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History :: Emergency Landing Grounds

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Updated: 18 Jan 05

The Great War

During the Great War, air power was required to patrol the coast and provide aerial defences against the Zeppelin and Gotha bomber threat. However the aircraft were slow and had limited fuel capacity. Therefore, in addition to their home bases the squadrons could call on emergency landing strips which were created at Anwick, Braceby, Bucknall, Cockthorne, Cuxwold (nr Grimsby), Grimsthorpe Park, Kelstern, Market Deeping, Moorby, New Holland, Swinstead, and Winterton. The network of emergency landing grounds was the best available solution to keeping the fighters airborne as long as possible to engage enemy aircraft and dirigibles.

These night landing fields or emergency landing grounds consisted of a grass strip runway, a shed housing a couple of mechanics, fuel and some flares to aid emergency landings in poor visibility.

Emergency Landing Groundswere no more than fields, cleared of obstacles such as hedges and ditches, marked on being suitable for landing aircraft on.

 

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