duke of Henry VIII, who developed the Royal Navy and its permanent base at [[Portsmouth]], fortified the island at [[Ya
    23 KB (3,704 words) - 17:07, 29 November 2016
  • Wrexham hosted the [[Royal National Eisteddfod of Wales|National Eisteddfod]] in 1888, 1912, 1933 and ...'s former police station on Regent Street, originally the barracks for the Royal Denbighshire Militia, is now home to Wrexham Museum. The Museum has two gal
    19 KB (3,139 words) - 18:10, 1 September 2022
  • Bangor is also host to the Royal Ulster Yacht Club and the Ballyholme Yacht Club. Tourism is important, part ...e seekers who travelled on the new railway from Belfast to take in the sea air. The town has been the site of a monastery renowned throughout Europe for i
    18 KB (2,945 words) - 19:33, 25 January 2023
  • A large Royal Air Force airfield was built on Tiree during Second World War; this became the airpor
    7 KB (1,180 words) - 07:29, 17 November 2015
  • ...ished on the town's airfield which manufactured aircraft for the Royal Air Force. ...ok the town in 1645 but was obliged to withdraw and returned with a larger force days later and laid siege to the castle. However, the Parliamentarians with
    29 KB (4,437 words) - 09:29, 30 March 2017
  • ...| url=http://www.herefordcitycouncil.gov.uk/html/charters.htm | title=The Royal Charters of the City of Hereford | work=Hereford City Council | accessdate= ...ng the famous Hereford breed. The city was the home of the British Special Air Service (SAS) for many years, although the Regiment relocated to nearby Cre
    10 KB (1,692 words) - 09:41, 30 March 2016
  • ...as since closed and the sites of the large British Army|Army and Royal Air Force ordnance depots that were built to serve these needs have disappeared benea
    11 KB (1,777 words) - 12:50, 23 December 2019
  • ...hen it was an important fortified borough of Wessex with the right to mint Royal coinage. It was enclosed with substantial earthworks by King Alfred the Gre ...g the conflict was concluded here in November 1153. The town was granted a Royal Charter in 1155 by the new king, Henry II; only the second town in England
    11 KB (1,653 words) - 13:14, 19 October 2020
  • [[File:Founder's Building, Royal Holloway, south quad.jpg|right|thumb|200px|Royal Holloway's world-famous ''Founder's'' building]] ...the hill in nearby [[Englefield Green]] commemorates all Commonwealth air force personnel killed in Second World War. It was the first new-built British bu
    6 KB (893 words) - 20:29, 18 June 2014
  • ...northern [[Surrey]], hard by the border with [[Berkshire]]. It is home to Royal Holloway, University of London, the south eastern corner of Windsor Great P ==Air Forces Memorial==
    5 KB (808 words) - 13:00, 1 June 2011
  • The novelist Eric Linklater described Sanday's shape seen from the air as being like that of a giant fossilised bat. During Second World War, the Royal Air Force built a Chain Home radar station at Whale Head on Sanday.
    8 KB (1,299 words) - 08:22, 12 June 2015
  • ...nt which was given the go ahead in 1988. An Act of Parliament had to be in force to allow breaking through of the foreshore owned by the crown. A whole new ...period of growth and elegant development continued for several decades. A royal visit by King George V and Queen Mary in March 1935 is commemorated by a pl
    35 KB (5,481 words) - 07:14, 19 September 2019
  • .../ref> and the "Iron Burgh". Coatbridge also had a notorious reputation for air pollution and the worst excesses of industry. By the time of the 1920s howe ...ef>''Lanarkshire - An Inventory Of The Prehistoric And Roman Monuments'' - Royal Commission On The Ancient And Historical Monuments Of Scotland. HMSO - RCHM
    27 KB (4,173 words) - 21:53, 27 January 2016
  • ...am Hamilton, to be a whaling centre, though by 1797 it was developing as a Royal Navy dockyard which it remained until the dockyard was transferred to Pembr ...Llangwm]], Milford Haven, [[Neyland]], [[Pembroke]] and [[Pembroke Dock]] (Royal Dockyard) Conservation Areas.<ref name="CCW"/>
    48 KB (7,526 words) - 09:22, 30 January 2021
  • During Second World War, RAF Burtonwood served as the largest US Army Air Force base outside the United States, and was visited by major celebrities like H There was a further RAF training camp at Padgate, a Royal Naval air base at Appleton Thorn (RNAS Stretton) and an army base at the Peninsula Ba
    13 KB (2,004 words) - 13:17, 9 August 2021
  • ...and Islands : Locations] ''Welcome to the Learning Zone : Visit & Learn'' (Royal Navy)</ref> Artefacts including arrowheads and the remains of a canoe have ...he Imperial German Asiatic Fleet. During World War II, Stanley served as a Royal Navy station and serviced ships which took part in the 1939 Battle of the R
    30 KB (4,594 words) - 22:47, 5 April 2020
  • ...his was the headquarters for the United States Army Air Forces's Ninth Air Force's IX Troop Carrier Command, being known as Grantham Lodge.<ref>{{cite web|a RAF Spitalgate trained pilots during both world wars, initially as a Royal Flying Corps establishment, but has never been an operational fighter or bo
    14 KB (2,350 words) - 14:21, 7 July 2016
  • ...ced in nearby fields, but this was strengthened in 1941 when the Royal Air Force established both a RAF Regiment base and a glider training facility. In 194
    9 KB (1,360 words) - 08:19, 30 July 2014
  • ...upplies to the Royalist headquarters in Oxford. In January 1645 a Royalist force tried to recapture the bridge and destroy it. The skirmish, known as the Ba In 1941<ref name=Lobel/> the Fleet Air Arm opened Royal Naval Air Station, HMS Hornbill, between Culham railway station and Clifton Hampden v
    8 KB (1,278 words) - 10:12, 16 July 2023
  • .... To the west of the town are a sandy beach, golf links and the Royal Air Force station, RAF Lossiemouth. Lossie Forest is a large pine forest that starts ...as a trading port that the Elgin Burgesses used as a counterbalance to the Royal Burgh of [[Forres]]'s trading port of [[Findhorn]]. The dispute with the Ea
    24 KB (3,913 words) - 16:56, 23 August 2011
  • RAF Akrotiri is a major Royal Air Force base on the north edge of the village. It was first built in the mid-1950s
    3 KB (427 words) - 13:06, 23 July 2018
  • ...C) is from the opposite service of the commander, either a Brigadier or an Air Commodore. The current CBF is Air Vice Marshall Graham Stacey and the DCBF is Brigadier Bill Kingdon.
    1 KB (213 words) - 22:45, 31 August 2011
  • ...te of a wartime aircrash and bears the sad remains of a Royal Canadian Air Force Handley Page Halifax bomber. The undercarriage, together with a wooden cros
    7 KB (1,108 words) - 17:09, 31 August 2018
  • ...s Federation from 1958 to 1962. In 1979, Beatles producer George Martin's AIR Studios Montserrat opened and the island attracted world-famous musicians w ...les an hour and damaging over 90 percent of the structures on the island. AIR Studios closed, and the tourist economy upon which the island depended was
    14 KB (2,171 words) - 14:16, 4 December 2022
  • ...o fewer than three Jurats (out of the six Jurats). Appeals are made to the Royal Court of Guernsey (which also exercises some original jurisdiction in crimi ...rganisation Todt and used slave labour to build bunkers, gun emplacements, air-raid shelters, and concrete fortifications. In 1942, the Lager Norderney c
    26 KB (4,127 words) - 14:45, 29 January 2022
  • |name=Royal Wootton Bassett |picture caption=Royal Wootton Bassett
    16 KB (2,478 words) - 15:13, 17 March 2020
  • ...the South Sandwich Islands from 1976 until 1982 when it was closed by the Royal Navy. The Argentine claim over South Georgia contributed to the 1982 Falkla ...ich Islands.jpg|right|thumb|200px|The South Sandwich Islands conspire with air currents to make wave patterns in clouds]]
    24 KB (3,680 words) - 09:21, 6 September 2021
  • ...tilda bequeathed Lambourn and [[Chippenham]] to Hugh de Plucket out of the Royal demesne in 1142 for his aid in The Anarchy of the civil wars against the us ...on, 492d Bombardment Group ("the Carpetbaggers") of the USAAF's Eighth Air Force was returning from an aborted mission. Berkoff maintained control of the pl
    28 KB (4,418 words) - 18:28, 4 December 2019
  • ...on a hillside near Morven on 25 August 1942 while serving in the Royal Air Force.
    1 KB (219 words) - 16:55, 9 March 2018
  • ...RAF Rufforth<ref>[http://www.raf.mod.uk/bombercommand/s63.html Royal Air Force - RAF History Bomber Command (website accessed: 27 July 2010)]</ref> crashe
    2 KB (265 words) - 17:09, 24 October 2011
  • ...n the site of UK military colleges since 1946 and the establishment of the Royal Military College of Science (RMCS) on the Beckett Estate. This college is n ...g and education to experienced officers of the Royal Navy, Army, Royal Air Force, Ministry of Defence Civil Service, and serving officers of other states.
    11 KB (1,587 words) - 17:09, 15 February 2019
  • ...he town.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.newarkairmuseum.org/ |title=Newark Air Museum |work=newarkairmuseum.org |year=2011 [last update] |accessdate=29 Au
    19 KB (2,930 words) - 14:20, 7 July 2016
  • ...own was greatly expanded from 1814 onwards following the construction of a Royal Naval Dockyard. It is the third largest town in Pembrokeshire, exceeded onl ...other Royal Navy vessels. The last ship launched from the dockyard was the Royal Fleet Auxiliary tanker ''Oleander'' on 26 April 1922.
    13 KB (2,054 words) - 23:29, 1 November 2011
  • ...t is the local Balnakeil Craft Village, a rather picturesque old Royal Air Force radar base from the Cold War era. The villagers mainly live sustainably and ...Garvie Range used by aircraft of the RAF, Royal Navy and United States Air Force. A rocky islet resembling a ship is used for bombing practice. Although exp
    15 KB (2,560 words) - 22:12, 24 July 2016
  • ...o put this belief down but it lasted a remarkable time and one of the last force-fires was lit in Helmsdale was about 1818. During Second World War, the Royal Air Force built Loth Chain Home radar station at [[Crakaig]] a few miles South West o
    7 KB (1,177 words) - 18:01, 17 June 2015
  • During Second World War, the Royal Air Force built an airfield at [[Glenegedale]] which later became the civil airport f Islay’s place, exposed to the full force of the North Atlantic, has led to its being the site of a pioneering wave p
    19 KB (3,114 words) - 22:51, 13 March 2020
  • Kennington is a primarily residential area. It is also a Royal manor. ...n 1389. He was paid 2 shillings. The manor house of Kennington remained a royal palace until the time of Henry VIII. Kennington was the occasional residen
    19 KB (2,994 words) - 11:10, 25 January 2016
  • '''Tain''' is a royal burgh in [[Ross-shire]], in [[Easter Ross]]. ...was granted its first royal charter in 1066, making Tain Scotland's oldest Royal Burgh, an event commemorated in 1966 with the opening of the Rose Garden by
    7 KB (1,085 words) - 08:25, 5 June 2016
  • ...by that name still. The airfield was previously shared with the Royal Air Force base RAF Aldergrove, which closed in 2008; the base is now known as Joint H ...site for the airport was established in 1917 when it was selected to be a Royal Flying Corps training establishment during the First World War. The airport
    12 KB (1,794 words) - 23:45, 6 March 2020
  • ...winds, especially strong in winter, are southerly and southwesterly. Gale force winds occur less than 2% of the time in any one year, but gusts of 115 mile <blockquote>"the air is infected by a stench almost insupportable – a compound of rotten fish,
    68 KB (10,888 words) - 15:23, 23 August 2019
  • ...by up to 120 volunteers who trained on a weekly basis and wore a Royal Air Force style uniform. After the breakup of the communist bloc in 1989, the Royal Observer Corps was disbanded between September 1991 and December 1995. Howe
    24 KB (3,726 words) - 20:54, 28 January 2016
  • ...irst hotel in the village started in 1808; it was called "Reeves" (now the Royal Hotel).<ref name="somharbours">{{cite book |title=Somerset harbours, includ ...story|publisher=Winter Gardens|accessdate=24 January 2010}}</ref> the open air pool, with its arched concrete diving board,<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www
    25 KB (3,760 words) - 11:12, 19 September 2019
  • Bury St Edmunds was one of the royal towns of [[East Anglia]]. Sigebert, King of the [[East Angles]], founded a ...arons of England are believed to have met in the Abbey Church and sworn to force King John to accept the Charter of Liberties, the document which influenced
    15 KB (2,401 words) - 13:35, 27 January 2016
  • ...Blitz. Benito Mussolini's airforce proved to be no match for the Royal Air Force, who shot down a fair number of Italian biplanes over the English Channel a ...rthur Balfour, Captain of the Golf Club in 1889, became Captain of the The Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St Andrews in 1894 and Prime Minister (in successi
    11 KB (1,839 words) - 10:57, 5 August 2015
  • ...name="edplow" /> Lowestoft's other museums include the Maritime Museum and Royal Naval Patrol Service Museum, both located in Sparrow's Nest park in the nor ...al Patrol Service, formed primarily from trawlermen and fishermen from the Royal Naval Reserve, was mobilised at Lowestoft in August 1939. The service had i
    28 KB (4,326 words) - 20:34, 13 December 2016
  • ...cern until the Second World War when it was requisitioned by the Royal Air Force. ...before her accessiojn to the throne, when she officially opened the Manor Royal industrial area. Building work continued throughout the 1950s in West Green
    24 KB (3,764 words) - 07:08, 19 September 2019
  • ...he old German custom of defining the limits of the 'peace' of popular open-air courts by stakes and ropes,<ref name=EPNS-AMetc/> the ropes then giving a n ...e term may come from the old French ''raper'', meaning to seize or take by force,<ref name=castles>{{cite web|url=http://www.sussexcastles.com/sussex-timeli
    15 KB (2,352 words) - 11:24, 7 June 2023
  • ...of Gwynedd ordered that the fugitive prince be dragged from the church by force, but his soldiers were beaten back by the local clergy allowing Gruffydd to ...tp://www.coflein.gov.uk/en/site/95305/details/CASTELL+ODO/ "Castell Odo"]. Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales. Retrieved 16 A
    34 KB (5,405 words) - 21:19, 15 April 2016
  • |picture caption=York from the air ...Window whose glass dates from about 1500 and commemorates the union of the royal houses of York and Lancaster. The roofs of the transepts are of wood. That
    42 KB (6,682 words) - 17:02, 26 March 2024
  • ...ing royal nunnery of the kingdom of [[Deira]], and the burial-place of its royal family. ...& Royal Cres.JPG|right|thumb|upright|Captain Cook's statue in front of the Royal Crescent]]
    37 KB (5,686 words) - 20:50, 28 January 2016
  • .../ChannelIslands.aspx |title=Channel Islands |publisher=The Royal Household Royal.gov.uk |accessdate=31 May 2011}}</ref> ...ed in the Royal Guernsey Light Infantry regiment which was formed from the Royal Guernsey Militia in 1916.<ref>{{cite book |last=Parks
    17 KB (2,629 words) - 23:04, 31 January 2022
  • .../ChannelIslands.aspx |title=Channel Islands |publisher=The Royal Household Royal.gov.uk |accessdate=31 May 2011}}</ref> ...ed in the Royal Guernsey Light Infantry regiment which was formed from the Royal Guernsey Militia in 1916.<ref>{{cite book |last=Parks
    22 KB (3,481 words) - 13:22, 24 February 2024
  • ...plar by Henry II in 1160. The Templars were a major international maritime force at this time, with interests in North Devon, and almost certainly an import ...ing the death of Harman's son Albion in 1968,<ref>"Island owner dies after air lift" (source unknown). 24 June 1968</ref> Lundy was put up for sale in 196
    39 KB (6,039 words) - 20:30, 26 November 2023
  • ...1914 and closed 1919.<ref>{{cite book| title = The Birth of the Royal Air Force| first =Ian| last = Philpott| page = 265| year = 2013 | isbn = 97817815933
    12 KB (1,907 words) - 09:44, 30 January 2021
  • ...ormerly 9 Signal Regiment (2 Wireless Regiment pre-1959) and the Royal Air Force's 33 Signals Unit, is based at Ayios Nikolaos. This unit is believed to be ...ommanded by a Royal Signals Lieutenant Colonel, with a number of Royal Air Force and civilian contractors attached.
    3 KB (403 words) - 22:03, 7 January 2018
  • ...and which attracts many visitors for its fair beaches, little villages and air of peaceful contentment. It is also an offshore financial centre. On 6 January 1781, a French invasion force of 2,000 men (of whom half didn't arrive) landed to take over the island. T
    30 KB (4,553 words) - 08:12, 26 September 2015
  • In 1401, a Royal Grant was issued, allowing the men of the town to operate boats between Lon ...t by General Gordon between 1865 and 1879: it is now a museum, partly open-air under the care of the Gravesend Local History Society.<ref>[http://www.grav
    21 KB (3,422 words) - 21:01, 27 January 2016
  • In 1944 a Royal Canadian Air Force Halifax bomber with a full bomb load caught fire over Wallingford. Most of
    4 KB (632 words) - 18:06, 17 February 2019
  • ...small fort. Garrison Fort was built in 1545. Samuel Pepys established the Royal Navy Dockyard in the 17th century. ...ships compelled the little "sandspit fort" there to surrender and landed a force which for a short while occupied the town. Samuel Pepys at [[Gravesend, Ken
    17 KB (2,844 words) - 09:26, 16 November 2022
  • ...e disused former Second World War, Eighth Air Force and post-war Royal Air Force airfield, RAF Bovingdon. ...ircraft was said to be based here, as Bovingdon was the closest Eighth Air Force base to London.
    5 KB (768 words) - 23:16, 16 June 2012
  • Responsibility for the maintenance of the river still resides with the Royal Parks Agency. ...arks/bushy_park/history.cfm |title=History and Architecture |publisher=The Royal Parks |accessdate=2012-02-01}}</ref> It was not universally popular, as it
    10 KB (1,689 words) - 10:44, 25 April 2017
  • ...in France.<ref>[http://www.raf.mod.uk/bombercommand/jul44.html/ Royal Air Force Bomber Command 60th Anniversary Campaign Diary, July 1944 (website accessed
    11 KB (1,714 words) - 23:10, 1 March 2018
  • During the Second World War, the Royal Air Force built a radar station on top of [[Ward Hill, Fair Isle|Ward Hill]] at 712 f
    9 KB (1,352 words) - 17:41, 20 February 2020
  • ...e Falkland Crisis of 1770, five Spanish frigates entered the small British force had to surrender. This edged Britain and Spain closer to war. In 1771, Sp ...also a small breeding area for Elephant Seals at Elephant Point. Royal Air Force Ornithological Society's members did a complete coastal survey in 1995 <ref
    5 KB (673 words) - 23:31, 8 March 2018
  • ...r Air, Kingsley Wood. During Second World War, it was a base for Royal Air Force fighters. Standing where the valley of the [[River Lea]] cuts its way throu ...to Britannia Airways and subsequent merger with First Choice Airways), Dan-Air and Monarch Airlines. In 1972, Luton Airport was the most profitable airpor
    13 KB (2,100 words) - 20:19, 20 March 2020
  • ...departure gates are situated, one is connected to the main terminal by an air-bridge and the other two by the Stansted Airport Transit System people-move ...", which provides indirect uplighting illumination and is the location for air-conditioning, water, telecommunications and electrical outlets. The layout
    10 KB (1,592 words) - 08:27, 1 February 2016
  • ...nearby [[Thorney Island, Sussex)|Thorney Island]] was used as a Royal Air Force base, playing a role in the Battle of Britain. The north of Emsworth at thi
    8 KB (1,386 words) - 20:15, 19 August 2012
  • ...w.englandsgolfcoast.com/</ref> and has hosted The Open Championship at the Royal Birkdale Golf Club. ...to try to rescue those aboard the vessel. The crews battled against storm-force winds as they rowed towards the casualty. The entire crew from the St. Anne
    17 KB (2,657 words) - 22:54, 27 January 2016
  • ...rt of a tour of Yorkshire by King Charles III and Queen Camilla.<ref name="royal visit">{{cite web|url=https://www.itv.com/news/calendar/2022-11-02/king-cha ...Racecourse was chosen as the venue for an airshow, after the world's first air display in Reims, France in 1908. All the world's leading aviators were pre
    27 KB (4,157 words) - 19:48, 25 January 2023
  • ...orning of Pike Sunday, 10 June 1798, during the Irish Rebellion of 1798, a force of United Irishmen, mainly from [[Bangor, County Down|Bangor]], [[Donaghade ...Ireland, with displays by the Red Arrows, Territorial Army and Royal Air Force.
    10 KB (1,573 words) - 15:20, 27 January 2016
  • ...ers, giving them control of the mouth of the Tyne and forcing the Royalist force to flee south, leading to the Battle of Boldon Hill.
    16 KB (2,557 words) - 16:10, 23 December 2018
  • ...er Commissioners who were responsible for shipping in the area. During the air-station years the breakwater was closed to the public and used, for a perio ===The air-station years (1913-1986)===
    8 KB (1,187 words) - 09:48, 30 January 2021
  • ...es, mainly Italian mercenaries, were ejected by a combined Franco-Scottish force under General D’Essé (André de Montalembert, Sieur de Essé) on June 19 ...rld Wars, like the other islands in the inner Firth of Forth. In 1878, the Royal Engineers built batteries on the three corners of the island, designed as s
    21 KB (3,356 words) - 13:24, 5 October 2012
  • ...gh it was not quite the last invasion of all, for in 1797 a rag-tag French force landed in [[Pembrokeshire]], at [[Carreg Gwastad]], near [[Fishguard]] befo During the Second World War Teignmouth suffered badly from "tip and run" air raids.<ref name="hosdev">{{Cite book
    26 KB (4,164 words) - 14:53, 27 January 2016
  • ...nowned for golf and has four courses and links, the most notable being the Royal Lytham & St Annes Golf Club, one of the host courses for the Open Champions ...Clifton Arms" Hotel. Also located there are "The County" and "The Ship and Royal" public houses. Some of the oldest buildings are found in Henry Street and
    22 KB (3,516 words) - 22:51, 27 January 2016
  • Bury is regionally notable for its open-air market, Bury Market, and its popularity has been increased since the introd .... Since moving to Bury the Lancashire Fusiliers were part, in 1898, of the force that relieved Khartoum and fought in the Battle of Omdurman and in 1899–1
    19 KB (3,084 words) - 22:13, 18 September 2019
  • ...rty bird families in total. It is a popular place for birdwatchers, with a Royal Society for the Protection of Birds nature reserve offering spectacular vie ...ed the island. The massacre in July 1575, when the Earl of Essex ordered a force to the island, led by Francis Drake and John Norreys. The English killed hu
    13 KB (1,982 words) - 07:33, 7 November 2017
  • ...p.<ref>Bowlt 1996, p.137</ref> Between 1955 and 1975 the United States Air Force was based at the Ruislip station,<ref>Skinner 2005, p.44</ref> before the U
    24 KB (3,712 words) - 13:46, 28 January 2016
  • ...repaired the bridge upon reaching Manchester, and used it to send a small force into Sale and Altrincham. Their intention was to deceive the authorities in ...members of the Royal Australian Air Force and one member of the Royal Air Force, the pilot and the bomb-aimer were killed.
    21 KB (3,366 words) - 09:25, 19 September 2019
  • ...n) Squadron''. It is run by officers who are commissioned in the Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve (Training Branch), assisted by adult Senior NCO’s and c
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  • ...the Queen's badge flag or the flag of the United Kingdom,<ref>[http://www.royal.gov.uk/MonarchUK/Symbols/UnionJack.aspx Union Jack] - The British Monarchy ...e Commonwealth realms; for example, it is known by law in Canada as the '''Royal Union Flag'''.<ref name=ruf>[http://www.pch.gc.ca/pc-ch/infoCNtr/cdm-mc/ind
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  • During the Irish Rebellion of 1641, Obins Castle was captured by a force of dispossessed Irish led by the McCanns (Mac Cana), the Magennises (Mac Ao ...age.com – A genealogical survey of the peerage of Britain as well as the royal families of Europe
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  • ...irthplace of Second World War airman, Sir Augustus Walker of the Royal Air Force.<ref>{{Cite web|title = An ordinary house, an extraordinary hero|url = http
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  • Sandhurst is known worldwide as the location of the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst (often referred to simply as '''Sandhurst'''). D ==The Royal Military Academy==
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  • ...he Squadron had close links with 42(R) (formerly 236 OCU) of the Royal Air Force before the latter was disbanded in the government defence review in 2010. T
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  • ...iam Smith, William Webb, ''The history of Cheshire: containing King's Vale-Royal entire'', printed by John Poole, 1778</ref> Sandbach has been a market town since 1579 when it was granted a Royal Charter by Elizabeth I at the petition of Sir John Radclyffe of Ordsall who
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  • Southam was a Royal manor until AD 998, when Ethelred the Unready granted it to Earl Leofwine.{ ...as 2028 (Southam) Squadron Air Training Corps, an RAF-sponsored (Royal Air Force) youth organisation for 13- to 20-year-olds. The squadron is based in Milla
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  • ...Royal Air Force Westland Sea King rescue helicopters from Chivenor, three Royal Navy Sea Kings from [[Culdrose]], one RAF Sea King from RAF [[St Mawgan]] a
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  • ...useum.org.uk/ |title=RAF Museum in London & RAF Museum Cosford - Royal Air Force RAF Museum Aviation History - free family fun activities |publisher=Rafmuse
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  • ...has a small harbour and large caravan site which was formerly a Royal Air Force airfield, RAF Ballyhalbert, during World War II. It had a population of 1,0 ...lifetime, Ballyhalbert was home to RAF, Army, Navy and United States Army Air Forces personnel. The airfield was sold to developers in March 1960, and i
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  • ...publisher=London School of Economics | title=Memorandum of Evidence to The Royal Commission on Local Government in Greater London |date=July, 1959 | author= ...dges of the county have remained, while in the depth of the metropolis the royal parks and urban squares provide a weak echo of what once was.
    14 KB (2,209 words) - 22:57, 29 April 2013
  • ...n 1943, it was used by both the Royal Air Force and United States Army Air Force. During the war it was used primarily as a bomber airfield. After the war i
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  • In November 1976, a party from the Argentine Air Force landed on Thule, and, without informing the British Government, constructed ...s/1491073/Secret-Falklands-task-force-revealed.html "Secret Falklands task force revealed"], ''Daily Telegraph''</ref><ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/45
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  • Behind Pucklechurch's Star Inn is the site of an ancient royal villa, where on 26 May 946, King Edmund I of England was murdered by Liofa ...Station Pucklechurch, 1945 to 1959]</ref> There was a non-flying Royal Air Force station called RAF Pucklechurch from 1952 to 1962, when the site was transf
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  • The Rowner estate and HMS ''Sultan'' are on the former Royal Naval air station, first known as RAF Gosport and later as HMS Siskin and gives its n Royal Hospital Haslar, formally the last military hospital of the United Kingdom,
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  • ...Kirkham Prison, an open prison built on part of the site of the Royal Air Force base which closed in 1957.
    8 KB (1,169 words) - 12:36, 13 June 2013
  • ...fficially opened. In 1833 the Commissioners set up the 'Stalybridge Police Force', which was the first of its kind in the country. By this year the populati ...chester]], and subsequently to towns adjacent to Manchester, using as much force as was necessary to bring mills to a standstill. The movement remained, to
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  • ==Air Crash== ...te of a wartime aircrash and bears the sad remains of a Royal Canadian Air Force Handley Page Halifax bomber. The undercarriage, together with a wooden cros
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  • ...rashed on 26 June 1959, can be found close to the summit of Iron Crag <ref>Air Britain Historians ltd [http://www.abpic.co.uk/photo/1194991/], accessed 20
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  • The Royal Air Force maintains a bombing range, known officially as RAF Holbeach, on salt marshl
    7 KB (1,137 words) - 13:03, 6 October 2020
  • ...ational importance during the Second World War; it was home to a Royal Air Force (RAF) airfield and Prisoner-of-war camp.<ref name="AFSB">Airfield Focus 65: ...1932, Air Ministry Announcements, Page 43: The Royal Air Force, Royal Air Force Intelligence, Reorganisation of the Armament and Gunnery School, from 1 Jan
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  • ...chibald Montgomery-Massingberd, personally appealed to King George VI. The Air Ministry relented, redrawing the plans that resulted in building RAF Spilsb ===The Royal Air Force in Spilsby===
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  • ===RAF mid-air collision (1968)=== On 19 August 1968, two Royal Air Force jet aircraft collided at 14,500 feet over the town of Holt. All 7 crew from
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  • ...has developed several times over the years, giving the impression from the air of a series of hooks along the south side of the spit.<ref name=Tansley848> ...n spring and autumn, sometimes in huge numbers when the weather conditions force them towards land.<ref>Elkins (1988) pp. 136–137.</ref><ref>Newton (2010)
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  • ...sed him to keep heading north and warned him that he would not win through force of arms. ...miles south of the town. The town also gives its name to the busy Daventry air traffic control sector.
    17 KB (2,740 words) - 12:25, 8 July 2013
  • ...ng along its eastern perimeter are a chain of ponds - including three open-air public swimming pools - which were originally reservoirs built along the he ...on the southern slopes of Parliament Hill, is the Gospel Oak Lido, an open-air swimming pool, with a running track and fitness area to its north.
    22 KB (3,563 words) - 11:23, 30 January 2016
  • ...August 1944, a Douglas C-54 Skymaster (42-72171) of the United States Army Air Forces, on approach into Glasgow Prestwick Airport in bad weather, crashed ...antic gateway for over half a century. During Second World War the US Air Force had a base at the airport. Though a period of sharp decline in the 1980s an
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  • ...:Prestwick from the air 1.jpg|right|thumb|200px|Prestwick Airport from the air]] ...ce (RAF) facilities (the USAF Military Air Transport Service (MATS) 1631st Air Base Squadron), and in 1953 on the Monkton side of the airport, both used b
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  • ...e winter months runways were essential. This was taken up by the Royal Air Force after the obvious success of the Hatson (Orkney) experiment. *The Air Accidents Investigation Branch recommended a safety audit of City Star Airl
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  • ...ld locally in Burghead Visitor Centre and Elgin Museum and one each in the Royal Museum, [[Edinburgh]], and the British Museum in [[London]]. Much of the fo ...the Morayshire coast in general are heavily dependent on the two Royal Air Force stations, RAF Lossiemouth and RAF Kinloss, which are located at roughly equ
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  • ...barn constructed in the area in 1595 can now be seen in the Chiltern Open Air Museum. In the early part of the 18th century farmland was enclosed in orde ...ding in Ealing Road, opposite St Mary's church, which incorporates an open-air miniature railway.
    9 KB (1,374 words) - 09:02, 21 April 2017
  • ...il 2011 }}</ref> In 1440 Henry VI granted numerous privileges to his joint royal custodian of the two manors, including a daily income of up to 12 shillings While under total royal control following Henry VIII's full annexation of the manor into the Honour
    17 KB (2,609 words) - 11:49, 27 February 2018
  • ...prospered, the inns in particular. Until recently the large stables at the Royal Oak Hotel could be seen. ...Swynnerton. It is often used by the Air Training Corps and the Army Cadet Force.
    8 KB (1,302 words) - 12:39, 8 August 2013
  • ...oldiers passed through destined for the Western Front. In 1938 a Royal Air Force training camp was established to train technicians in maintenance and repai
    3 KB (488 words) - 12:41, 8 August 2013
  • ...r is used by the United States Air Force, as the headquarters of its 100th Air Refueling Wing and 352nd Special Operations Group. ...hall Treasure. In 1934, Mildenhall was the start point of the MacRobertson Air Race to Melbourne, in Australia.
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  • On 12 July 1944 a Royal Air Force Supermarine Spitfire fighter crashed at Greenlands Farm, off the Keymer Roa
    13 KB (2,094 words) - 20:25, 29 January 2021
  • ...order seven miles east of [[Crowborough]] and about seven miles south of [[Royal Tunbridge Wells|Tunbridge Wells]]. Other nearby villages include [[Ticehurs ...ation is on the line from [[London]] (Charing Cross) to [[Hastings]] via [[Royal Tunbridge Wells|Tunbridge Wells]], and was opened in 1851 by the South East
    7 KB (1,050 words) - 11:00, 19 September 2019
  • ...everal levels; a wild open space with interesting wildlife; as a breath of air off the sea away from the town; on the Marine Drive around its circumferenc ...ttp://www.llandudnochurches.org.uk/sainttudno.html Saint Tudno] where open-air services are held every Sunday Morning in summer. Nearby are several large
    16 KB (2,683 words) - 10:17, 3 October 2017
  • ===Royal Air Force=== ...ng by Gustav Hamel, an early flying pioneer. The next known use was by the Royal Flying Corps who used the same fields between 1914 and 1918 as a staging po
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  • The Royal National Lifeboat Institution operates a lifeboat station on Lower Lough Er Near Killadeas, on Lower Lough Erne, is Gublusk Bay, a Royal Air Force base for Short Sunderland and PBY Catalina flying boats during Second World
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  • Maze was the site of HM Prison Maze, formerly a Royal Air Force station (RAF Long Kesh), named after neighbouring [[Long Kesh]]. The prison
    2 KB (249 words) - 07:39, 21 November 2017
  • ...arl of Northampton, Lord Lieutenant of Warwickshire commanded the Royalist force. William Dugdale, acting as a herald, called for the garrison commander to ...pubacc/359/35905.htm |title=The Renegotiation of the PFI-type Deal for the Royal Armouries Museum in Leeds |publisher=Parliament.co.uk |date=12 December 200
    32 KB (5,330 words) - 11:03, 19 September 2019
  • ...rt was utilised as a fighter station, '''RAF Baginton''', by the Royal Air Force. It was damaged in the 1940 Coventry Blitz bombing raid by the Luftwaffe. ...idays. In the late-1980s, Coventry City Council sold the airport lease to Air Atlantique.
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  • ...d.af.mil/DefChal/2002/dc_2002_fact_rafr.htm|title=History of the Royal Air Force Regiment|publisher=USAF Security Forces|accessdate=2009-05-05}}</ref> The R |title=Royal Feud
    17 KB (2,723 words) - 17:55, 30 January 2016
  • ...ancaster, and when Richard III of the House of York became king in 1483, a force was despatched to besiege Bodiam Castle. It is unrecorded whether the siege [[File:Aerial photo of Bodiam Castle.jpg|thumb|300px|Bodiam Castle from the air]]
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  • ...of 270 people on the island, the majority of residents providing a labour force for the pottery works.<ref>Legg (p.72)</ref> After his death, the island wa Since 1964 the island has been host to the Brownsea Open Air Theatre, annually performing the works of [[William Shakespeare]]. The isla
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  • ...thly supply ship to Montevideo, Uruguay, increasing the desirability of an air link to the South American mainland. In 1971, the Argentine Air Force broke the islands' isolation starting with amphibious flights from Comodoro
    9 KB (1,382 words) - 08:10, 1 February 2016
  • |operator=Royal Air Force ...ground/acro.html Falkland Islands Information Portal]</ref> is a Royal Air Force station in the [[Falkland Islands]]. The airbase goes by the motto of "Defe
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  • ...e Lacy. During the Second World War the hall was occupied by the Royal Air Force.
    4 KB (653 words) - 22:00, 18 September 2019
  • ...uxford airfield later became a fighter airfield for the United States Army Air Forces operating P47 Thunderbolt aircraft. In 1972 the Ministry of Defence [[File:Duxford October 2011 Air Show - Flickr - p a h (7).jpg|right|thumb|200px|At the Duxford Airshow]]
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  • ...a mile south of the village is the Silverstone Circuit, a former Royal Air Force Second World War bomber base and now the traditional home of the British Gr
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  • ...marched to Dover, which had been reported impregnable and held by a large force. The English, stricken with fear at his approach had confidence neither in ...ditional troops and their equipment. The solution adopted by Twiss and the Royal Engineers was to create a complex of barracks tunnels about 15 metres below
    17 KB (2,873 words) - 10:21, 30 January 2021
  • The flat carse lands by Bladnoch River were home to a Royal Air Force field of the Second World War. Lane Burn seems to have been diverted for th ...r Force War Graves - geograph.org.uk - 672629.jpg|Kirkinner Cemetery - Air Force war graves
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  • '''The Royal Commission on Ancient and Historical Monuments''' are, or were, three separ *The Royal Commission on Ancient and Historical Monuments and Constructions in Scotlan
    18 KB (2,654 words) - 15:40, 1 February 2016
  • ...ne's, the latter now known formally as the Central Church of the Royal Air Force but popularly known by its old name; in the children's rhyme "''Oranges and *[http://www.raf.mod.uk/STCLEMENTDANES/ Central Church of the Royal Air Force]
    5 KB (805 words) - 23:00, 9 April 2014
  • ...it was home to a USAF heavy bomber squadron, followed by a Royal Air Force air transport squadron, and between 1951 to 1969 by two RAF training squadrons.
    6 KB (938 words) - 22:58, 19 November 2018
  • ...mary school, a doctors' surgery, a golf club. There is a former Royal Air Force bomber airfield (RAF Station Bourn 1940-1945), which today is used for ligh
    9 KB (1,498 words) - 17:42, 12 August 2014
  • ...nsden Charity Air & Car Show]</ref> and Gransden Lodge, a former Royal Air Force station which saw active service in Second World War, but is now a gliding
    4 KB (642 words) - 17:21, 18 May 2018
  • ...age, Oakington Barracks lies empty. Created as RAF Oakington in 1939, the air base closed eventually in the 1970s and was handed over to the army as a ba From 1940 a Royal Air Force bomber airfield, RAF Oakington, was constructed at Oakington covering 540 a
    5 KB (784 words) - 20:48, 13 May 2014
  • ...uadron and the Royal Belgian Air Force. Sections of the concrete track and air-raid shelters can still be seen.<ref name=victoria/>
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  • ...and then RAF Fighter Command until 1966, when the site transferred to the Royal Engineers and became Waterbeach Barracks. The small Museum has now closed, Active community groups include the Scouts and Girl Guides, Army Cadet Force, several playgroups and a play scheme, as well as a Community Association.
    4 KB (659 words) - 11:35, 10 December 2015
  • ...te journal| authorlink=Geoffrey Howard|title=Irish Alphabet: A look at the Royal Ulster Constabulary| journal=Autocar | volume=128 (nbr 3778)| pages=pages 1 ...at these were to be used as supplementary runways by the United States Air Force in the event of a major conflict with the Soviet Union.<ref name="nirs">[ht
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  • ...sed as a storage station for the Royal Air Force and the United States Air Force; since that time it has been used as an army training facility and on occas
    6 KB (928 words) - 20:11, 30 December 2017
  • ...orld War Grimsthorpe Park was used by the Royal Flying Corps and Royal Air Force as an emergency landing ground. During the Second World War the central par
    9 KB (1,546 words) - 22:33, 24 April 2015
  • ...can soldiers based at the airfield (51 Operational Training Unit Royal Air Force was the main unit based at Twinwood Farm) and at Bedford Corn Exchange. The
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  • The airships site was nationalised in April 1919, becoming known as the '''Royal Airship Works'''. ...7 MU. 217 MU, RAF Cardington, produced all the gases used by the Royal Air Force until its closure in April 2000; including gas cylinder filling and mainten
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  • ...1942. The base was used by the Royal Air Force and the United States Air Force until 1993. ...for the rest of the Second World War. After the war, the United States Air Force stayed on during the Cold War.
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  • ...astle in the world. It is famed for its long association with the British royal family and also for its architecture. ...ng which Henry VIII and Elizabeth I made increasing use of the castle as a royal court and centre for diplomatic entertainment.
    68 KB (11,053 words) - 08:51, 20 November 2023
  • ...08</ref> While at the railway, the Duke travelled on a specially prepared "Royal Train", consisting of tank locomotive ''41241'', an LMS Class 2MT, pulling ...om called ''Yanks Go Home'' (set in 1942), in which a group of US Army Air Force pilots arrive by train and alight at the station (Haworth) and are statione
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  • ...e North Atlantic, their tasks included searching for U-boats and acting as air cover for convoys. Several aircraft crashed in the vicinity of the village
    8 KB (1,307 words) - 09:25, 19 December 2017
  • ...terminal. National Air Traffic Services hold the contract for provision of air navigation services at the airport. In 2004 the airport handled 314,375 pa ...F Gibraltar''', also formerly known as '''North Front''', is a [[Royal Air Force]] station on [[Gibraltar]]; the station is a joint civil-military facility
    19 KB (2,993 words) - 08:11, 1 February 2016
  • ...at Middle Hill was closed in the early twenty-first century, and Royal Air Force (RAF) personnel responsible for rigging were no longer based at [[Gibraltar ...ialerectorschool/gallery/gibraltar.cfm|work=raf.mod.uk|publisher=Royal Air Force|accessdate=6 November 2012}}</ref>
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  • ...urgh Castle''' is the crowning glory of the City of [[Edinburgh]]; a grand royal fortress steeped in history which dominates the skyline of the city from it ...reign of King David I in the 12th century, and the site continued to be a royal residence until the Union of the Crowns in 1603. From the 15th century the
    80 KB (12,650 words) - 19:56, 16 May 2018
  • ...d States Air Force base, Kindley Air Force Base, then a United States Navy air station, NAS Bermuda, and is now what is now L F Wade International Airport
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  • ...ritain's defences as home to both fighter and bomber aircraft. Close by, a Royal Ordnance Factory, ROF Pembrey, provided high explosives for Britain's war e Royal Air Force training continues to this day on a bombing range to the west of Pembrey Co
    9 KB (1,442 words) - 10:21, 11 November 2014
  • ...ort. Their construction was at the behest of Lord Palmerston following the Royal Commission on the Defence of the United Kingdom. ...q=%22john%20mirehouse%22%20angle&f=false The Plantagenet Roll of the Blood Royal: The Mortimer-Percy Volume, Marquis of Ruvigny, Reprinted by Heritage Books
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  • The site of the former Royal Air Force airbase, RAF Greenham Common, is to the south-east of the village, surround * [http://www.berkshirehistory.com/villages/greenham.html Royal Berkshire History: Greenham]
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  • ...til it was prorogued in 1972. The Senate chamber was used by the Royal Air Force as an operations room during Second World War. The building was used for th ...Kingdom for the use of this chamber as an operations room by the Royal Air Force during the Second World War."
    12 KB (1,879 words) - 16:55, 21 September 2017
  • ...helicopter,<ref>[http://www.merseyside.police.uk/html/aboutus/departments/air-support/whereabouts/index.htm Merseyside Police]</ref> known as 'Mike One'. ...11.shtml Local] Pager Report</ref> However, the club, unlike its neighbour Royal Birkdale, does not have the capacity to host large events such as The Open
    23 KB (3,705 words) - 22:47, 27 January 2016
  • ...unit, classed as a 'Universal stores' depot and had the official Royal Air Force name, "RAF Handforth No 61 M.U. (Maintenance unit)". The depot opened in 19
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  • During the second world war the summit housed a Royal Air Force radar, a plaque, near the car park is dedicated to those that served there.
    3 KB (422 words) - 23:33, 11 February 2015
  • ...nally built in the 11th century by th new Norman kings, as a projection of royal power in the wild north of England. It is an example of the early motte and ...r, the chapel was used as a command and observation post for the Royal Air Force when its original use was recognised. It was re-consecrated shortly after t
    5 KB (813 words) - 19:52, 10 November 2019
  • ..., and is host to a wide range of events throughout the year, including the Air-Britain Classic Fly-in and smaller airshows. ...r Royal Air Force personnel. The airfield played an important part in the air defence strategy of the United Kingdom during the Second World War. Initial
    11 KB (1,699 words) - 23:33, 21 March 2015
  • ...During the Civil War, Cardiff Castle was initially taken by Parliamentary force, but was regained by Royalist supporters in 1645. When fighting broke out a ...nd World War, little was left except the castle. During the war, extensive air raid shelters were built in the castle walls, able to hold up to 1,800 peop
    54 KB (8,319 words) - 21:35, 27 December 2019
  • ...the surviving ancient woodlands in Britain. A large area was reserved for royal hunting before 1066, and remained the largest crown forest in England after ...boundary of the Hundred of St Briavels]</ref> and after 1668 comprised the royal demesne only. The Forest proper is within the civil parishes of [[West Dea
    26 KB (3,962 words) - 12:19, 10 April 2017
  • ...tion was then switched to building 3,330 Hawker Typhoons for the Royal Air Force. On 8 April 1941 the first test flight of the Gloster E28/39 with a turbo-j *[http://www.raf.mod.uk/history/e281.html Royal Air Force History of the Gloster E28/39/Meteor]
    5 KB (823 words) - 23:00, 28 March 2015
  • ...t Stanley.jpg|right|thumb|300px|right|Stanley Harbour and Stanley from the air. Moody Brook in the distance]] When Argentina invaded the Falklnad islands in 1982, the Royal marine barracks at Moody Brook were a prime target. Lieutenant-Commander S
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  • RAF Odiham, home of the Royal Air Force's Chinook heavy lift helicopter fleet, lies to the south of the village. ...m or Odiham, a small Market-Town, where was formerly a strong Castle and a Royal Palace. The Castle was straitly besieged, Anno 1216, the 18th of King John,
    6 KB (915 words) - 21:24, 4 April 2015
  • ...e Second World War, it was called RAF Ringway, as a base for the Royal Air Force. From 1975 until 1986 it was Manchester International Airport'. During World War II it was the Royal Air Force's base RAF Ringway, and was important in military aircraft production and t
    25 KB (3,639 words) - 22:44, 15 March 2021
  • ...pened and the Royal Air Force 602 Squadron (City of Glasgow) Auxiliary Air Force moved its Wapiti IIA aircraft from nearby Renfrew in January 1933.<ref name ...0s, the airfield housed a large aircraft storage unit and squadrons of the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve.
    15 KB (2,258 words) - 18:45, 26 January 2019
  • The town was granted a Royal Charter in 1450, making the Town of Strathaven a burgh of barony. The town' ...known town centre names. There are two banks, Halifax Bank of Scotland and Royal Bank of Scotland office in the Common Green.
    8 KB (1,233 words) - 16:23, 24 May 2020
  • The airport was originally a Royal Air Force station, ''RAF Castle Donington'', which was decommissioned in 1946. The si ...way was added to enable the airport to handle long-haul flights, and a new air traffic control tower was constructed, the second tallest in the UK at the
    10 KB (1,421 words) - 22:30, 21 April 2015
  • ...mile to the south of the village lies RAF Coningsby, one of the Royal Air Force's most important stations, home of No. 3 Squadron, No. XI Squadron, No. 29 ..., two Hurricanes and a Dakota. These aircraft still fly and can be seen at air shows during summer.<ref>[http://www.raf.mod.uk/bbmf/ "Welcome to RAF BBMF"
    4 KB (610 words) - 06:48, 15 October 2020
  • ...electricity. During Second World War it was requisitioned by the Royal Air Force as the officers' mess for RAF Harlaxton and later to house a company of the
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  • The other burial enclosure was constructed by the Royal Society of Physicians as a memorial for an important founding member, Willi ...afterwards. In 1952 it became home to a number of small United States Air Force units tasked with providing mobile radio facilities to the USAF in Britain.
    4 KB (629 words) - 13:58, 25 September 2017
  • ...rnicia]]. Archaeologists have interpreted the site as one of the seats of royal power in the 7th century. ...accompanied the Northumbrian king Edwin and his queen Æthelburg to their royal vill (the Latin term is ''villa regia''), ''Adgefrin'', where Paulinus spen
    38 KB (5,979 words) - 16:04, 16 May 2015
  • In the Second World War there was a Royal Air Force airfield at Stanton Harcourt. It is notable for having been a transit point
    9 KB (1,316 words) - 22:20, 27 May 2015
  • ...during Second World War both by the Royal Air Force and the Norwegian Air Force as a location for flying boats.<ref name="un">{{cite web| url=http://www.un
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  • During Second World War, the Royal Air Force built a Chain Home radar station at Skaw. A combined Coastal Defence U-Boa
    2 KB (292 words) - 17:11, 29 August 2023
  • ...orth Chew Farm and Manor Farm, North Wick was an area secured by Royal Air Force personnel, lit by fires, and with "automatic" guns to simulate anti-aircraf
    11 KB (1,781 words) - 07:02, 19 September 2019
  • ...pubs/place/184 Suffolk Camra]</ref> The other pub is the Brewer's Tap. The Royal British Legion was a members only club, but closed in April 2012.<ref>[http ...United Kingdom: RAF Lakenheath. The social impact of the United States Air Force fighter airbase and its nearby sister, RAF Mildenhall, on the economy of La
    5 KB (737 words) - 20:21, 15 July 2015
  • |ownership=Royal Air Force ...n the family's remarkable French-inspired style, but sold to the Royal Air Force in 1918.<ref>[http://www.raf.mod.uk/rafhalton/aboutus/haltonhouseofficersme
    8 KB (1,286 words) - 22:57, 12 September 2015
  • ...</ref> The formal posting of the many Wrens working there (of the Women's Royal Naval Reserve) was to 'HMS Pembroke V'. *''Hut 3'': Intelligence: translation and analysis of Army and Air Force decrypts<ref>{{Harvnb|Millward|1993|p=17}}</ref>
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  • There used to be a Royal Air Force station nearby called RAF Methven.
    2 KB (287 words) - 12:06, 1 October 2015
  • Royal Air Force Great Massingham is a former Royal Air Force station by Great Massingham, overspreading the fields on the east side of t
    2 KB (248 words) - 21:49, 16 October 2015
  • ...ade France in 1415. On 23 April 1445, the abbey church was the venue for a royal wedding; the marriage of Henry VI to Margaret of Anjou was celebrated there ...chfield. It compares closely, for instance, with the holdings of the great royal foundation of Reading Abbey which had 228 volumes.<ref name="James">{{Harvn
    21 KB (3,282 words) - 15:53, 20 December 2015
  • ...dale, to the south-west of [[Amble]]. It was once the site of a Royal Air Force station, and now has two prisons.
    3 KB (459 words) - 14:41, 7 July 2016
  • A major change came to the village with the arrival of the Royal Air Force during the Second World War. Otherwise Boulmer has changed little in over 1 ...ice was originally funded by the Duke of Northumberland and was run by the Royal National Lifeboat Institution between 1825 and 1967 when the RNLI decided t
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  • ...rations from Ronaldsway to the mainland UK were transferred to Isle of Man Air Services. In a 1936 expansion of the Ronaldsway Airport, workers discovered The airfield came under Royal Air Force control at the outbreak of the Second World War. Known as RAF Ronaldsway, i
    9 KB (1,386 words) - 18:56, 29 November 2015
  • ...ow been laid down on the only suffient flat part of the island. Scheduled air services from Johannesburg were scheduled to commence in May 2016. The fir ...link-of-the-island-with-south-africa On St Helena Day, 21 May 2016, begins air link of the island with South Africa]' – Mercopress, Saturday May 23rd 20
    18 KB (2,694 words) - 06:54, 3 May 2021
  • Since 1937 RAF Linton-on-Ouse has been home to a Royal Air Force station, RAF Linton-on-Ouse. Since 1957 the main role of the airfield has
    4 KB (557 words) - 23:43, 5 February 2024
  • ...rded, both from the sea by naval gunfire and from the air by the Royal Air Force Harriers. At 4.30 p.m., on 7 June, a British Harrier bombing positions held ...al gunfire from HMS ''Active'''s 4.5 inch gun. During the initial assault, Royal Marines from C company 9 troop 40 commando were dropped almost on top of t
    4 KB (628 words) - 23:18, 8 December 2015
  • ...water]] harbour between [[Mount Batten]] and the [[Royal Citadel, Plymouth|Royal Citadel]]. In addition to ships of the Royal Navy, large commercial vessels, including ferries to France and Spain use t
    7 KB (1,182 words) - 22:14, 20 September 2016
  • ...5, the RAF base became an Army base, as the regimental headquarters of the Royal Scots Dragoon Guards, who saw their return to Scotland after 20 years in Ge
    3 KB (409 words) - 14:38, 25 January 2016
  • The airport provides air travel connections for [[Caithness]], with scheduled services to [[Aberdeen Requisitioned by the Air Ministry during Second World War, the airfield was extended with hard runwa
    3 KB (374 words) - 14:26, 17 June 2017
  • ...e 1940s, playing club level rugby union for Maesteg RFC, and the Royal Air Force and playing representative level rugby league for Great Britain, and Wales, *Jeff Young, rugby player for Blaengarw RFC, the Royal Air Force, London Welsh RFC, Bridgend RFC, Harrogate RFC and Yorkshire
    2 KB (309 words) - 18:54, 29 February 2016
  • [[File:Royal & Ancient Clubhouse.jpg|thumb|350px|The Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St Andrews]] *Royal Aberdeen Golf Club - [[Aberdeen]]
    119 KB (17,852 words) - 09:36, 16 December 2022
  • ...:Camber Castle from the air.jpg|right|thumb|250px|The castle seen from the air]] ...the pay of the Spanish, made plans to hand over the castle to an invading force of French and Spanish soldiers, although the conspiracy never came to fruit
    37 KB (5,788 words) - 20:53, 16 May 2016
  • |diocese=Royal Peculiar ...ent, mainly Gothic church which serves an important role in the religious, royal, parliamentary and judicial ceremonial of the nation.
    30 KB (4,706 words) - 22:11, 20 May 2016
  • ...en meeting there since the thirteenth century, and also as the seat of the Royal Courts of Justice, based in and around [[#Westminster Hall|Westminster Hall ...vation work has been carried out since, to reverse the effects of London's air pollution, and extensive repairs took place after the Second World War, inc
    41 KB (6,397 words) - 22:38, 26 December 2019
  • ...on and Tristan da Cunha]]. It serves mainly as a cantonment for Royal Air Force personnel.
    743 B (118 words) - 12:58, 24 May 2016
  • ...y (the collection of the Earls of Oxford). They were joined in 1757 by the Royal Library, assembled by various monarchs. Together these four "foundation col ...t=Richard|accessdate=May 2016}}</ref> In 1757, King George II gave the Old Royal Library and with it the right to a copy of every book published in the coun
    40 KB (6,083 words) - 16:37, 20 January 2019
  • ...is" Squadrons who, during World War II, were based at the nearby RAF Croft air base (now the site of the Croft Circuit as described above).
    3 KB (532 words) - 17:46, 21 June 2016
  • ...wn to the north-east corner of the churchyard, St Paul's Cross, where open-air preaching took place. ...ess took several years, but a design was finally settled and attached to a royal warrant, with the proviso that Wren was permitted to make any further chang
    62 KB (9,854 words) - 17:37, 16 October 2022
  • ...was discontinued in 1983 on the grounds of poor financial performance. Dan-Air inherited the service and offered a three-times daily service. The airline ...using lower capacity BAe 146 regional jets. The emergence of EasyJet as a force in UK aviation coincided with the launch of a daily service to [[Luton Airp
    8 KB (1,278 words) - 22:04, 4 September 2016
  • ...ed to [[Edinburgh]] ([[Turnhouse]]). In June 1935 Blackpool and West Coast Air Services started a service to the [[Isle of Man]].<ref name=lb2>{{cite web| ...mouflaged and had dummy cows placed on top of the factory so that from the air it would look just like fields with cattle.<ref name=lb3 />
    19 KB (2,699 words) - 19:50, 5 September 2016
  • ...ayed a role in the wars of the 14th century. It was subsequently held as a royal castle, and was raided on several occasions by the MacDonald Earls of Ross. ...the 7th-century form ''Airdchartdan'', itself apparently a mix of Gaelic ''air'' (by) and Old Welsh (or Pictish) ''cardden'' (thicket or wood).<ref>Tabrah
    24 KB (3,785 words) - 22:06, 5 September 2016
  • ...rro was a recognised fishing settlement and its first known record is in a royal document of 1303. ...ves were lost.<ref>Couch (1965); p. 12-13</ref> This storm, with hurricane-force winds, caused damage to property from Plymouth to [[Land's End]]; the fishi
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  • ...during Second World War they too were taken over for use by the Royal Air Force: the church tower used as an observation post and navigation mark. ...539-40</ref> The churchyard contains the war graves of 23 Commonwealth air force personnel of Second World War.<ref>[http://www.cwgc.org/find-a-cemetery/cem
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  • The nearby Royal Air Force station, RAF St. Mawgan, takes its name from the village. It is next to [[
    5 KB (723 words) - 11:13, 2 October 2016
  • ...dfish.jpg|right|thumb|200px|Three rocket-armed Fairey Swordfish, 774 Naval Air Squadron]] ===St Merryn air field===
    13 KB (2,111 words) - 14:39, 2 October 2016
  • ...l]] near Lough Swilly. They were intercepted by a large British Royal Navy force, and finally surrendered after a three-hour battle without ever landing in ===Air===
    26 KB (4,094 words) - 12:15, 2 August 2017
  • ...Ballyshannon, the "Donegal Corridor", which was used by British Royal Air Force flights from [[Northern Ireland]] into the Atlantic Ocean.<ref name=indy>{{ | title = Plaques mark secret wartime air corridor in Donegal
    12 KB (1,879 words) - 10:49, 30 January 2021
  • ...reakwaters were built between 1849–72, while Portland Harbour occupied a Royal Navy base until 1995. ...nted until 1844. Construction of the modern harbour began in 1845 when the Royal Navy established a base at Portland for replenishment of the fleet. The new
    31 KB (4,753 words) - 19:39, 13 May 2020
  • ...mic geology of the region, and forming vol. XIV of the transactions of the Royal Geological Society of Cornwall|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=lqJBAAA ......: London, provinces, Wales, Scotland, Ireland, abroad, navy, army & air force|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=IA4gAQAAMAAJ|accessdate=19 January 201
    6 KB (996 words) - 18:36, 9 October 2016
  • ...ng Second World War the nearby Perranporth airport was used as a Royal Air Force base. ...r the nearby [[Perranporth Airfield]] was used as a base for the Royal Air Force. It became operational on 28 April 1941. At the height of the war over nine
    6 KB (969 words) - 12:50, 12 October 2016
  • ...Air Force, the United States Army Air Forces and the Royal Navy.<ref name="air">{{cite web|title=King Alfred's Tower - Zeals Airfield|url=http://www.alfre ...ction against Japan, and in April 1945 the airfield was transferred to the Royal Navy, and was commissioned HMS Heron using the airfield for aircraft carrie
    7 KB (1,103 words) - 11:06, 5 November 2016
  • ...war graves of four British Army soldiers of World War I and two Royal Air Force officers of World War II.<ref>[http://www.cwgc.org/find-a-cemetery/cemetery
    9 KB (1,353 words) - 19:10, 8 November 2016
  • RAF Snitterfield, a former Royal Air Force station, is situated to the west of the village. The northern section of wh
    12 KB (1,869 words) - 18:55, 10 November 2016
  • |operator=Kemble Air Services Limited The airfield was built as a Royal Air Force station and was known as '''RAF Kemble'''. The Red Arrows aerobatics team w
    8 KB (1,244 words) - 13:57, 17 November 2016
  • Talacre was used by the Royal Air Force during the Second World War, as an aircraft firing range. Fighters flew ove
    3 KB (428 words) - 22:55, 30 November 2016
  • ...s and Hawker Hurricanes. For a short while in 1943 it was passed on to the Royal Navy. During this time a Sunderland flying boat landed at Angle airfield af
    3 KB (537 words) - 11:08, 8 December 2016
  • ...essdate=13 February 2016}}</ref> There is a disused World War II Royal Air Force airfield RAF Dale, above the south-east cliffs of the beach. There are thre
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  • ...primary school, golf course, sports club, a riding school, three pubs, The Royal Oak, The Devonshire Arms and The Oddfellows Arms, and the late 17th-century ...he Industrial Revolution, coal-power supplanted water-power as the driving force and mineable coal seams were found in Mellor. Relatively recently, the Brit
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  • [[File:Denton greater manchester from the air.jpg|thumb|250px|Viewed from the air, looking west]] ...c gravestone belonging to a deceased Soldier named Samuel Bromley from the Royal Artillery.
    17 KB (2,615 words) - 19:09, 25 December 2016
  • ...the Norman conquest, Chadderton was made a constituent manor of the wider Royal Estate of [[Tottington, Lancashire|Tottington]], an extensive fee held by t ...|McPhillips|1997|pp=22–23}}.</ref> A few days later, on 3&nbsp;August, a royal proclamation forbidding the practice of drilling was posted in Manchester.<
    38 KB (5,724 words) - 06:59, 19 September 2019
  • ...e crow's-nest was removed to allow the structure to be used as a Royal Air Force radar station known as ''RAF Tower'',<ref name=enjoy1 /> which proved unsuc [[File:Blackpool Tower from the air.jpg|left|thumb|200px|Blackpool from the air]]
    26 KB (3,923 words) - 13:20, 16 January 2017
  • ...ml Airfiends & Aviation Memorials website]</ref> and was used by Royal Air Force Transport Command.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.controltowers.co.uk/B/Br
    6 KB (832 words) - 11:07, 9 February 2017
  • ...The airfield was in service from 1943 until 1947 and was used by Royal Air Force Transport Command.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.controltowers.co.uk/B/Br
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  • The Parish also includes RAF Halton, a Royal Air Force (RAF) training station with a grass airfield used for glider training. ...- geograph.org.uk - 198188.jpg|The airfield at RAF Halton, taken from the air</gallery>
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  • ...War by the Royal Air Force and the United States Army Air Forces Ninth Air Force. After the war the airfield returned to civilian use and the airfield compl ...volt supply to the 110 volt they were using, and lighting transformers for air raid shelters. Gardner's also won contracts with the Telecommunications Res
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  • The high-level open air walkways between the towers gained an unpleasant reputation as a haunt for ...scules, weighing over 1,000 tons each, are counterbalanced to minimise the force required and allow raising in five minutes.
    26 KB (3,958 words) - 07:56, 28 July 2017
  • ...al Air Force. Upavon is referred to as the birthplace where the Royal Air Force was formed. ...22 Volunteer Gliding Squadron, providing glider training to members of the Air Cadet Organisation. The Army Gliding Club also uses the airfield in co-oper
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  • ...C was born in Urchfont in 1914. An Air Observer/Navigator in the Royal Air Force, he was posthumously awarded the Victoria Cross after he was killed in acti
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  • |name=Royal Liver Building |picture=The Royal Liver Buildings - geograph.org.uk - 526323.jpg
    9 KB (1,357 words) - 09:21, 19 September 2019
  • A Royal Air Force airfield was constructed near [[Flookburgh]] in late 1940 and named '''RAF
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  • ...for forty years almost without interruption, in which time he saw out the Royal Navy's victories of the Napoleonic Wars and afterwards sent out countless e ...rld War, when he warned the residents of [[Ulverston]] that the German Air Force would bomb their pepper pot. (They did not.)
    3 KB (527 words) - 09:54, 14 January 2018
  • ...n the standard colour scheme. The shield in the centre of the motif is the Royal Arms of the United Kingdom; the others are, clockwise from the left: the co ...arles Campbell Wood, a South African serving as an airman in the Royal Air Force, dived from the upstream footway of the bridge into the Thames to rescue a
    9 KB (1,433 words) - 22:31, 2 June 2017
  • ...ree. Tolmé's bridge was narrow and too weak to carry buses, and in 1926 a Royal Commission recommended its replacement. ...of its opening it was painted in dull shades of blue as camouflage against air raids, a colour scheme it retains. Although Wandsworth Bridge is one of the
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  • ...was Peter Lind & Company Limited. It is frequently asserted that the work force was largely female and it is sometimes referred to as "the Ladies' Bridge". ...oyal Festival Hall]], Waterloo station, [[Queen Elizabeth Hall]] and the [[Royal National Theatre]], as well as the [[National Film Theatre]], which is dire
    11 KB (1,719 words) - 22:10, 2 June 2017
  • ...performing arts venues, alongside the Royal Shakespeare Company and the [[Royal Opera House]]. Since 1988, the theatre has been permitted to call itself the '''Royal National Theatre''', but the full title is rarely used. The theatre present
    19 KB (2,877 words) - 09:22, 19 September 2019
  • On the morning of 15 October 1940, a Royal Air Force Squadron was involved in combat over the [[River Medway]], and during a ski
    8 KB (1,265 words) - 12:19, 13 June 2017
  • *Oranmore aerodrome was a Royal Air Force base in World War I. It later became a civil airfield serving the city of G
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  • The cape lies within the boundaries of the Royal Air Force station known as RAF Akrotiri. ...ef>[http://www.qaranc.co.uk/theprincessmaryshospital.php Queen Alexandra's Royal Army Nursing Corps: The Princess Mary Hospital]</ref>
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  • ...l art galleries and a school of English. The town is compact with a quaint air of antiquity in the narrow streets. There is a large yachting marina close ...forces led by Charles Blount, 8th Baron Mountjoy defeated the rebel Irish force, led by the princes Hugh Roe O'Donnell and Hugh O'Neill, which was allied w
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  • ...ked and the holdings were deserted. In 1310 the bailiffs of Tallaght got a royal grant to enclose the town. No trace of these defensive walls survive and th ...f [[Rathcoole, Dublin|Rathcoole]] lie west of Tallaght, along with the air force aerodrome at Baldonnell. There is also still considerable open land, some s
    28 KB (4,422 words) - 12:25, 2 August 2017
  • ...Museum, London|Natural History Museum]], the [[Science Museum]] and the [[Royal Albert Hall]]. The Victoria and Albert Museum is a non-departmental public ...referred to as the Art School or Art Training School, later to become the Royal College of Art which finally achieved full independence in 1949. From the 1
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  • ...a concrete block and used for target practice by aircraft of the Royal Air Force. The wrecks of the submarines lie much closer to the low-water mark than th
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  • ...Bristol Beaufort and Bristol Beaufighter conversion squadrons, as well as air firing and night flying.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.controltowers.co.uk/
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  • |operator=Stobart Air Ltd ...east-northeast of [[Carlisle]] in [[Cumberland]]. It has its origins in a Royal Airforce station, RAF Crosby-on-Eden, and is today a private airfield owned
    9 KB (1,394 words) - 21:36, 21 July 2017
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  • ...ck. There is also a granite column dedicated to the American Expeditionary Force, many of whom were based in Belfast prior to D-Day. ...giving passengers panoramic views 200 ft above the city. The wheel had 42 air-conditioned capsules, which could hold up to six adults and two children. T
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  • ...e village. The largest proportion of land in commercial use is related to air transport and hospitality. The village includes public parkland with footp ...irey airfield to the Royal Air Force and its subsequent development by the Air Ministry as Heathrow R.A.F. station. This entailed the complete demolition
    13 KB (1,901 words) - 14:02, 4 October 2020
  • ...nd attached to buildings, schools etc. close to the area, e.g. the Belfast Royal Academy has the Ben Madigan Preparatory School on the Antrim Road. On 1 June 1944, an American Air Force B-17 bomber crashed into Cave Hill during heavy fog, killing all ten crew i
    8 KB (1,244 words) - 13:01, 26 October 2017
  • ...n/aboutus/101squadron.cfm |title=101 Squadron history |publisher=Royal Air force |location=Brize Norton |accessdate=20 March 2013}}</ref> ...ot down and killed over Voué in France. The villagers of Voué buried the air crew and tended the graves for many years until the link with Ludford was d
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  • In 1966, the Royal Air Force built a large housing estate on the opposite side of the River Witham. The ...ironstone quarry. Other companies based in the village include Compressed Air Plant, Auriga, Petlife International and Clever Cooks. In the parish on the
    9 KB (1,313 words) - 10:18, 17 November 2017
  • ...962 Signals Unit |year=2009 |accessdate=}}</ref> which was an [[Royal Air Force|RAF]] radio communications station from early in the 1950s until 1988.<ref> *{{cite book |editor=RCHME |editor-link=Royal Commission on the Historical Monuments of England |year=1982 |title=An Inve
    8 KB (1,189 words) - 10:06, 30 November 2017
  • ...//www.royalparks.org.uk/parks/bushy_park/ |title=Bushy Park |publisher=The Royal Parks |date= |accessdate=7 December 2013 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://w ...planned the D-Day landings from Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force (SHAEF) at Camp Griffiss in the Park. A memorial by Carlos Rey [http://map
    11 KB (1,630 words) - 12:51, 1 December 2017
  • ...d it until World War II. During the war, it was a sanatorium for Royal Air Force officers. ...cles/12/02/2004/51990/Losses-force-Studley-Priory-on-to-market.htm 'Losses force Studley Priory onto market.']</ref>
    3 KB (536 words) - 10:51, 5 December 2017
  • In 1920 the Royal Air Force acquired Otmoor for use as a bombing range.<ref>{{cite book |editor-last=Lo
    4 KB (564 words) - 09:10, 7 December 2017
  • ...ximum of 1,000 tons of ammunition a day.<ref name="SubBrit" /> A Royal Air Force station, RAF Box, was also established using one area of the tunnels.<ref n
    16 KB (2,464 words) - 11:54, 12 December 2017
  • ...ughout however in 1229 Thomas de Arderne, lord of Matching Hall, was given Royal licence to impark Matching wood, i.e. inclosure, which seems to have caused ...Matching. They came from the 391st Bombardment Group of the U.S Ninth Air Force.
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  • On 17 October 1952, two Gloster Meteors of No 72 Squadron, Royal Air Force, crashed nearby killing both pilots.
    5 KB (837 words) - 09:26, 15 February 2018
  • Fearing war with Germany, in 1937 Royal Air Force (RAF) Canewdon was one of four RADAR sites established to test the use of C
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  • Jurby Airfield was originally used as a Royal Air Force training base in Second World War, as 'RAF Jurby'. During the 1950s it was ...ery/cemetery/2111490/JURBY%20(ST.%20PATRICK)%20CHURCHYARD Jurby Church Air Force war graves]
    5 KB (818 words) - 13:57, 22 February 2018
  • Royal Air Force fast rescue boats and a Royal Navy motor torpedo boat flotilla operated from Creeksea during World War II
    2 KB (295 words) - 16:39, 1 March 2018
  • ..., so she was prepared for use against the Japanese as part of the ‘Tiger Force’. PA474 is now part of the RAF's Battle of Britain Memorial Flight. No. 3 Ferry Pilots Pool/Ferry Pool, Air Transport Auxiliary, was based at Hawarden between 5 November 1940 and 30 N
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  • ...ham was the horse painter Sir Alfred Munnings, who became President of the Royal Academy. His house in Dedham, Castle House, now contains a gallery of his ...author who became a world authority on the operations of the US Eighth Air Force in World War II.
    11 KB (1,622 words) - 11:55, 30 January 2021
  • ...ime satellite aerodrome and training base, named RAF Rhoose, for Royal Air Force Spitfire pilots. Construction work commenced in 1941, and the airfield offi ...le sites, the Consultative Committee then proposed the abandoned Royal Air Force airfield at Rhoose. The Ministry of Aviation then began to remove the tumb
    8 KB (1,244 words) - 20:13, 20 March 2020
  • ...Hawker Harts, and Hawker Hind light bombers. All the aircraft used a grass air strip. ...the airfield was named ''RAF Turnhouse'' and ownership transferred to the Air Ministry.
    12 KB (1,774 words) - 20:23, 3 April 2018
  • ...the house was used as a convalescent home for the United States Eighth Air Force. ...ry undertook much work in the gardens for which they were both awarded the Royal Horticultural Society's Victoria Medal of Honour.<ref>[http://www.hickorygo
    9 KB (1,385 words) - 12:41, 26 April 2018
  • ...was interrupted by the Second World War Noel became a Controller with the Royal Observer Corps and was awarded an MBE in 1943.<ref name=trail/><ref>London ...tp://www.unithistories.com/officers/RAF_officers_B01.html| title=Royal Air Force (RAF) Officers 1939-1945:B |website=www.unithistories.com |accessdate=2 Jul
    12 KB (1,902 words) - 22:13, 1 October 2019
  • ...the later 12th century may have been by administrators of the surrounding royal forest as a base for operations against poachers.<ref name=dunning>{{cite b ==Air disaster==
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  • ...r's parlour and, during the Second World War, it was used by the Royal Air Force.
    7 KB (1,047 words) - 20:36, 10 July 2018
  • The village's 12th-century church was destroyed in a Second World War air raid on the night of 8 May 1941.<ref name="WaddAtWar">''Waddington At War 1 ...this, the station had been home to part of the Avro Vulcan nuclear bomber force.
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  • |picture=RAF CONDUCTS FIRST AIR STRIKES OF IRAQ MISSION MOD 45158633.jpg |operator=Royal Air Force
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  • The 1st Fremington Air Scouts group is also in the village. ...yrasc.btck.co.uk/HISTORYOF116COY18COYSQNANDFREMINGTONCAMP|title=18 Company Royal Army Service Corps - HOME PAGE|website=18coyrasc.btck.co.uk}}</ref>
    8 KB (1,297 words) - 21:24, 28 August 2019
  • The largest localities of the parish are Wrafton and Chivenor, which has an air base; RAF Chivenor. ...ld War and 85 from the Second World War. It also has 38 post-war Royal Air Force burials and one Italian war grave. In total it has 126 active military pers
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  • ...which is also close to a surviving base in [[Woolwich]], long home to the Royal Artillery and now to other parts of the British Army.)
    5 KB (700 words) - 15:43, 4 November 2018
  • ...World War, the RAF Winkleigh Airfield was used by the Royal Norwegian Air Force from 1944 as the main training Centre in Britain, after Norway's exiled arm
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  • ...Andrew MacBeth and Lt Frederick James Bravery. The other crew members were air mechanics Charles William Offord, J May, Albert J Winrow, H Simmons and G G ...fabric from a wing. It was the deadliest accident involving the Royal Air Force at the time.<ref name="Aviation Arch">{{cite web|url=http://www.aviationarc
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  • [[File:Royal Air Force 1939-1945- Bomber Command CH4742.jpg|thumb|250px|RAF Balderton in 1942]] ...al Air Force (RAF), Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF) and United States Army Air Forces (USAAF). During World War II it was used primarily as a troop carrie
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  • ...was requisitioned during World War II for use as a base for the Royal Air Force, and then later became a military hospital for injured servicemen.
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  • ...www.nottshistory.org.uk|accessdate=2017-02-14}}</ref> Also of note are the royal coat-of-arms of Charles II, dated 1683, which sit above the chancel arch. I ...//www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=59348921|title=Sergeant ( Air Gnr ) Lawrence Emmerson Garrod (1923 - 1944) - Find A Grave Memorial|websit
    13 KB (2,013 words) - 11:08, 12 April 2019
  • ...server]</ref> The RAF Buchan operational camp is retained by the Royal Air Force and known as Remote Radar Head Buchan.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.raf.m
    16 KB (2,459 words) - 15:57, 7 June 2019
  • During Second World War the airfield became a Royal Air Force station – RAF Dyce. It was the site of the Dyce Sector Operations Room wi ...n bomber crashed on landing wrecking a goods train in Dyce Station. During air raids in the Second World War, aircraft were moved to East Fingask beside [
    14 KB (2,082 words) - 15:24, 8 June 2019
  • ...econd, a stained-glass window, is a memorial to Sgt Pilot of the Royal Air Force, William Philip Dales from [[Little Humby]].
    5 KB (719 words) - 09:03, 18 June 2019
  • ...g the war with the Royal Air Force). This was later renamed as Kindley Air Force Base and USNAS Bermuda, which occupied more than half the island's land und
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  • ...would not be until 1867 that a valid plan, that by Lt. Albert Hime of the Royal Engineers, was approved. Built by the Royal Engineers, Hime's Causeway was opened to traffic on 19 September 1871 by th
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  • ...the Bermuda Government. He converted the RAF facilities into the '''Civil Air Terminal''', operated by the local government. .... By then it was operated by the United States Air Force, as Kindley Air Force Base.
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  • ...ons - H|url=http://www.rafweb.org/Stations/Stations-H.htm#Hereford|website=Air of Authority - A History of RAF Organisation|publisher=M B Barrass|accessda
    3 KB (490 words) - 23:27, 16 August 2019
  • ...odwit'', which specialised in instrument and blind landing technologies. A Royal Navy officer and seaman from the base are buried in Hinstock Church's buria
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  • To the south is situated [[Shobdon Aerodrome]], formerly a Royal Air Force glider training facility operational during the Second World War, now used
    5 KB (844 words) - 21:03, 13 September 2019
  • ...ral hospitals. They also added a runway in co-operation with the Royal Air Force, but due to the marshy land only one runway was developed.<ref>[http://www. ...tion Authority Aerodrome Ordinary Licences]</ref> It is frequently used by air taxi services to Europe.
    4 KB (537 words) - 21:07, 13 September 2019
  • There was a Royal Air Force station in the village during and immediately after the Second World War. ...iginally it was a grass airfield used by the No 601 Squadron Auxiliary Air Force from 6 January 1942 until April of that year. They flew American Bell P39 A
    10 KB (1,517 words) - 16:14, 17 September 2019
  • ...graves of a Royal Fusiliers soldier of the First World War and a Royal Air Force airman and WAAF airwoman of the Second World War.<ref>[http://www.cwgc.org/
    2 KB (360 words) - 20:39, 17 September 2019
  • ...d of the club, flying there in his private Dragon aircraft, which bore the royal insignia. The aviator Amy Johnson also patronised the club.{{sfn |Clegg |20 ...orld War, the hall was used by Sheffield Royal Infirmary and the Royal Air Force, with the adjacent aerodrome becoming RAF Firbeck.{{sfn |Wain |2014 |p=113}
    13 KB (1,967 words) - 09:25, 10 October 2019
  • ...Captain Percy Charles "Pick" Pickard DSO DFC (1915–1944) was a Royal Air Force bomber pilot and commander during the Second World War. He was born in Hand
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  • ...English Channel. Wing Captain C. L. Lambe, Officer Commanding Royal Naval Air Service Dover and Dunkirk posted six pilots from different squadrons who ha ...ing German bomber offensives with many victories recorded. Pilots from the Royal Flying Corps were also stationed at the Aerodrome as the RNAS and RFC often
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  • RAF High Halden is a former Royal Air Force Advanced Landing Ground.
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  • Pyrton was a royal estate in 774, when King Offa of [[Mercia]] gave land there to [[Worcester ==Air crash==
    10 KB (1,518 words) - 14:30, 29 November 2019
  • ==Air crash== On Thursday 13 July 2006 a Royal Air Force Harrier GR9 aircraft flying from RAF Cottesmore to RAF Fairford crashed jus
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  • ...inistry of Defence. It was formerly RAF Boddington, a non-flying Royal Air Force station where No. 9 Signals Unit RAF was based.
    1 KB (200 words) - 16:03, 28 February 2021
  • ...y of Defence. It was formerly '''RAF Boddington''', a non-flying Royal Air Force station located in [[Barrow, Gloucestershire|Barrow]], close to [[Boddingto ...later controlled by the Royal Signal Corps before passing to the Royal Air Force.
    3 KB (389 words) - 22:51, 21 January 2020
  • ...h the local council. Since 1999, it has hosted North West England's annual Royal Horticultural Society flower show. The deer park was created by a royal charter in 1290 and deer have been present since then. The two species pre
    19 KB (2,891 words) - 17:18, 23 February 2020
  • ...as a base for the Royal Naval Air Service and then latterly, the Royal Air Force during the First World War. A Royal Naval Air Service seaplane base was opened on the mere in September 1917.{{sfn|Chorlt
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  • ...ucestershire floods of 2007, the fire brigade, Army, Royal Navy, Royal Air Force and the Environment Agency joined forces to save the threatened substation.
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  • |operator=Royal Air Force '''RAF Little Rissington''' {{Airport codes||EGVL}} is a Royal Air Force aerodrome and RAF station in the east of [[Gloucestershire]]. It was once h
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  • During the Second World War, the parish hosted RAF Windrush, a Royal Air Force Relief Landing Ground. Although it closed for military purposes in 1945, th
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  • In 2015, a memorial was unveiled to the Royal Canadian Air Force aircrew who died when their Lancaster Bomber crashed into the beacon. Four
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  • ...e leased site is part of [[RAF Valley]], an RAF station teaching Royal Air Force pilots using BAE Hawks. Plans put forward in early 2006 have led to a subsidised weekday air service between the airport and [[Cardiff Airport]], in the hope of improvi
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  • ...of Clyde]] where nuclear submarines were based at [[Holy Loch]] and where Royal Navy Trident missile submarines are still based at HMNB Clyde (Faslane Nava
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  • ===A Royal Air Force station=== ...enemy reconnaissance aircraft off the west coast of [[Ireland]] and in the air defence role over [[Belfast]].
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  • ...Today the airport is used for scheduled services to the mainland, and for air ambulances. ...d received a concrete runway in 1942. During the War, over 1,500 Royal Air Force personnel were stationed at RAF Port Ellen.<ref>{{cite news | first=Robbie
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  • |operator=Royal Air Force ...uk/rafbrizenorton/ |title=RAF Brize Norton |year=2011 |publisher=Royal Air Force |accessdate=5 March 2011}}</ref> It is close to the villages of [[Brize Nor
    27 KB (3,943 words) - 09:17, 19 June 2020
  • ...ituated inside the Royal Air Force danger area D118 known as Pembrey Sands Air Weapons Range. Pembrey is open seven days a week but only licensed at weeke ...ng Training Command started in 1937 and by September 1939, the RAF's No. 2 Air Armament School was the first unit to be stationed at the airfield. By May
    3 KB (406 words) - 23:03, 16 March 2020
  • ...e War, 309<ref>Jefford, page 85</ref> and 666 Squadrons from the Royal Air Force used the aerodrome.<ref> Jefford, page 104</ref> ...ned a worldwide reputation for aviation training, being known as Britain's Air University. Students of more than 100 countries have been trained at Perth.
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  • The airport was first developed in 1940 as '''RAF Scatsta''', a Royal Air Force fighter plane base to support Coastal Command flying boat operations at RAF
    4 KB (699 words) - 13:24, 17 March 2020
  • ...nd was then used mainly for military purposes. The Royal Air Force had an |air base there (RAF Stornoway) during the Second World War and also from 1972 u Nowadays the airfield is mainly used for domestic passenger services. The Royal Mail have a daily mail flight. Bristow Helicopters operate helicopters equi
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  • ...mainly used to handle helicopters and privately owned aircraft. The Wales Air Ambulance used to operate from the airport but has now moved to a purpose b ...ame a sector station in October 1941, taking on the responsibility for the air defence of South and West Wales including shipping in the [[Bristol Channel
    6 KB (934 words) - 18:28, 17 March 2020
  • |type=Royal Air Force station |operator=Royal Air Force
    11 KB (1,588 words) - 13:28, 19 June 2020
  • ...he War Office that their land was to be taken over and used as a Royal Air Force station. It was used throughout the war. In 1956, it was eventually purchas
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  • In 1935 Lawrence left the Royal Air Force and lived at Clouds Hill. A few weeks later, at the age of 46, he suffered
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  • ...orset Fire and Rescue Service Training Centre. In April 2017 the Royal Air Force relocated their Fuels Training school from RAF Halton to MOD West Moors. In
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  • The airport was previously a Royal Air Force base, RAF Kirmington, opened in 1941 during the Second World War, from whic ...te=27 July 2014|publisher=ITV news|date=27 March 2014}}</ref> However, Sun Air launched twice-weekly flights to Aalborg and Billund in April 2016, in orde
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  • |type=Royal Air Force station |operator=Royal Air Force
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  • |operator=Royal Air Force '''Royal Air Force Lossiemouth''', commonly nicknamed '''Lossie''' {{Airport codes|LMO|EGQS}}
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  • |operator=Royal Air Force and<br />United States Space Force ...orce and the United States Space Force, and formerly the United States Air Force.
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  • ...6824 Lost Bombers]</ref> Half the aircrew were in the [[Royal Canadian Air Force|RCAF]].
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  • |operator=Royal Air Force ...l]], near [[Sleaford]]. Among other functions, it is home to the Royal Air Force College, which trains the RAF's new officers and aircrew. Its motto, ''Alti
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  • Just over one mile to the west of the village is the Royal Air Force College Cranwell, within [[RAF Cranwell]], with its two associated airfield
    5 KB (870 words) - 17:46, 10 September 2020
  • Near the village is the Royal Air Force grass airfield of [[RAF Digby]] (formerly RAF Scopwick). During the Second
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  • ...which has a meridian marker. The airfield was a Second World War Royal Air Force station, part of which now houses the [[Lincolnshire Aviation Heritage Cent
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  • ...air weapons range.]</ref> is a United Kingdom Ministry of Defence academic air weapons range situated between [[Boston]] and [[King's Lynn]] near [[Gedney ...nnery_bombing_range.pdf GOV.UK Publications, Ministry of Defence: Holbeach Air Gunnery and Bombing Range Bylaws 1939.]</ref> and colloquially simply as Ho
    7 KB (1,008 words) - 14:49, 11 October 2020
  • |picture caption=East Point from the air ...y 1942, the mission was to protect the small Royal Navy base and Royal Air Force station located on the island from Japanese attack. They were later manned
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  • ...variously by the United States Army, Royal Air Force and United States Air Force as the site of a convalescent home and military hospital.<ref>[http://www.r ...y, particularly during the Second World War, there were numerous Royal Air Force airfields close to Nocton; the level of training and operational flying re
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  • ...rtment, together with American military veterans, members of the Royal Air Force, and regional and international volunteers.
    3 KB (418 words) - 23:00, 6 November 2020
  • ...rth Somercotes]]. The area, a salt marsh, is used by a number of Royal Air Force stations in Lincolnshire for bombing practice and shares its name with [[RA
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  • Swinderby is close to the site of RAF Swinderby, now closed as a Royal Air Force station but which holds a bi-monthly antique and collectors fair that has b
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  • [[File:HPHastingT5-TG517.JPG|left|thumb|200px|Newark Air Museum]] ...nthorpe.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.newarkairmuseum.org/ |title=Newark Air Museum |work=newarkairmuseum.org |year=2011 |accessdate=29 August 2011}}</r
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  • ...irlines Ireland, together with another two airlines, CityJet and Norwegian Air International. ...ying Corps. By April 1918, when the Flying Corps was renamed the Royal Air Force, 'Collinstown Aerodrome' was more than 20% complete. Construction was compl
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  • ...Roundheads to reinforce and plan their attack. By the time Ormonde's main force moved around to the south of the city, the Roundheads were ready and fighti In 1817, William Windham Sadlier successfully flew in a hot air balloon from Portobello Barracks to [[Holyhead]] in [[Anglesey]].
    22 KB (3,524 words) - 11:13, 10 March 2021
  • ...ance unit classed as a universal stores depot, with the official Royal Air Force name 'RAF Handforth No 61 M.U. (Maintenance unit)'. The depot, which covere
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  • ...the Old Warden Estate was killed in 1940 while serving with the Royal Air Force. He had a keen interest in farming and estate management and after his deat
    11 KB (1,624 words) - 12:35, 14 April 2021
  • ...> a memorial to a former rector and a brass memorial plaque to a Royal Air Force Squadron Leader shot down over France in 1944.<ref name="Cave"/>
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  • ...t of the village is a vehicle proving ground that was formerly a Royal Air Force station. Opened in May 1941 the station was originally called RAF Ramsey bu ...July 1575 for 19 days, when, according to Laneham, she hunted "the hart of force" in the Chase, and probably visited Honiley Hall, which place was at the ex
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  • .../marg/crashes1942.htm)</ref> The village was situated close to a Royal Air Force practice bombing range during World War II and in his book "A Thousand Shal
    18 KB (2,770 words) - 13:41, 20 April 2021
  • ...s as a bomber station, then in the 1950s assigned to the United States Air Force. Since its closure in 1994 the airfield has been converted into a substanti
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  • ...was then occupied by the 67th Fighter Wing of the United States Eighth Air Force. Their operations room planned and directed many of the Flying Fortress day
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  • During the Second World War the Hall was requisitioned by the Royal Air Force and used as a maintenance unit, storing and supplying armaments for local a
    10 KB (1,589 words) - 22:30, 28 July 2021
  • ...o be King Richard III. Upon taking the throne the lands were maintained by royal bailiffs. In 1629, the manor was sold to the citizens of London while its s ..."South Farm". The suffix relates to the village's location in the ancient Royal Forest of Galtres.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://kepn.nottingham.ac.uk/map/coun
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  • .... 207 Sqn were based there. After the war it was by the Royal Canadian Air Force for many years. The airfield has served as the base for British Parachute S
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  • ===Air base=== During the Second World War a large Royal Air Force station known as RAF Ossington was laid out on land close to the Ossington
    5 KB (718 words) - 12:39, 16 September 2021
  • ...e quarries, and land extending further down the ravine, were bought by the Air Ministry and the site became RAF Chilmark, which was the home of No. 11 Mai ...ntinued until at least 1997.<ref>{{cite web|title=Journal of the Royal Air Force Historical Society vol 35|url=http://www.rafmuseum.org.uk/documents/Researc
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  • ...of season trains, yard shunting etc, built as 2&nbsp;ft 6in gauge for the Royal Navy at [[Fishguard]]. ...hanical 3-speed built in 1939 for the Air Ministry), used by the Royal Air Force for hauling explosives and ammunition at RAF [[Chilmark]] in [[Wiltshire]].
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  • |name=Royal Air Force Station Syerston |picture caption=The air traffic control tower in 2006
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  • |picture=The Royal Oak, Watnall - geograph 5704288.jpg |picture caption=The Royal Oak, Watnall
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  • ...-date=8 March 2020 |title=Air Commodore Sir Harald Peake (90316) |work=RAF Air of Authority Organisation}}</ref> ...uisitioned during the Second World War for use as a base for the Royal Air Force, and then later became a military hospital for injured servicemen, being at
    7 KB (1,004 words) - 12:57, 4 October 2021
  • ...y chaplain staff member, and in 1996, with the closure of the depot of the Royal Army Chaplains' Department at [[Bagshot Park]], it became the tri-service A
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  • ...day / from Rahen. The angel thereupon (for reply) took him up through the air in a fiery chariot until they arrived at the king's residence}}</ref> A gra ...landing had been attempted by the French at [[Bantry Bay]] in 1796 with a force of fifteen thousand men. While unsuccessful, the attempt greatly alarmed th
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  • ...n monument, 2015-08-04 (cropped).jpg|right|thumb|120px|Royal Norwegian Air Force Commemorative Stone in Woodhaven.]] ...ina aircraft manned by Flight A of No. 333 (Norwegian) Squadron, Royal Air Force. The Norwegian personnel were based at RAF Leuchars along with their collea
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  • ...he house remained in private hands until 1938, when it was acquired by the Air Ministry, and became RAF Pitreavie Castle. The RAF station closed in 1996, ...etween an English force commanded by Colonel Robert Overton and a Scottish force, including some 800 Highlanders from the Clan Maclean. After the battle, wh
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  • ...sh, is located near the village. Although still available to the Royal Air Force, the former airfield has been taken over by the specially-formed Machrihani ...cotland Wing, who were on camp at the nearby airfield, contacted the Civil Air Patrol cadets in Brant Rock on 14 April 2006.
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  • Theobald Wolfe Tone, leader of the 1798 Irish Rebellion, was captured by the Royal Navy off Dunaff Head, Lough Swilly in November 1798.<ref>{{Cite book|title= ...established control of the Urris Hills when General Dalziel led a military force into the valley and brought this short period of self-rule to an end.<ref>{
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  • ...mapped by Wilkins on 29 December 1929. It was photographed again from the air on the United States Navy Operation "Highjump", 1946-47. ...ntario, the Canadian pilot on Wilkins' 1929 flight and on Wilkins' 1937-38 air expedition over the Beaufort Sea in search of six missing Soviet airmen.
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  • ...es many of North London's largest institutions, including the [[Royal Air Force Museum]], Public Health England's Centre for Infections, the Colindale Camp
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  • ...v.uk}}</ref> but also a registered charity.<ref>{{charity|244708|Royal Air Force Museum}}</ref> *[[Royal Air Force Museum London]] in Hendon, Middlesex, opened 1972
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  • |name=Royal Air Force Museum London ...ve buildings and hangars showing the history of aviation and the Royal Air Force.
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  • |name=Royal Air Force Museum Cosford ...hire]], is a museum dedicated to the history of aviation and the Royal Air Force in particular.
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  • |picture=British Aerospace Bae 146 CC.2, United Kingdom - Royal Air Force (RAF) JP6221031.jpg |picture caption=BAe 146 CC2 of No. 32 (The Royal) Squadron.
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  • ...The Manor of Bexley was acquired by Henry VIII, and remained a part of the royal estates until James I sold it to John Spielman in an attempt to raise funds ...17. In 1723 Styleman leased the property for 99 years to John Selwyn MP, a royal courtier, who improved and enlarged the estates a great deal before his dea
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  • ...d War, the Big House was first occupied by a school, then by the Royal Air Force. Afterwards it was left empty, and by 1955 was so dilapidated that the 8th
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  • ...nised the importance of mediæval Lindfield and in 1343 granted the town a royal charter to hold a market every Thursday and two annual eight-day fairs. For *Frank Reginald Carey, Royal Air Force ace fighter pilot.
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  • ...ot, but during World War II it reverted to military use with the Royal Air Force, providing storage and salvage facilities for crash-damaged aircraft. The a
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  • ...ombers moved there by road before completion and delivery to the Royal Air Force from Brooklands.
    7 KB (1,088 words) - 22:27, 2 August 2022
  • ...otel in 1928, and before the Second World War it was used by the Royal Air Force. It was very badly damaged by fire (not a bomb) in 1944 and was demolished
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  • ...ampshire|Wheatley]]. The parish also engulphs the [[Alice Holt Forest]], a royal forest lying near the border with [[Surrey]]. ...war graves of six British Army soldiers of First World War and a Royal Air Force airman of Second World War.<ref>{{cite web|title=Binsted (Holy Cross) Churc
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  • ...azing land. In 1914 one of the sheds on the airfield was taken over by the Royal Flying Corps and by 1915 the demand for pilots for First World War was so g ...irfields, retrieved 10 July 2011</ref> The site was then neglected and the Air Ministry relinquished control of the land in 1959.<ref name="daveg4otu"/> T
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  • ...helicopter training school was established there, as the Hamble College of Air Training. The south airfield has long since disappeared<ref name="hamblehis ...ed and high density housing built next to the road, near the terminal. The Royal Yachting Association (RYA), a non-profit organisation, has its offices in H
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  • ==Royal Air Force== ...Ministry of Civil Aviation. Full customs facilities were provided for both air transport operators and the private owners of light and executive aircraft.
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  • ...BC News, 29 September 2006</ref> Part of the site is now used by the local Air Training Corps. ...Marine Park. Every year, usually around August, the marina hosts the RNLI (Royal National Lifeboat Institution) Great Waterside Raft Race, where teams race
    8 KB (1,235 words) - 06:39, 12 October 2022
  • ...d in 1941, and was used by both the Royal Air Force and United States Army Air Forces, primarily as a fighter airfield. After the war, in 1947, it was clo
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  • ...Lion''. St Mary Magdalene's Church was built in 1873. The former Royal Air Force station, RAF Oakhanger, still retains its satellite domes, although the sta
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  • RAF Sopley was a Royal Air Force base near the village built in the early fifties as a domestic camp and use
    7 KB (1,191 words) - 19:18, 28 October 2022
  • On 4 April 1944 a Royal Air Force, Airspeed Horsa I (LG999) was taking part in a training exercise out of RAF
    6 KB (1,045 words) - 09:09, 6 November 2022
  • ...RAF, Northumbrian Universities Air Squadron and the Yorkshire Universities Air Squadron.<ref> ...after a mid-air collision.<ref>{{cite news|last1=Walker|first1=Andy|title=Air disaster will be commemorated|url=http://www.darlingtonandstocktontimes.co.
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  • ...Gareth Clayton (1914–1992) senior Royal Air Force officer who served as Air Secretary from 1970 to 1972
    7 KB (1,014 words) - 11:48, 13 January 2023
  • ...l)Bill Hansard, House of Commons vol.226 c.1674 19 March 1929 Army And Air Force (Annual) Bill]</ref>
    8 KB (1,246 words) - 13:55, 16 January 2023
  • ...contains the war graves of two soldiers of First World War and a Royal Air Force officer of Second World War.<ref>[http://www/cwgc.org/find-a-cemetery/cemet
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  • ==Royal Air Force station== ...ps as a training aerodrome, in 1918 it was turned over to the American Air Force.
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  • ...l 1941. BSA Guns Ltd was also producing .303 Browning machine guns for the Air Ministry at the rate of 600 guns per week in March 1939 and Browning produc ...planning and the encirclement of a large part of the British Expeditionary Force into the Dunkirk pocket resulted in a hasty evacuation of that part of the
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  • ...ays by Alan Cobham's Flying Circus. Local newspapers also promoted further air displays by C W A Scott and Tom Campbell Black in April and June 1936 but t
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  • ...r on display externally. Several exhibits are on loan from the [[Royal Air Force Museum]] including the Hawker Hunter used by Neville Duke to break the airs
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  • The airfield was built during the Second World War by the Royal Air Force as a relief landing ground for nearby RAF Tangmere. The site was the forme The American Eighth Air Force used the field as a fighter airfield for the 308th and 309th Fighter Squadr
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  • ...s the departure point for some of the earlier flights, using Blériots<ref>Royal Flying Corps WW1 Blériot XI reconnaissance monoplane | {{cite web |url=htt ...local flying schools received a contract to train pilots for the Royal Air Force and was known as No. 16 Elementary and Reserve Flying Training School initi
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  • ...e-Names Committee for Flight-Lieutenant Bertie J. Conchie of the Royal Air Force, pilot with the [[British Antarctic Survey]], who flew the British Antarcti
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  • ...le=Meteorological Observations At The Foreign And Colonial Stations Of The Royal Engineers And The Army Medical Department 1852—1886. |url=|location=Londo As the advent of the torpedo boat meant a fast attacking force of small vessels capable of wreaking havoc on the naval squadron anchored a
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  • |name=Royal Naval Dockyard |builder=Royal Navy
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  • ...of the Sixth Group of RAF Bomber Command which was the Royal Canadian Air Force component of the command.<ref>{{cite web|last=Hinson|first=Colin|title=Alle
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  • Fields to the south of the village were used by the Royal Air Force (and the Royal Flying Corps) as RAF Bellasize between 1916 and 1919, and 1939–1945.<ref>
    3 KB (453 words) - 23:56, 4 May 2023
  • ...used as a landing ground for the Royal Flying Corps (later, the Royal Air Force).
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  • The Royal Air Force operated a 600-acre bombing range on the beach at RAF Cowden between 1959 a ...ke the old bombs safe but were disbanded in 2019 with the British Army and Royal Navy EOD teams continuing to operate nationally.<ref>{{cite news|title=The
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  • ...n November 1941. In 1943 it was allocated to No.6 Group Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF).<ref>{{cite book |last1=Delve |first1=Ken |title=Northern England :
    3 KB (424 words) - 16:58, 18 June 2023
  • ...aintain a number of Thor missiles in readiness as part of the UK deterrent force, before finally closing in April 1963.<ref name="RAF Full Sutton" /> During
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  • ...amentarian commanders, Colonel John Hampden. The victorious Prince and his force then returned to Oxford over the bridge bringing 120 prisoners, most of the ==Air crash==
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  • ...on, 6th Baron Deramore, and was used as the headquarters for the Royal Air Force's No. 4 (Bomber) Group from 1940&ndash;45. It is now the administrative he
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  • ..., being officially closed in 1954 and transferred to the United States Air Force, which moved out in 1957, and the field was sold to a private firm.<ref>{{c
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  • Royal Air Force Holmpton is still a part of the RAF and the Defence Estate (2009). It curre On 14 January 1942 at 20.44, a Royal Air Force Avro Manchester bomber crashed on Mill Hill south of the village of Holmpto
    7 KB (1,029 words) - 21:42, 16 August 2023
  • ...sbn=1-85306-542-0|page=129}}</ref> However, in October 1943, the Royal Air Force created an airstrip from steel mesh at Huggate Wold to test the airstrip in
    4 KB (578 words) - 18:36, 17 August 2023
  • ...>{{cite book |last1=Philpott |first1=Ian |title=The birth of the Royal Air Force |date=2013 |publisher=Pen & Sword |location=Barnsley |isbn=978-1-78159-333-
    14 KB (2,043 words) - 12:51, 22 August 2023
  • Eventually, John Bowes Morrell was the driving force behind the university's establishment.<ref name=found /> York accepted its ...e was vacated by the family, allowing it to be taken over by the Royal Air Force as the headquarters of No. 4 Group RAF, part of RAF Bomber Command. The hal
    22 KB (3,264 words) - 19:21, 24 August 2023
  • ...rmistice.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Philpott|first1=Ian M.|title=The Royal Air Force : an encyclopedia of the inter-war years|date=2005|publisher=Pen & Sword Av ...and, Issue 10, July 2011 – pages 18, 19.</ref><ref>{{youtube|7gTI3rlJdSs|Royal Anglo Saxon}}</ref>
    8 KB (1,285 words) - 20:08, 27 August 2023
  • ...ions cadre (No. 90 Signals Unit RAF) and the home of No. 135 Expeditionary Air Wing. ...g land to convert it into an RAF airfield, which became known as Royal Air Force Leeming. Part of the buildup of the base included building a decoy airfield
    16 KB (2,336 words) - 18:34, 31 August 2023
  • In 1940 the Royal Air Force built an airfield called RAF Snaith north-west of Pollington. From it flew
    2 KB (303 words) - 17:03, 6 October 2023
  • From 1940 the East Common was requisitioned by the Royal Air Force as a light airfield and named RAF Melbourne. It was later re-built as a st
    8 KB (1,262 words) - 15:53, 22 October 2023
  • During the Second World War, the Royal Air Force used the house as a hospital and convalescent home for the RAF bases in the
    7 KB (1,023 words) - 22:45, 26 October 2023
  • In 1937 RAF Staxton Wold, a Royal Air Force radar station, was set up at the top of Staxton Hill and is currently the o
    2 KB (375 words) - 13:18, 7 November 2023
  • ...e=262}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last1=Proctor|first1=Ian|title=The Royal Air Force in the Cold War, 1950-1970|date=2014|publisher=Pen & Sword|location=Barnsle
    5 KB (762 words) - 18:43, 8 November 2023
  • ...}</ref> There was also an RAF base nearby during the World Wars. Royal Air Force Weeton continued long after the Second World War, throughout the years of N
    7 KB (1,121 words) - 15:34, 26 November 2023
  • During Second World War, the Royal Air Force built a Chain Home radar station at Skaw. The radar station was built in 19
    3 KB (435 words) - 20:50, 27 November 2023
  • ...the public transport of passengers or for flying instruction. The Cornwall Air Ambulance is based at the airport. Since 2012, the airport has hosted the ' |work=Royal Air Force
    14 KB (2,003 words) - 23:07, 1 December 2023
  • ...eld from 1939 until 1950, when it was transferred to the United States Air Force for use as a communications centre. ...logical sites in South-West Northamptonshire |location=London |publisher=[[Royal Commission on the Historical Monuments of England]] |pages=38–39 |url=htt
    5 KB (732 words) - 19:26, 20 January 2024
  • ...at the southernmost edge of the county. The station is home to the 422nd Air Base Group and operates one of Europe's largest military switchboards and p In September 1940 the Air Ministry decided that certain stations would be designated as emergency air
    11 KB (1,685 words) - 17:14, 21 January 2024
  • ...to train bomber pilots. It was later taken over by the United States Army Air Forces, who used it as a reconnaissance base. From here stars including Bob ...dCommunity/> Many new residents at that time lived in the former Royal Air Force huts until brick-built houses were constructed on the site. Berinsfield is
    3 KB (480 words) - 22:14, 12 February 2024
  • ...944 it became the headquarters for No 2 Group RAF of Bomber Command led by Air Vice Marshal Basil Embry. On the staff there for six months before his capt
    4 KB (592 words) - 21:30, 26 February 2024
  • ...eing founded by King Alfred is no longer promoted). In recognition of this royal connection, the college has also been historically known as '''King's Colle ...ries=University of Oxford College Histories}}</ref> In 1329, an additional royal grant of a manor house, La Oriole, eventually gave rise to its common name.
    29 KB (4,575 words) - 21:33, 17 March 2024

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