RAF Rackheath
Royal Air Force Rackheath, more commonly known as RAF Rackheath, is a former Royal Air Force station located near the village of Rackheath, approximately north-east of Norwich, in the county of Norfolk in England.
History
Laid out on agricultural land between the two settlements of Rackheath Parva and Rackheath Magna, construction on the airfield began in, for the United States Army Air Forces Eighth Air Force. Constructed to the Air Ministry requirements for a class A airfield, it followed the typical layout of other heavy bomber bases, with a main runway of and two auxiliary runways of each. The perimeter track was in length, and this and the runways had a concrete screed finish. Mark II airfield lighting was installed, two T2 hangars were erected for major aircraft maintenance, and dispersed temporary building accommodation provided for some 2400 personnel in the wooded countryside of the estate to the south-west of the airfield. A dispersed weapon storage area was constructed to the north of the airfield. During construction, of soil were excavated, of soak-away drains installed, and of concrete laid. A major overhead power line had to be put underground to clear the aircraft flying approaches.USAAF use
The airfield was given USAAF designation Station 145.467th Bombardment Group (Heavy)
The airfield was opened on, and was used by the 467th Bombardment Group, 'The Rackheath Aggies', of the United States Army Air Forces, arriving from Wendover AAF at Utah. The 467th was assigned to the 96th Combat Bombardment Wing, and the group tail code was a 'Circle-P'. Flying Consolidated B-24 Liberators, its operational squadrons were:- 788th Bombardment Squadron
- 789th Bombardment Squadron
- 790th Bombardment Squadron
- 791st Bombardment Squadron
File:467bg-b242.jpg|thumb|left|Ford B-24H-25-FO Liberator, serial 42-95234 'Weiser Witch', of the 788th Bomb Squadron. This aircraft crash landed at RAF Bungay on 5 May 1945 after fire in the nose.|alt=
In combat, the unit served chiefly as a strategic bombardment organisation, attacking the German navy harbour at Kiel, chemical plants at Bonn, textile factories at Stuttgart, power plants at Hamm, steel works at Osnabrück, the aircraft industry at Brunswick, and other objectives.
In addition to strategic operations, it was engaged occasionally in support and interdiction missions. It bombed shore installations and bridges near Cherbourg on D-Day, 6 June 1944. It struck enemy troop and supply concentrations near Montreuil on 25 July 1944 to assist the Allied drive across France.
In September, over two weeks the bombers flew petrol from Rackheath to a forward base at Clastres in France for use by the US mechanised forces. Attacked German communications and fortifications during the Battle of the Bulge, December 1944 to January 1945. To assist the Allied assault across the Rhine in March 1945 it attacked enemy transportation.
The group flew its last combat mission on 25 April 1945, and then returned to the US to Sioux Falls AAF in South Dakota during June and July 1945. Subsequently, the 467th was re-designated as the 467th Bombardment Group, with Boeing B-29 Superfortresses in preparation for the planned invasion of Japan. The 467th was inactivated on 4 August 1946.
RAF use
The airfield was returned to the Royal Air Force, and a number of units were posted here:- No. 94 Maintenance Unit RAF
- No. 231 Maintenance Unit RAF
Current use
The former admin site is now a small development of new private houses and the former barracks site is now new commercial buildings. The former main technical site is now known as Rackheath Industrial Estate, with several of the WW2-era buildings having been modified or extended and used for light industry, with many new additional modern industrial buildings constructed. The primary access road on the estate was named Wendover Road to commemorate the airbase in the United States where the 467th Bomb Group was formed. Other estate roads carry related names including: Albert Shower Road after base commander Colonel Albert J. Shower; Ramirez Road after ground crew chief M/Sgt Joe Ramirez; Witchcraft Way after an individual aircraft of the group; and Hudson Close and Liberator Close.
The control tower still exists, though after many years of neglect, was renovated during 2006 and 2007; it has been converted to use as an administrative building, currently occupied by a software company. The west T2 hangar is virtually beyond recognition, as compared to its appearance in 1943. The former aircraft hangar doors have been removed, replaced by modern brickwork and aluminium cladding, with smaller rolling shutter doors added to the front, and it has been repainted cream and green. Inside the building, the roof girders appear to be original and identical to those seen in photographs taken in 1944. The other T2 hangar, on the eastern side of the airfield near the Salhouse railway station, was dismantled many years ago and two new small industrial buildings constructed on its former southern dispersal.
Memorials
A memorial to the 467th Bomb Group consisting of a plaque and a pair of benches was dedicated in 1983. The memorial plaque, flanked by the two benches, is situated in front the Rackheath village sign on the Salhouse Road, adjacent to the Holy Trinity Church at 52°39'46"N 01°22'42"E.A further memorial stone was erected in 1990 on the corner of Bidwell Road and Liberator Close. Flanked by two flagpoles with United States and United Kingdom flags hoisted, the polished black granite stone, with inscription detailing the operations of the 467th Bombardment Group of the 2nd Air Division, Eighth Air Force, USAAF at RAF Rackheath, was dedicated on 29 July 1990 by the Four Hundred And Sixty Seventh Bombardment Group Heavy Association Ltd.
Rackheath Pathfinders
Site 6 was a small part of the airbase comprising, amongst others, Commanding Officer's quarters, officers' club, shower blocks, dining rooms, cinema, kitchen areas, and several blast shelters. The site is bisected by Newman Road.In March 2020, a volunteer group was formed to help manage and 're-claim' the site. A Facebook Group has been formed to enable people to follow the volunteers progress.