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801st/492nd BG Association newsletter Harrington Aviation Museum newsletter Contact us: Cbaggermuseum@aol.com |
Carpetbagger
Aviation Museum
Harrington,
Northamptonshire
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History of
Harrington Airfield
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On the 6th November 1943
Harrington Aerodrome was handed over to the Royal Air Force by the USAAF . The
'handing over' parade was scheduled for 1500 hrs with the troops assembling at
1315 hrs. At 1345 hrs Air Chief Marshall Sir A.T. Harris KCB OBE AFC, Air
Officer Commanding-in-Chief Bomber Command, arrived by air. At 1415hrs Air Vice
Marshall H.K. Thorold CBE DSC DFC AFC, Air Officer Commanding No 92 Group,
arrived by road. They were received by Group Captain G. Lowe DFC AFC, Officer
Commanding RAF Station Desborough.
At 1415 hrs a RAF wing comprising of the
Harrington personnel and a contingent from RAF Desborough marched to the
Assembly Point on the North/South runway under the command of Wing Commander
P.D.S. Bennett DFC, Officer Commanding RAF Satellite Harrington, whilst the 852nd
Engineer Aviation Battalion was taking up its position. Both Units were then
handed over to Colonel Landaker USAAF who took charge of the parade. At 1500
hrs the RAF wing and the 852nd Engineer Aviation Battalion marched
in column past the Saluting Base to the music of their respective bands. The
RAF wing was followed by a motorised section of the 852nd Engineer
Aviation Battalion. On resuming their position on the parade ground Major
General Lee USAAF made a brief speech as Master of Ceremonies, this was
followed by the Invocation delivered by Chaplain W.B. Morton of the USAAF.
In token of the democratic aim for which
they were fighting Private Harry A. Downs of the 852nd Engineer
Aviation Battalion then handed over the Airfield with the good wishes of his
Battalion to AC2 Anthony H. Wright of the RAF who acknowledged it in a brief
speech of thanks. Lt General I.C. Eaker then formally presented the airfield
and in doing so stressed the mutual objective of the two forces, which was to
bomb Hitler until his war machine collapsed. He also reminded those present
that Britain had already placed at the disposal of the American Air Corps more
than 100 airfields. In formally accepting this token of the co-operation of
their American Ally, the Air Officer Commanding-in-Chief Bomber Command spoke
of the purpose of the airfield, which was to train skilled aircrews to break
the enemy's means and will to war, to emasculate every centre of his
production. He warned that whilst they were well on the way to achieving this
the war was a race, Victory the prize, but not to the man who eased up and
looked over his shoulder during that race.
At 1535 hrs all stood in salute to the
strains of the National Anthems of the two Nations. As the music ceased three
Wellington aircraft from RAF Desborough flying in formation, dipped in salute.
To bring the ceremony to a fitting conclusion Squadron Leader Donald M. Knight
of the Chaplains Branch RAF read a Benediction.
The AOCIC Bomber Command, accompanied by
the AOC No 92 Group with Lt General I.C. Eaker, Major General Lee and Brigadier
General Moore then made an inspection of the airfield, after which they took
tea in the RAF Officers Mess. The AOCIC was later escorted to his plane by
W/Cdr P.D.S. Bennett DFC and took off at 1647 hrs. Lt General I.C. Eaker with
Brig General Peck departed by plane at 1652 hrs. At 1700 hrs General Lee left
the Mess and was accompanied to his private train at Lamport by Air Vice
Marshall H.K. Thorold CBE DSC DFC AFC, Group Captain G. Lowe DFC AFC and Wing
Commander P.D.S Bennett DFC.
Being some 500 ft above sea level and
located not too far away from the supply bases of Cheddington and Holme as well
as the British SOE based at Tempsford, Harrington was chosen for the
Carpetbagger Operations by the Eighth Air Force's Special Operation Group.
These operations being to deliver supplies and OSS agents into occupied Europe
to support local Resistance units. The advance echelons of the 36th and 406th
Bomb Squadrons moved into Harrington on the 25th March 1944. These squadrons
were to form a new Bomb Group known as the 801st Provisional Bomb Group (H).
The Station was officially handed over to
the new Commanding Officer, Lt Col Clifford Heflin, by Squadron Leader E. D.
King, RAF, on the 1st May 1944. Later in the month two more squadrons were
attached to the 801st Group, these were the 788th from Rackheath and 850th from
Eye who had been sent to Cheddington for initial training in Carpetbagger
operations before moving to Harrington.
In addition to the planes and their crews
support groups at Harrington included: HQ and 352nd Air Service
Squadron, 39th Service Group; HQ 328th Service Group; 35th
Station Complement Squadron; 1077th Signal Company; 1561st
Ordnance S&M Company; 1094th Quartermaster Company; 1139th
Military Police Company; 2132nd Engineer Fire Fighting Platoon and
Detachment "O" 1020th Chemical Company
Carpetbagger operations at Harrington peaked
in June and July of 1944 as Operation Overlord became a reality in France. For
the month of July 1944, the four squadrons at Harrington supplied resistance
forces with 5,043 containers, 3,015 packages, 1,540 bundles of leaflets and 69
"Joes" or agents and 7 pigeons. The total of 424 successful sorties
was the highest achieved in a single month during the life of the project.
On the 13th August 1944 the Carpetbaggers at
Harrington were re-designated as the 492nd Bomb Group (H) and the four
squadrons became the 856th, 857th, 858th and 859th Bomb Squadrons under the
Commanding Officer, Col Clifford Heflin. On the 26th August 1944 the command
was transferred to Colonel Robert Fish, Colonel Heflin returning to America.

Lt Col Fish, left, and Col Heflin, right
Despite these organisational changes August
was not far behind July with 350 successful sorties, delivering 243
"Joes", 4,066 containers, 1,580 nickels and 2,306 packages, but by
then the tide had begun to turn. When Carpetbagger operations at Harrington
came to a practical end on the night of 16/17th September 1944, the
492nd BG had completed 335 sorties for the month.

B24 Miss Fitts taking off in front of the Foxhall Cottages
Due to General Patton's fuel supply problem
in France it was decided that the Carpetbagger's B-24 Liberators should be used
to fly gasoline directly to forward airfields. Between the 21st and 30th
September 1944 822,791 gallons of 80 octane gasoline were flown out from
Harrington on 'trucking missions' to three separate airfields in France and
Belgium. This operation contaminated the fuel tanks of a considerable number of
the B-24s and resulted in their condemnation as beyond repair
In September 1944 the 8th Air force High
Command decided that as supply missions would inevitably gradually run down the
492nd Group would prepare three squadrons for the night bombing role leaving
only one squadron (the 856th BS) to carry out supply missions on behalf of the
OSS. These transitions however proved to be difficult due to the many
modifications that had been made to the B-24 aircraft for their Carpetbagger
role, which had included the removal of oxygen equipment and some armament.
On 17th December 1944 Colonel Hudson H.
Upham assumed command of the 492nd Bomb Group with night bombing and supply
dropping operations continuing.
In January 1945 the 859th Bomb Squadron were
transferred to the 15th Air Force and operated Carpetbagger type missions from
Brindisi in Italy
On the 27th February 1945 a
Spitfire Mk IXE, serial number MA814 of No. 303 Kosciuszko Fighter Squadron
based at Coltishall, Norfolk, was returning from a routine patrol when its
Polish pilot, Flight Sergeant Klemens Prusak, decided to land on the American airfield
at Harrington and obtain some much prized American cigarettes and candy from
the base's PX store. Douglas D. Walker recounted his memories of this incident
when he revisited the airfield in 1987:
It was a sunny morning in February 1945
when I was strolling to the mess with a few friends to have lunch. We noticed
an English Spitfire plane landing on the runway nearby (this did not surprise
us, many English pilots landed at our base to purchase American cigarettes and
candy bars) The pilot hopped out, strolled in our direction, and stopped to
chat to us. He was a member of the Free Polish Airforce and was just finishing
his training. We invited him to join us for lunch.
During lunch we learned how, as a child
he fled from the Germans when they had invaded his country and how he had
waited impatiently to be old enough to join the Free Polish Airforce so that he
could "fly Messerschmitts". As we parted company he told us to watch
him, he was going to perform a "fly over" and show us some
"fancy flying". We watched as he skilfully threw his Spitfire into a
series of aerobatics until, in horror, we saw him dip too low to the ground. A
wing ripped through a nearby tree, then the plane smashed into the Finance Hut
and dug a hole into the ground near us. We ran to help him but there was
nothing we could do. We watched helplessly as he was pronounced dead by the
medics. Fortunately the loss of life was not greater as the two men who were
normally in the Finance Hut were in the mess hall when the accident happened.
The remains of F/Sgt Klemens Prusak, service
no. P-782599, born 22.11.14 and died 27.2.45 were buried in the
Newark-upon-Trent Cemetery, Nottinghamshire. (The Air Ministry file reference
on F/Sgt Prusak being P-429165/45). The Polish Air Force Association in Great
Britain in a letter written in 1994 claimed that they had no information about
any living relatives of the late F/Sgt Prusak

F/Sgt Prusak's Grave at Newark Cemetery

The Polish War Graves at Newark Cemetery
The Northants Aviation Museum Society has
reconstructed a Nissen hut on the site of this Finance Hut on the
administration site of the airfield and it now houses their museum. The site of
the Spitfire crash being in the field where the main car park for the museum is
now located
On the 14th March 1945 the 406th Night
Leaflet Squadron moved from Cheddington to Harrington and operated there until
the 28th June 1945 with 20 aircrews along with their B-17 Flying Fortress and
B-24 Liberator aircraft
In addition to the B-24 Liberators the 492nd
BG also used C-47 Dakotas, A-26 Invaders and British built Mosquitoes. These
Mosquitoes were fitted with wire recording machines and were used in Red
Stocking missions to record radio messages from agents in Germany and Austria.
It was not unusual therefore for there to be in excess of 60 operational planes
on the airfield at any one time

A-26 Invader Queen of Spades at Harrington 1945

Mosquito TA 614 used at Harrington as a training aircraft
Afternoon lineup at Harrington (photo taken from the small arms range butts looking south)
The 492nd BG at Harrington continued supply
dropping, bombing and Red Stocking missions until the 7th May 1945 when Germany
finally surrendered.
On the 7th July 1945 the air echelon of the
492nd BG left Harrington for Kirtland Field, Albuquerque, USA where they later
joined up with the ground echelon who had travelled back to the USA by the
ocean liner Queen Elizabeth. The Group being deactivated on the 17th October
1945.
Following the withdrawal of the Americans
Harrington airfield then fell into a period of disuse when it was held on a
care and maintenance basis.

Control Tower 1945
In those days the RAF Maintenance Units (now
called Supply Depots) were responsible for receipt of equipment from
manufacturers and its storage until required by Squadrons and other units. When
no longer required by such units, their equipment was returned to the
appropriate Maintenance Unit. After the war this was returned at such a rate
that the massive Maintenance Units could no longer cope and in consequence took
under their wing a number of non operational aerodromes in order to use them in
a storage capacity
During 1947 - 48 the No 25 Maintenance Unit
Hartlebury, Worcestershire, had under their control the aerodromes at
Harrington, Chelveston and Diss in Norfolk and into these a stream of Bedford
lorries and Queen Mary low loaders delivered equipment until all suitable
buildings were filled to capacity.
According to Colin Colleyshaw, the officer
commanding at Harrington during this period, manning at Harrington were 40
airmen, 2 Corporals, 2 Sergeants, 1 civilian Clerk of Works and 1 Officer in
charge. Quite a bit different to when it was an operational airfield during the
war, then there were over 3,000 American servicemen on the base.
After the initial receipt of equipment from
units closing down it was essential to classify it into equipment required by
the RAF for future use, or equipment surplus to requirements which could be
sent to the auctions being held at that time
Gradually, as surplus equipment was
auctioned, storage capacity in the Maintenance Units returned and equipment
could be re-shipped to them and the sub-sites, as the aerodromes were called,
were de-requisitioned and returned to farming, though in some cases retaining
their runways and buildings for a number of years
Although the airfield at Harrington again
fell into disuse and had been returned to farmland, it received a new lease of
life when it was selected to become one of the RAF's Thor missile sites in the
late 1950's.

Thor missile being raised to launch position
Three rocket launch pads, which still
remain, with ancillary buildings were constructed. The whole area, being
declared top security, was fenced off and floodlit. The IRBM WS-315A Thor
missile system had a range of 1,500 nautical miles. The 60 ft long Thor missile
was powered by a 150,000 lb thrust rocket engine fuelled by liquid oxygen and
RP-1, a light cut petrol, and carried a 2 Megaton thermonuclear warhead.
Deployment of these missiles commenced in December 1958 and was phased out in
1963 with the advent of the manned V-bombers, the Valiant, Vulcan and Victor,
along with an increased threat to fixed installations due to the improved
accuracy of Soviet missiles.

Aerial photo of Thor launch pads 1998

Thor Launch pads in 2001

Thor Launch pad 2001

Revetment 'stores' 2001

The last Thor missile leaving Harrington in 1963
After the Thor site was abandoned the buildings,
runways and most of the roads and taxiways were demolished in 1965. The
resultant hardcore forming the base of many other roads and buildings then
under construction elsewhere at the time. The airfield once again returning to
agriculture.

Wartime layout of Harrington airfield - Station 179

The memorial on the C-47 dispersal at the side of the Lamport - Harrington Road
In 1987, at a reunion of the Carpetbaggers,
a memorial was dedicated to the memory of those who did not survive the war.
This memorial is located on the site of one of the former aircraft dispersal
points and depicts a Carpetbagger B-24 Liberator taking off in front of the
Foxhall cottages alongside the airfield at Harrington.
In 1999 Colonel Fish and his wife Jean
revisited Harrington and a memorial service was held on the airfield. In
attendance were representatives of the USAF Special Operations Command from RAF
Mildenhall, members of the Harrington Aviation Museum Society, Northants
Aviation Society and many members of the public. After the wreath laying there
was a flypast by a Talon Hercules of USAFSOC

Col Robert & Jean Fish at the Station 179 memorial
Although the foundations of some buildings
can still be seen around the site of the airfield, the only remaining original
substantial WW2 buildings left standing are on the former administration site.
The Carpetbagger Aviation Museum is now housed in part of the original
Operations Building at the airfield's administration site. The Northants
Aviation Society have also located their museum on the site of the former
finance hut alongside the Carpetbagger Aviation Museum.

Col. Robert W. Fish with his post war uniform at the Carpetbagger Aviation Museum

A "Joe" on display at the Carpetbagger Aviation Museum
©
Copyright Harrington Aviation Museum Society 2001 - 2