The Wartime Memories Project

- RAF Great Orton during the Second World War -


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World War 2 Two II WW2 WWII 1939 1945

RAF Great Orton



   RAF Great Orton (also known as Wiggonby) opened in June 1943 as a Satellite for 6 OTU Wellingtons from Silloth. From October 43 to May 44, 55 OTU flew Hurricanes and Master Aircraft from this base. The Tactical Excercise Unit Typhoon Conversion Squadron was formed at the base on the 7th April 1944 In November 43 No. 1674 HCUwas formed flying Wellingtons. Warwicks of 281 and 282 Air Sea Rescue Squadrons were based at Great Orton between 18/4/44 and 2/1/45.

Great Orton Airfield was put on Care and Maintenance when 6 OTU disbanded and postwar used for bomb storage by 249 MU until closure in 1952. The site was used as a burial ground for animals during the 2001 foot and mouth outbreak.

 


If you can provide any additional information, please add it here.



Those known to have served at

RAF Great Orton

during the Second World War 1939-1945.

  • Smith Pearson Watson. LAC.

The names on this list have been submitted by relatives, friends, neighbours and others who wish to remember them, if you have any names to add or any recollections or photos of those listed, please Add a Name to this List



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Want to know more about RAF Great Orton?


There are:0 items tagged RAF Great Orton available in our Library

  These include information on officers, regimental histories, letters, diary entries, personal accounts and information about actions during the Second World War.


LAC. Pearson Watson Smith No. 56 Operational Training Unit

My father, Pearson Smith (born 1920), was from Sunniside, Newcastle-upon-Tyne, and enlisted in the RAF on 21st of November 1940 at Padgate. He initially mustered as an ACH/W.Op., then became an ACH/GD, and finally a Maint/Asst. He was demobbed on 15th of July 46 at RAF Cardington, Bedfordshire, having reached the rank of LAC.

He went to 10 Signal Recruit Centre, Blackpool, in Feb 41, then moved to No. 3 Signals School (RAF Compton Bassett, Jun 41), 51 OTU (RAF Cranfield, Aug 41), 55 OTU (Oct 41 and Mar 42, RAF Usworth and RAF Great Orton), 16 RC(A) (May 42), hospital at RAF Kirkham (Jul - Aug 43), 56 OTU (RAF Brunton, Jan 45) and No. 95 Maintenance Unit (RAF Lords Bridge, Cambridge, Sep 45) before demobbing at RAF Cardington (102 PDC 'A') on 25/5/46.

He also did several 'Alt Backers Up' courses, though it's not clear from his service record what these were. However, an article on the BBC website WW2 People's War may shed some light on this as the correspondent says ‘The Backers Up’ course consisted mostly of football, arms drill, firing on the rifle range, route marches and physical training. The only other possibility is that, as the term 'Backers Up' was used by the Pathfinder Force to describe crews whose job was to add coloured markers to target flares to maintain the aiming point during a raid, is that he may have started as a maintenance assistant on radios but later changed to explosive ordnance, hence how he came to be at 95 MU. I think this unlikely as he joined 95 MU after the war ended and prior to that had been at OTUs, none of which had aircraft used by the Pathfinder Force.

I never met my father, as my parents separated when I was a child and he died in 1992. I would be interested in any stories or information about the places he served, especially at the time he was there, and also about the 'Alt Backers Up' courses mentioned on his Service record, as well as information about 16 RC.

Notes:

  • RAF Compton Bassett was a training establishment for ground trade radio operators and radio mechanics.
  • 51 OTU at RAF Cranfield (Bedfordshire) in 1941 operated the Beaufort, Mosquito, Wellington, and Hurricane.
  • 55 OTU at RAF Usworth (Co. Durham) in 1941 operated the Hurricane X.
  • 16 RC (A) - no information, but possibly 16 Radio Course, location unknown; the 'A' denotes attachment to 55 OTU as parent unit.
  • 55 OTU at RAF Great Orton (Cumberland) in 1942 operated the Hurricane, Typhoon and Master.
  • RAF Kirkham (Lancashire) was the main armament training centre for the RAF from Nov 1941 and had a military hospital, probably the closest one to RAF Great Orton where Pearson was based at the time.
  • 56 OTU at RAF Brunton (Northumberland) in 1945 operated the Typhoon 1b and Tempest.
  • RAF Lords Bridge in 1945 was an Air Ammunition Park and Forward Filling Station for mustard gas munitions.
  • RAF Cardington (Bedfordshire) in 1946 was a Personnel Despatch Centre (for demobilisation). The 'A' denotes 'A Class' demobilisation category.

Stephen Smith







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