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RAF Digby - RCAF Digby
A history : 1918 - 1978


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> RAF Bases

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Full list of locations on site

Alma Park
Anwick
Bardney
Barkston Heath
Belton Park
Binbrook
Blankney Hall
Blyton
Boston Wyberton Fen
Bottesford
Bracebridge Heath
Braceby
Buckminster
Bucknall
Caistor
Cockthorne
Coleby Grange
Coningsby
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Cuxwold
Digby
Donna Nook
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East Halton
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Elsham Wolds
Faldingworth
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Freiston
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Grantham
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Grimsthorpe Park
Harlaxton
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Holbeach
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Lincoln West Common
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Manby
Market Deeping
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Mere
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Normanby
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Orby
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Sibsey
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Skellingthorpe
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South Carlton
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Spilsby
Spitalgate
Stenigot
Strubby
Sturgate
Sutton Bridge
Swinderby
Swinstead
Theddlethorpe
Tydd St Mary
Waddington
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Waltham (Grimsby)
Wellingore
Wickenby
Wigsley
Winterton
Woodhall Spa

Updated: 2 Jan 08

CHAPTER 4 - AFTER THE WAR

c. Mar 1948 - 1953

In March 1948, the Secretarial Branch Training Establishment and Equipment Officers’ School left for Bircham Newton to be replaced in September by the Aircrew Education Unit and Aircrew Transit Unit. Shortly afterwards the AEU went to St Athan and No 2 Wing of No 1 Initial Training School was formed. In December the Station lost the ATU to Driffield.

There were no more movements until 1950, when No 1 Initial Training School went to Jurby and No 2 Initial Training School was formed at Digby together with the Instructional Leadership Course.

On 17 January 1950, the present Station Church was dedicated by His Grace the Bishop of Lincoln the Right Reverend Maurice Harland. The original Church, built and dedicated in the early 20s, had been dismantled during a previous building programme. The Church used to stand close to where the present Officers’ Mess is situated. Luring the inter—war years, the temporary Mess was to be replaced with a more permanent structure. The west wing of the Mess, however, was to be built where the Church (itself a temporary structure) stood. Accordingly, the Church was removed and the presently used building taken over. Incidentally, it had been the custom for Station Commanders to present a brass plaque to the Church, giving name and dates of command. Regrettably, when the Church was moved, the plaques disappeared, and to this day there is no trace of them. The only reminder of the old Church plate is the alms plate given by Squadron Leader Ridley mentioned earlier, and a silver sanctuary lamp in memory of James Graydon and Adrian Gordon Cole dated August 1928. We presume them to have been the victims of a flying accident. The lamp was discovered shortly after his arrival in 1977 by the Reverend Michael Hbwes, renovated by the PSA and now hangs once more in the Church.

The Station Commander, when the Church was dedicated, was Group Captain D Lumgair, who later became the Reverend D Lumgair, CBE. He was still attached by proxy as it were , to RAF Digby, since his first parish was Shotwick, in Cheshire. Shotwick, you will remembers was the old name for RAF Sealand, and with which Scopwick became confused.

There are 37 Canadian airmen buried in Scopwick Church burial ground who lost their lives while stationed at Digby. The Cross of Sacrifice was unveiled there by the Air Member, Canadian Joint Staff on 1 June 1950.

On 3 May 1951, No 421(F) Squadron RCAF, which had been formed at Digby in April 1942 as No 42 Sqn revisited its birthplace for a few hours.

The Red Indian Squadron, which had become a regular squadron in the Royal Canadian Air Force Defence Group, had been sent to England under a reciprocal arrangement, to acquire experience in the latest technique of air operations. Clearly, the visit was treated with great ceremony. fig 11 shows an unknown Canadian flight lieutenant being given the unusual privilege of inspecting the Queen’s Colour on parade. From Digby, its members attended a special memorial service at Scopwick Church burial ground and afterwards inspected the graves of their comrades. These include the grave of an American airman who served with the Royal Canadian Air Force, Pilot Officer J G Magee, whose poem ‘High Flight’ (found among his papers after his death in action) became widely known in both Canada and the USA, although it is less well known in this Country. It runs:

Oh I have slipped the surly bonds of earth
And danced the skies on laughter—silvered wings;
Sunwards I have climbed and joined the tumbling mirth
Of sun split clouds, and done a hundred things
You have not dreamed of — wheeled and soared
And swung high in the sunlit silence; hov’ring there.
I’ve chased the shouting wind along and flung
My eager craft through footless halls of air
Up the long delicious burning blue.
I’ve topped the wind—swept heights with easy grace
Where never lark or even eagle flew —
And while with silent lifting mind I’ve trod
The high untrespassed sanctity of space
Put out my hand
And touched the face of God

On April 1950, No 1 Entry E and S Wing graduated (at Cranwell with No 49 entry). It was fitting that the reviewing officer should be Lord Tedder. Of No 1 (E & S) entry he said: “They are truly pioneers and have the right to share with Group Captain Seymour, the first Assistant Commandant, the credit for raising the Wing to the flourishing state in which we find it today.. these 12 can worthily take the place in the commissioned ranks of the Royal Air Force, and I am sure that the will derive nothing but benefit from having been reared alongside their fellows of the GD Branch that they will now help to sustain. All share the bond of training at the College and a common bond of loyalty to the standards and traditions of the College. I feel that nothing but good can come from an extension of the fellowship of Cranwell to include these additional Branches of the Service.”


On the last guest night of term, following the dining out of No 1 Entry, the Station cinema (undergoing yet another phase in its varied existence) was filled by staff and flight cadets waiting expectantly for the first revue to be presented by the Wing at Digby. One cannot help wondering whether the officers waited with some trepidation for the assault on the features of training. In the audience we e Air Vice Marshal Trinder, Air Vice Marshal Harcourt-Smith and Air Commodore Beamish.

The band played the Overture and the No 1 Entry revue began. As the Senior Entry was not numerically strong enough to produce a revue on its own, No 2 Entry assissted, and between them a most amusing programme was put on, with numerous noises off-stage .- not all of them intentional.

There were the inevitable skits on life in the Wing and somehow or the other thinly veiled references to certain well—known figures seemed to creep in, but all were taken in good part. The show was very varied, ranging from harmony singing to a ‘Hellzapoppin’ type of humour, and was most enthusiastically received. The party that took place later on in the Mess provided the grand finale, and it was generally agreed that the evening left nothing to be desired.

Sport, of course, played a very important part in the life of the cadets and cricket in particular was both popular and successful. The Senior Equipment Instructor, Wg Cdr Maggs, however, was extremely keen on athletics and expected all cadets to take part in a standards competition. As is so often the case, this sort of exercise was far from popular with the ball game players in general and the cricketers in particular. One Saturday night, long after dark, following a very successful afternoons cricket and appropriate celebrations several members of the team decided that it would be a good idea if they were to mark out an athletics area on the Wing Commander’s lawn. Cap comforters, denim overalls and plimsolls were the rig for this stealthy operation. The track was marked, the high jump prepared and the tug of war laid out. The whole exercise was achieved with no disturbance to the household until one member of the party decided to move a wheelbarrow of dahlia plants. Unknown to the cadets, Magg’s other passion was dahlias. The slight squeeking of the wheelbarrow awakened him and a green pyjama’d Wing Commander shouted “Who s there?” from a bedroom window. Remembering their GCT the cricketers froze, until thinking they could safely creep away, they returned to their Mess. They thought that they had escaped without being spotted, but next morning after Church the cricket captain received a most generous invitation from the Wing Commander and Mrs Maggs for him and the team to drinks at noon, when they would have an opportunity to inspect their handiwork ‘. Henceforth even the cricketers did their best on the athletics field.

Not all Digby cricket was of a high standard, however. On 28 July 1951, officers and their ladies watching from the Lemon saw a cricket match fought out in an atmosphere as tense as any accompanying an inter—Squadron match. It was the occasion of the Gentlemen v Players match, when the Assistant Commandant led a team of 14 Gentlemen:of Digby (the E & S Wing Senior Entry and the ‘Living In’ officers) against all—comers providing that their numbers did not exceed 11. The match was full of incidents not covered by any rule books, but unfortunately resulted in a ????. Rumour has it that after the match peace again returned to the Churchyard where WG had been spinning in his grave for the previous 3 hours!I Therre is no truth, however, in the ruinous that the Lemon was re—christened the Oval as it is now known -- in honour of the high standard of play.

1951saw the formation of No 2 Grading School at Digby. This was to give flying training to would—be pilots and grade them as to their suitability for training. The actual training and grading was carried out by civilian instructors of Messrs Airwork.


In August and September, Nos 1 and 2 Squadrons of 2 Initial Training School left Digby for Kirton Lindsey leaving No 3 Wing here. February 1953 saw the departure of 3 Initial Training School. No 2 Air Grading School followed. Regrettably, no note has been made of the date of the last operational flight from Digby. All we have recorded is that, on 31 March 1953, ‘a board of officers took over the tower an Bldg 106 (south Hangar) from Messrs Airworks Ltd’.

Sports success in 1953 was upheld by the Station soccer team which won the Lincoln Wednesday League and Knockout Cups and the Lincoln Hospitals cup.

In September 1953, the E and S Wing was moved to Cranwell and the Unit went on to a ‘Care and Maintenance’ Basis until 1 October 1954, when, work was started, in anticipation of our receiving 2 signals units.

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location of RAF Digbyin relation to Lincolnshire - click here for full-size map showing all station locations

Digby memorials
Sector Ops Room Museum

Digby Oral Histories:
Geraldine Poulton - Ops Room WAAF
Peggy Balfour - Ops Room WAAF


"A history 1917 - 1978"
Foreword
Introduction
1917 - Aug1919
Inter-War Years
1919-1926
1927-1937
1937-1939
World War II
1939-1940
1941
Jan - Aug 1942
Sep 1942 - 1944
1945
Return to Training
1945 - Jan 1948
Feb - Mar 1948
Mar 1948 - 1953
A cadet remembers
The Signals Era
Jan 1955 - Dec 1961
Dec 1963 - 1978

1955 - the Signals Era


RAF Digby Party in the Park

Digby Ops Room Museum
A brief history on Airops website

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