If you’re a car boot sale enthusiast you may well know about
this little bit of wartime history. For three miles SW of Morpeth, near the village of Tranwell , lie the fading remains of a
short-lived World War II airfield once known as RAF Morpeth – aka Tranwell Airfield.
It existed for a few short years in the 1940s, but has now lain
fallow for more than sixty years. Constructed from 1941, it was opened the
following year as ‘No.4 Air Gunnery School’, and was handed a collection of
ungainly Blackburn Bothas for the purposes of training up student airmen – with
around 4,000 young men passing through its gates during WWII.
The Botha was essentially a failed torpedo bomber, relegated
to a training role early in the war. Other, more reliable, aircraft were to be
found at Tranwell, but it was the Botha which was to be most infamously linked to
the site – and which was to account for several fatalities during the base’s
short life.
Essentially, the Bothas were heavy and underpowered – and
the airstrips at Tranwell were only just
long enough to take them. Several incidents in a few short months were
punctuated by two especially notable accidents – the first occurred in November
1942 when two planes collided on the same runway, resulting in one death. Then
in March 1943 two Bothas collided over the base, killing ten young airmen
(average age 20) – five of whom were from The Netherlands. All are buried at
St.Mary’s Church, Morpeth. With its appalling safety record the Bothas were
eventually replaced by Avro Ansons in July 1943.
In time, demand for air gunners dimished and RAF
Morpeth/Tranwell was closed in December 1944 – the substantial numbers of staff
being reassigned elsewhere. A few months later the site reopened as No.80
Operational Training Unit, pairing Free French pilots with the famous Spitfire
– though this only lasted three months before the base became a Maintenance
Unit. Activity diminished thereafter before it was closed for good in 1948.
Many of the overseas men who spent time at Tranwell – including a large Polish
contingent – settled in the region after the war.
A few relics remain, including an underground control room,
but the site is today a car boor sale haven. Proposals to reactivate the
airfield and/or create a museum there in recent years have come to nought.
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