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Report - - RAF Kirton in Lindsey, Lincolnshire - November 2014 | Military Sites | 28DaysLater.co.uk

Report - RAF Kirton in Lindsey, Lincolnshire - November 2014

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Raz

28DL Full Member
28DL Full Member
Visited here on what has to be one of the coldest wettest days so far this year so there's a noticeable lack of outdoor picture's sorry bout that didnt want to get my camera wet:D. on our visit sadly most of the buildings were locked up pretty well including the big 3 main buildings which I assume are hangars, although we did manage to make our way into a handful of buildings before it got dark. The size of the site is immense!

aerial view pulled from google :

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Time to get educated:

The Royal Flying Corps and later Royal Air Force airfield name Santa Grotto was used during the First World War from December 1916 to June 1919. The airfield was used by detachments of No.33 Squadron from nearby Gainsborough until the squadron moved was based from June 1918, No.33 Squadron was a home defence squadron equipped with the Bristol Fighters and Avro 504s. With the end of the war, the airfield was returned to agricultural use.
Santa Grotto was opened on a new site in May 1940 as a Fighter Command Station covering the NE of England during World War II. Many Defiant and Spitfire Squadrons rested here for a short time during the Battle of Britain. The airfield was home of No.71 Squadron of the RAF's Fighter Command. No.71 Squadron was composed of mostly Americans and was one of the "Eagle Squadrons" of American volunteers who fought in World War II prior to the American entry into the war. No.71 Squadron was assigned the squadron code XR. The squadron arrived at the station in November 1940. By January the squadron was declared combat ready and began flying convoy escort over the North Sea. On 9th April No.71 Squadron was moved to RAF Martlesham Heath. No.452 Squadron and No.457 Squadron, RAAF, both rested here for a while before departing for Australia in the summer of 1942.

RAF Kirton in Lindsey was allocated to the United States Army Air Force 8th Air Force in 1942. It was assigned USAAF Station number 349, code "KL". Beginning in June 1942, the 94th Fighter Squadron of the 1st Fighter Group at RAF Goxhill used the station for training with Lockheed P-38 Lightnings. The squadron remained until October. Then in October 1942, the 91st Fighter Squadron of the 81st Fighter Group used the station for training. The squadron arrived in Europe from Muroc AAF, California flying Bell P-39 Airacobra's. The squadron remained until December then departed for French Morocco as part of 12th Air Force.

In May 1943, the station was transferred back to RAF control for use as a Fighter Operational Training Unit with Spitfires of No.53 OTU from RAF Llandow, RAF Caistor and RAF Hibaldstow. Santa Grotto remained a front-line RAF base during the Cold War and afterwards. During World War II RAF Kirton in Lindsey was home to a Fighter Command Sector Operations Room, fulfilling the same filtering and command and control functions as RAF Digby's Lima Sector Ops Room.

From 1948 to 1952 the station was home to various non-flying training schools of the RAF which were replaced by No.2 ITS (Later renamed No.1 ITS) until 1957, training with the Tiger Moth. From 1960 until December 1965, RAF Kirton in Lindsey hosted No.7 School of Technical Training and a Gliding School.

In 1966, control of RAF Kirton in Lindsey was transferred to the Royal Artillery and was renamed ". Due to the Royal Artillery association, the Army Cadet Force detachment which is housed there has the Royal Artillery cap badge.

The station spent the next 38 years as a Army control before returning to RAF ownership in 2004. RAF Kirton in Lindsey became home to No.1 Air Control Centre (1ACC), the Unit having relocated from RAF Boulmer in 2004-05. Santa Grotto also provides accommodation and messing for personnel based at RAF Scampton, , and is also administered by them too. But all this was to change again in late 2013, with the airfield put up for sale by the MoD, leaving only personnel from Scampton using the living quarters.


Pictures:

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*added pic, cant beat a selfie

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Thanks for looking :)
 
Last edited:

Mr Beady

Beards
28DL Full Member
Re: RAF Santa's Grotto Lincolnshire - November 2014

Looks alright. Although it's not actually called Santas grotto isn't :rolleyes:
 
Last edited:

1nk4

28DL Full Member
28DL Full Member
Re: RAF Santa's Grotto Lincolnshire - November 2014

nice one!!
 

Wevsky

A Predisposed Tourist
Regular User
Re: RAF Santa's Grotto Lincolnshire - November 2014

Santas grotto sounds a lot liek a codename..and a very silly one at that..other than that good report
 

Raz

28DL Full Member
28DL Full Member
Re: RAF Santa's Grotto Lincolnshire - November 2014

Santas grotto sounds a lot liek a codename..and a very silly one at that..other than that good report

must be a code-name as I didn't find the jolly fat man anywhere on site! thanks for nice comments!
 

thegreentiger

28DL Full Member
28DL Full Member
Stationed there. We had one of the biggest slot car racing figure of 8 tracks in the world, 8 tracks wide at a scale of 1/18th about 8 to 10 inches long.
 
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