RAF Pengam Moors

RAF Pengam Moors

(AKA RAF Cardiff – 43 MU)

RAF Pengam Moors from the air. The two Bellman hangars can be seen at top left of picture.
IATA: noneICAO: none
Summary
Airport type Military airfield between 1938 – 1946. Also used for civilian flying – closed 1954
Operator Royal Air Force
Serves Cardiff, Wales
Location Tremorfa
Elevation AMSL 7 ft / 2.00 m
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
NE/SW 2,800 853 Concrete
Statistics
Battles/Conflicts World War II
Opened as a civilian airport in 1931. Also known at various times as Splott Aerodrome, Cardiff Municipal Airport, RAF Cardiff, 43 Maintenance Unit, Pengam Moors Airport.

RAF Pengam Moors (also known as RAF Cardiff) was a Royal Air Force station and maintenance unit (MU), located on the Pengam Moors area of Tremorfa, 2 miles south east of Cardiff city centre in Wales from June 1938 to January 1946.

Prior to RAF service the site served as a private aerodrome later called Cardiff Municipal Airport. After World War II the airfield reverted to private commercial flying until closure in 1954 when all services were transferred to Rhoose airport. The runway has since been removed and the site has been covered with industrial units, private housing and a school, with the names of many roads reflecting the previous history as an airfield.

Contents

History

Pre World War II

The site had been associated with flying since as early as 1905 when Ernest Willows built his first airship at Pengam. His third airship Willows No. 3 - City of Cardiff flew from Cardiff to London on 6 August 1910. The flight established Willows as the first person to fly across the Bristol Channel and was the longest flight achieved in Britain at the time. He immediately followed this with a flight from London to Paris establishing the first airship flight across the English Channel at night.

The original privately operated Splott Aerodrome, on land purchased from Lord Tredegar, was opened for private club and leisure flying in September 1931, only later changing its name to Cardiff Municipal Airport when scheduled passenger flights began. The early accommodation was limited to wooden hutting and hangars. The aerodrome fronted on the Severn Estuary and to protect the single grassed runway from flooding, a sea wall was constructed.

British Air Navigation Co Ltd initially operated their services using de Havilland Fox Moths and de Havilland Dragon Moths. In April 1933 Great Western Railway Air Services began their flights to Haldon, Plymouth and Birmingham using Westland Wessex aircraft. In 1934, Great Western Railway Air Services was amalgamated with several other small airlines into the new Railway Air Services and upgraded to de Havilland 84 Dragon Rapides, the same aircraft type that was flown by Western Airways.

In 1933, Western Airways launched the service to Weston-super-Mare, with 13 flights each way daily at a charge of 6 shillings and 6 pence (thirty two and a half pence - or £16.70 in today's terms), only later extending to Bournemouth and France. Railway Air Services resumed peacetime flights in early 1946, now using their newly acquired fleet of Avro Ansons and ex-RAF Douglas Dakotas.

In 1939, the UK's Air Transport Licensing Authority came into being and gave Western Airways the monopoly for all airline flights into and out of Cardiff.

At various times a range of commercial service flights were introduced:

Wartime RAF use

The site was surveyed by War Department engineers and in August 1936 a decision to build a Royal Auxiliary Air Force station at Pengam Moors was made. Additional land was requisitioned to extend the length of the existing runway and provide space for a technical site. The buildings works were completed in 1938, with the provision of several brick built offices, hangars and with most accommodation housed in temporary Nissen and Quonset hutting. The headquarters site was in the north-west corner of the station and the technical site in the south-west corner located on the requisitioned former vegetable allotments.

In June 1938 No 614 (Glamorgan) Squadron RAuxAF was formed and took up residence at RAF Pengam Moors. Established as an army co-operation squadron on target spotting and range finding duties they were equipped with Hawker Hinds and Hawker Hectors until July 1939 when the squadron was re-equipped with Westland Lysanders. No. 614 Squadron remained at Pengam Moors until June 1940 when they were redeployed to RAF Inverness in Scotland and retasked onto coastal patrol duties. When the squadron returned to Wales they were based instead at RAF Llandow.

In January 1940 a flight of three crews from 815 Naval Air Squadron relocated to RAF Pengam Moors from RNAS Worthy Down flying Fairey Swordfish torpedo bombers on anti-submarine patrols in the Bristol Channel and English Channel. Their role was to locate German submarines and either sink them or prevent them from surfacing and attacking the large number of convoys arriving at Cardiff and Bristol with supplies from America and Canada.

In February 1940, The RAF established No. 43 Maintenance Unit (MU) at RAF Pengam Moors. The unit was tasked principally with dismantling, packing and despatching fighter aircraft to overseas locations. The Supermarine Spitfires, Hawker Hurricanes, Westland Lysanders and light bombers were flown into Pengam Moors from factories all over the UK. The staff at 43 MU dismanted the aircraft and crated them ready for loading onto freighters at Cardiff Docks, where they sailed to restock squadrons in Gibraltar, Malta and North Africa and other far flung theatres of war. The 43 MU facility remained in operation throughout the remainder of the war and was closed in October 1945.

In November 1940, No. 8 Anti-Aircraft Co-operation Unit (AACU) were based at the airfield with a variety of aircraft, but mainly Miles Martinet target tugs, to provide towed airborne targets for anti-aircraft gunnery training. The unit was amalgamated into No. 587 Squadron RAF in December 1943 and remained at Pengam Moors until the station closed in 1946.

The famous RAF pilot Guy Gibson, commander of The Dambusters was a visitor to RAF Pengam Moors in 1940. Gibson met the Penarth born actress and show dancer Eve Moore at a party in Coventry during early December 1939 while he was on three days rest leave at his brother’s house. The following year Guy and Eve were married at All Saints Church in Eve's home town of Penarth. Gibson was based at RAF Digby in Lincolnshire at the time and for the wedding he flew a Bristol Blenheim bomber from RAF Wellingore satellite field in Lincolnshire to RAF Pengam Moors, returning three days later with his new wife as a passenger.

In 1941 two Bellman hangars were built on the site, together with additional hardstanding and a Sommerfield perimeter trackway. In 1942 the grassed strip was replaced with a 853m (2,800ft) concrete runway.

Throughout World War II RAF Pengam Moors was used as an emergency landing field for Spitfires, Hurricanes and other aircraft from RAF Colerne, RAF Fairwood Common. RAF Filton and RAF Pembrey damaged in air battles over the Bristol Channel ports during nightly air raids by German raiders.

Post-war

In January 1946 RAF Pengam Moors was closed as a military establishment.The facility was handed back to Cardiff City Council and civilian flying recommenced from the airfield with the principal operator being Cambrian Air Services (later renamed Cambrian Airways), although it never regained the number of routes that had existed pre-war, as passenger aircraft were now larger and the short runway inadequate. The airfield became redundant when all civilian flying was transferred on 1 April 1954 to the expanding facility at the new Cardiff Airport that was being developed on the site of the former RAF Rhoose. The longer runways at Rhoose were more suitable for jet passenger aircraft and its remote location meant less noise problems over built up city areas.

The Pengam Moors airfield site has largely been turned over to residential or industrial uses including a Rover car parts factory, a Tesco Extra supermarket and the Willows High School; there is almost no signs remaining of its former use, although a few of the original buildings and road layouts still remain. Residential streets on the site bear names that hint at its past history - eg. Runway Road, Handley Road and Avro Close.

See also

List of RAF stations

External links