Advanced Landing Ground

Advanced Landing Grounds (ALGs) were temporary advance airfields constructed by the Allies during World War II during the liberation of Europe. They were built in the UK prior to the invasion and thereafter in northwest Europe from 6 June 1944 to V-E Day, 7 May 1945.

Advanced Landing Ground (ALG)
UK, France, Netherlands, Belgium, Occupied Germany, Austria, Czechoslovakia
Photo of the runway at Advanced Landing Ground A-43 (St Marceau, France) being constructed by IX Engineering Command, August 1944
TypeMilitary airfield
Site information
Controlled byRoyal Air Force
United States Army Air Forces
Site history
Built1944–1945
Battles/warsEuropean Theatre of World War II
Garrison information
OccupantsRAF Second Tactical Air Force
Ninth Air Force
Twelfth Air Force

Unlike the permanent airfields built in the United Kingdom and designed for the strategic bombardment of Germany, the tactical combat airfields on the continent were temporary, often improvised airfields to be used by the tactical air forces to support the advancing ground armies engaged on the battlefield. Once the front line moved out of range for the aircraft, the groups and squadrons moved up to newly built ALGs closer to the ground forces and left the ones in the rear for other support uses, or simply abandoned them.

Overview

When the Allies invaded Normandy on D-Day, Royal Air Force Airfield Construction Service engineers were among those in the initial assault waves. Their mission was to rapidly construct forward operating airfields, known as Advanced Landing Grounds (ALGs), on the European continent. As the Allied armies advanced across France and into Germany, several hundred airfields were built or rehabilitated for use by the allied air forces.

For security reasons, the airstrips were referred to by a coded number instead of location. In the United Kingdom, USAAF installations were identified by three digit (AAF) numbers ranging from AAF-101 to AAF-925. After D-Day, continental airfields in the European Theater of Operations (ETO) were also assigned coded numbers. American airfields were given A-, Y-, or R-, prefixes and numbered consecutively from 1 to 99. Both "A" and "Y" designated airfields could be found in France, however many "Y" fields would also be in Netherlands; Belgium and occupied areas of Germany. "R" coded fields were usually located in occupied Germany. British airfields on the continent were also consecutively numbered, but with a B-prefix.

The numbering system for airfields was sequentially assigned as airfields were allocated, not by location or by date of operational use. A-1, Saint Pierre du Mont, was declared operational on 13 June 1944; A-3 Cardonville on 14 June. However A-2, Cricqueville-en-Bessin, was declared operational a few days later on 19 June.

Also many of these airfields had no combat air group or squadron attached to them. They were designed for casualty evacuation and supply transport and consisted of a quickly built runway manned only by a small complement of station personnel with little or no infrastructure other than tents. As the ground forces moved east, wounded would be sent to the airfield to be picked up by C-47s and taken to hospitals in England or other rear areas. Also supplies would be airlifted to the fields and unloaded, to be quickly transported to the front line units. These were normally known as S&E Fields (Supply and Evacuation).

Once completed, airfields were usually utilised by the combat groups or squadrons within a day or so of being declared operational for military use by the IX Engineering command engineers. They would be used for perhaps a few days to a week, to several months, depending on the location, use, and operational requirements. Once the combat units moved up to the next assigned ALG, they could be utilised as S&E Fields, or deconstructed quickly and abandoned, with the land being released back to the landowners or civil authorities in the area.

Construction

A USAAF Engineer clearing out the wreckage of a destroyed Luftwaffe Messerschmitt Bf 109 aircraft at an ALG, with a Lockheed P-38 Lightning flying overhead on landing approach

The mission for constructing ALGs was placed in the hands of the Airfield Construction Service of the RAF Second Tactical Air Force, whilst the USAAF's Ninth Air Force and its specially created engineering arm, the IX Engineer Command, were responsible for ALG's in the US sector of operations. Each aviation engineer battalion in the command (of a total of sixteen) was composed of sufficient men and equipment to quickly construct an airfield or landing ground for a single tactical fighter or bomb group unit.[1]

ALGs were selected in two ways. First, existing enemy military or civilian airfields which were captured as the ground forces advanced were noted by engineers assigned to ground units. Second, engineers noted areas in grid locations where an airfield was desired, that had flat terrain, good land drainage, and where an airfield could be constructed quickly.[1]

Captured airfields could be restored for use as advanced landing field in one to three days depending upon the amount of damage and the number of mines and booby traps encountered.[1]

Dry-weather advanced landing fields were constructed by a single battalion at a favourable site in flat terrain in from one to three days, including time for reconnaissance. At less favourable sites, where more clearing and grading were required, or all-weather fields which also needed additional infrastructure, the time varied from three to ten days.[1]

ALGs were equipped with an access road that was connected to the existing road infrastructure; a dump for supplies, ammunition, and gasoline drums, along with a drinkable water and a minimal electrical grid for communications and station lighting. Tents were used for billeting and also for support facilities. Time was the all-important factor and ALGs serve its purpose if available for only a few days. As the forward area became the rear area, an advanced landing field could be improved for medium bomber use, but initially they primarily served fighter and transport groups.[1]

Based on the experience obtained in the North African and Italian campaigns, fighter groups required an airfield 120 feet x 3600 feet long, and fighter-bomber groups required fields 120 feet x 5000 feet long. Medium bomb groups required 120 feet x 6000 feet runways.[1]

Runway types

Instead of using rough, unimproved dirt strips, engineers used surfacing material necessary to strengthen the soil to support the weight of the aircraft and as a measure of insurance against the wet weather. Airfields were initially single runway landing strips which were laid down east–west (09/27) unless local conditions dictated a different runway direction.[1]

ALGs laid in the UK were of Sommerfeld Tracking a form of stiffened steel wire mesh.

  • Square-Mesh Track (SMT)[2]

The surfacing material selected for the building of advanced landing grounds during the first weeks after the Normandy invasion was known as square-mesh track (SMT). SMT, a British development, was material composed of heavy wire joined in three-inch squares. It was chosen over other surfacing materials because it was very lightweight, allowing sufficient quantities to be transported across the English channel on over-tasked landing craft. Easily workable, a SMT landing mat for fighters could be laid like a carpet in about one week.

  • Prefabricated Hessian (PBS)[2]

After the initial batch of airfields was completed using SMT, the Army aviation engineers switched almost exclusively to another surfacing material known as prefabricated hessian (burlap) surfacing (PBS). Light and easily transportable, PBS did not create the dust problem encountered with SMT fields. Made of an asphalt-impregnated jute delivered in rolls 300 feet in length and 36 inches or 43 inches in width, PBS was laid in overlapping layers to produce a dust-free fair weather surface. It was also common to build airstrips using both SMT and PBS, laying SMT on top.

  • Pierced Steel Plank (PSP)[2]

To provide an all season durable airfield for the RAF's 2TAF and the USAF Ninth Air Force's medium and light bombers, a third type of surfacing material known as pierced steel plank (PSP), or Marsden Matting was introduced on the Normandy bridgehead in July 1944. It consisted of 10-foot-long (3.0 m), 15-inch-wide (380 mm) steel planks joined together and laid perpendicular to the line of flight. Long used in other theatres, PSP would have been ideal for all airfields on the continent, but its limited availability and greater weight made this impractical. Moreover, because of supply problems, construction of even a PSP fighter-bomber field could take a month or longer, while similar PBS and SMT fields could be constructed in two weeks and one week, respectively.

In addition, Sod and Earth runways were built for Emergency Landing Strips (ELS) and Refuelling and Rearming Strips (R&R). Captured airfields contained a wide variety of runways, most commonly Asphalt; Concrete; Macadam or Tar-Penetrated Macadam.[1]

Airfield types

There were five main types of airfields built by the USAAF combat engineers on the continent. These were:

  • Emergency Landing Strips (ELS)

Consisted of a rough, graded runway approximately 2000 feet long to provide a place for emergency belly-landings of damaged aircraft.[3]

  • Supply and Evacuation (S&E)

Usually a rough graded runway near the front line or an airfield in the rear that was used by C-47s for transport of casualties to the rear, or delivery of supplies and munitions to the front line.[3]

  • Refueling and Rearming (R&R)

Consisted of a runway and an aircraft marshalling area on each end of the runway. It was designed to provide an airfield near the front lines upon which aircraft based in rear areas could land, be refuelled and rearmed, and take off again on a mission without having to return to their home field in the rear. Also could be used for dispersal or for when services other than refuelling or rearming was required. These airfields could be expanded into advance landing grounds by the addition of dispersal and other station facilities. Generally if an R&R strip was built, it would be sited wherever possible with a view to further expand it later into an ALG.[3]

  • Advanced Landing Grounds (ALG)

An advanced landing ground could be constructed as such from the beginning or by development from an R&R Strip by the addition of dispersal facilities, expansion of the road network and other additions to the station and technical area in order for it to be used over an extended period of time.[3]

  • Tactical Air Depots (TAD)

A number of ALGs were expanded into tactical air depots by the addition of hangars, shops, more dispersal hardstands, roads, and other facilities. Some were developed from the beginning.[3]

Deployment

IX Engineering Command putting down a Pierced Steel Planking (PSP) Runway at an Advanced Landing Ground under construction

Four main designations were given to ALGs on the European Continent:

  • "A" ALGs were located in France. They were constructed and used by Ninth Air Force units during the Invasion of Normandy (6 June – Mid July 1944) and during Operation Cobra, the break-out from Normandy, starting on 25 July 1944 until 25 August 1944. Those in Normandy were mostly decommissioned after their combat use, however others in Central France were used in various non-combat roles until the end of the war.[3]
  • "B" ALGs were built by American or British combat engineers for Royal Air Force use. Some of these were also used by USAAF Troop Carrier Groups and Command and Control organisations.[3]
  • "Y" ALGs were initially located in Southeastern France, built by Twelfth Air Force engineers as part of Operation Dragoon, the invasion of Southern France. Initially uncoded, they were given "Y" designations when they came under IX Engineering Command control in late 1944. ALGs were also coded "Y" in Northeastern France, Belgium; The Netherlands and Occupied Germany, after "A" coding reached 99 November 1944.[3]
  • "R" ALGs were located in Occupied Germany. Many more were constructed than are listed here, consisting primarily of Supply and Evacuation airfields either laid down quickly in agricultural areas or on captured Luftwaffe airfields. "R" coding began after Y-coding reached 99 in April 1945.[3]

An unforeseen development was the extraordinary demand for transport, supply, and evacuation fields as the Allied armies pushed past Paris toward the German frontier. In late 1944, supplies could not keep pace with U.S. General Dwight D. Eisenhower's forces, and to help lessen the supply shortage airfields for C-47 Skytrain cargo planes became a priority. Bringing in ammunition of all types and especially gasoline on the trip to the ALGs on the continent, the C-47s on the return trip evacuated wounded to the rear.[1]

By 15 September 1944, IX Engineer Command had placed over eighty ALG airfields in operation, while British engineers had constructed 76 airfields in their zone. In Southern France, another twenty or so fields had been built by American engineers from Twelfth Air Force from the Mediterranean Theater of Operations (MTO). In October these uncoded airfields were assigned to the ETO and given ALG code numbers.[1]

The stabilisation of the front lines in the Netherlands, Belgium, and eastern France in mid-September 1944, which would last into the new year, allowed aviation engineers a chance to reorganise and prepare for the upcoming winter season. As expected, they could not build new PHS and SMI airstrips during the fall rain and winter snow seasons because of the moist ground. Besides concrete, the American-made PSP was the only available surfacing material that could be laid down during this inclement weather in Europe.[1]

To keep the supply lines open, selected airfields in Belgium and France were therefore "winterized" with PSP. Because of the limited supply of PSP, however, only a limited number of airfields could be winterised, making it necessary to base two group sized units per airfield. But sufficient fighter-bomber and medium bomber airfields were completed that winter to ensure 2TAF and Ninth Air Force aircraft could continue flying combat missions.[1]

The major problem affecting airfield construction in early 1945 was not the surprise German Ardennes counteroffensive (which caused the abandonment of only one airfield – Y-39, Haguenau). Rather, an early February thaw threatened to make airfields inoperable due to the mud and water. Using local civilian labour, engineers performed extensive maintenance on the threatened airfields and successfully resolved the crisis.[1]

The renewed allied offensive in early 1945, following the Battle of the Bulge, was supported in earnest by the building of tactical airfields in occupied Germany. Trier (Y-57), became the first operational tactical American airfield on German soil on 10 March 1945. When a crossing over the Rhine River was spearheaded at Remagen, Germany, a supply and evacuation strip was quickly set up to support the bridgehead. As Allied tank columns struck out rapidly into the heartland of Germany, the airfield "clutches" of the Ninth Air Force's tactical air commands moved east of the Rhine river within range of virtually any target in Germany.[1]

Scores of former Luftwaffe sod and hard surfaced airfields were captured in the lightning advance through Central Germany, virtually undamaged, lessening the requirement for SMT, PHS, and PSP prefabricated surfacing. The relative lack of German military opposition in late March, April and May 1945 lessened the need for close air support and produced a greater demand for supply airstrips to keep the offensive moving. Every opportunity was used to clear captured German airfields for use along the armies' route, allowing C-47s and other transports to land with food, gas, and ammunition. The supply effort received top airfield priority. By V-E Day, 9 May 1945, 76 of the 126 airfields made operational east of the Rhine river were strictly supply and evacuation fields.[1]

Summary

USAAF Engineers constructed or rehabilitated over 280 continental airfields in the ETO from D-Day to V-E Day. In the summer months that followed, a few new airfields were constructed, but the vast majority were abandoned and turned over to local landowners or civil governments. Throughout Western Europe, as well as the airfields built by Twelfth and Fifteenth Air Forces in the MTO, a significant number were developed into permanent, civilian airports or NATO military bases after the war.[1]

The airfield coding system remained in effect until after the Japanese surrender in the Pacific, when, on 14 September 1945, the system was officially discontinued. Thereafter, airfields were referenced by their geographic name.[1]

Airfields

Only active combat ALGs are shown. Dedicated S&E, Liaison, Transport, and other non-combat airfields are not listed. Runway types are listed as follows:

Runway dimensions are in feet.

United Kingdom (Kent)

Advanced Landing Grounds were built in Kent during 1943 and 1944 for several reasons. The first being a requirement by the allies to station short-range fighters close to the English Channel coast so missions could be undertaken to attack enemy coastal fortifications; road and rail networks and other military targets in Occupied France prior to the invasion of Normandy. Also construction of the ALGs provided necessary engineering and construction training as well as providing practical experience in the development of forward airfields which would be necessary on the continent after the invasion. The ALGs laid down in Kent had two runways, while the ones laid down in France after the invasion generally had only one strip laid down east–west for speed of construction

Due to their temporary nature, the airfields were torn up and salvageable components were re-used on new ALGs in France after the assigned units were moved forward onto French ALGs after the invasion of Normandy.

Advance Landing Grounds in Kent
Station name
(USAAF No.)
In use
RAF Ashford (AAF-417) August 1943 – September 1944
RAF Brenzett (AAF-438) September 1943 – December 1944, Initially used to relieve pressure on RAF Kingsnorth.

From July used by No. 133 Wing RAF for operations against V-1 flying bombs

RAF Headcorn (AAF-412) August 1943 – August 1944
RAF High Halden (AAF-411) April – September 1944
RAF Kingsnorth (AAF-418) August 1943 – September 1944
RAF Lashenden (AAF-410) August 1943 – September 1944
RAF Staplehurst (AAF-413) August 1943 – July 1944
RAF Woodchurch (AAF-419) July – September 1943 373rd Fighter Group

Normandy campaign

Airfields in France used in support of the invasion and establishment of Allied forces in Normandy, France, during Operation Overlord and the immediate aftermath, 6 June – 24 July 1944

Operational Notes
ELS-1 Poupeville, France 6 June 1944 – unknown First USAAF Airfield in Liberated France.
49°23′02″N 001°20′00″W
Runway: 2000x100 SOD (05/23)
Emergency Landing Strip[1]
A-1 Saint-Pierre-du-Mont, France 13 June 1944 – 5 September 1944 Located: 49°23′27″N 000°56′41″W

Runway: 5000x120, SMT, (09/27)[1] Used by:[4]

366th Fighter Group, 17 June – 24 August 1944 (Republic P-47 Thunderbolt)
401st Fighter Squadron, 24 July – 15 August 1944 (Lockheed P-38 Lightning)
A-2 Cricqueville-en-Bessin (Cricqueville), France 16 June 1944 – 15 September 1944 Located: 49°21′57″N 001°00′26″W
Runway: 5000x120, SMT/ETH, (17/35)[1]
Used by:[5]
354th Fighter Group, 22 June – 13 August 1944 (North American P-51 Mustang)
367th Fighter Group, 14 August – 4 September 1944 (P-38)
A-3 Cardonville, France 14 June 1944 – 1 September 1944 Located: 49°21′17″N 001°02′37″W
Runway: 5000x120, SMT (15/33)[1]
Used by:[5]
368th Fighter Group, 20 June – 23 August 1944 (P-47)
370th Fighter Group, 24 July – 15 August 1944 (P-38)
A-4 Deux-Jumeaux, C 30 June 1944 – 15 September 1944 Located: 49°20′40″N 000°58′48″W
Runway: 5000x120, SMT (11/29)[1]
Used by:
48th Fighter Group, 18 June – 29 August 1944 (P-47)[lower-alpha 1][5]
107th Tactical Reconnaissance Squadron, 28 June – 5 July 1944 (P-51/F-5)[6]
A-5 Chippelle Airfield, France 5 July 1944 – 9 July 1944 Located: 49°14′25″N 01°00′28″W
Runway: 5000x120, SMT (06/24)[1]
Used by:[5]
404th Fighter Group, 6 July – 29 August 1944 (P-47)
A-6 Beuzeville-la-Bastille (Beuzeville), France Established 7 June 1944. Opened: 12 June 1944 Closed: 18 September 1944 49°25′16″N 001°18′16″W
Runway: 5000x120, SMT (05/23)[1]
: Used by 371st Fighter Group, 18 June – September 1944 (P-47), 367th Fighter Group, 22 July – 14 August 1944 (P-38)[5]
Located: 49°15′42″N 000°53′29″W
Opened: 30 June 1944 Closed: 5 October 1944
Runway: 4000x120, SMT (04/22)[1]
Used by:[4][5]
67th Tactical Reconnaissance Group, July – August 1944 (F-4/P-38; F-5/P-51)
12th Tactical Reconnaissance Squadron, 5 July – 11 August 1944 (F-5/P-51)
Located: 49°17′01″N 001°05′54″W
Opened: 5 August 1944 Closed: 11 September 1944
Runway: 5000x120, PHS (05/23)[1]
Used by:
474th Fighter Group, 6–29 August 1944 (P-38)
Located: 49°10′32″N 000°47′24″W (abandoned)
Opened: 18 July 1944 Closed: 4 November 1944[1]
Runway: 5000x120, PHS (07/25)
Used by:[5]
362d Fighter Group, 2 July – 10 August 1944 (P-47)
365th Fighter Group, 15 August – 3 September 1944 (P-47)
Located: 49°17′27″N 000°44′59″W
Opened: 28 July 1944 Closed: 2 December 1944
Runway 1: 5000x120, PSP (12/30)[1]
Runway 2: 5000x120, PSP (01/19)
Used by:[5]
373d Fighter Group, 19 July – 19 August 1944 (P-47)
406th Fighter Group, 5–17 August 1944 (P-47)
394th Bombardment Group, 25 August – 18 September 1944 (Martin B-26 Marauder)
Located: 49°21′49″N 000°52′26″W
Opened: 8 June – 25 August 1944
Runway: 3400x120, ETH (11/28)[1]
Used as: Casualty evacuation and transport Airfield (IX Service Command)[3][7]
Located: 49°21′15″N 000°49′41″W
Opened: 13 July – 4 November 1944
Runway: 3750x120, PBS (09/27)[1]
Used as: Transport Airfield[3]

Cotentin Peninsula/Brittany Breakout

Northern France Campaign

The US marks the "Northern France Campaign" from the break-out following the invasion of Normandy to September 1944.

Drive to the Seine River

Pursuit to the German border

Southern France Campaign

French Noncombat Support ALGs

Benelux Liberation

Western Allied invasion of Germany

Airfields captured or established to support combat operations during the Western Allied Invasion of Germany (1 February – 8 May 1945). This section lists those used during the war; ones used during the occupation period of Germany are listed in the Army of Occupation ALGs section.

Rhineland Campaign

Central Europe Campaign

Army of Occupation ALGs

ALGs used by American forces in Occupied Germany and Austria after the German surrender on 7 May 1945. Primarily used for storage of captured German weapons, aircraft and equipment before their destruction. Also for garrisons of US Army or US Army Air Force personnel.

Royal Air Force ALGs

A Spitfire Mark IX of No. 443 Squadron RCAF taxies to dispersal at B-2 Bazenville, alongside a field where French farmers are gathering in the wheat

Advanced Landing Ground airfields built by the Royal Engineers or 2TAF's Airfield Construction service for the Royal Air Force and units under British operation command were given "B" designations. Some of these were also used by USAAF Troop Carrier Groups and Command and Control organisations.[3]

Airfield Operational Notes Coordinates
B-1 Asnelles-sur-Mer, France - off Gold Beach operational (Spitfires) on D+4 49°20′25″N 000°34′58″W
B-2 Bazenville Airfield, Lower Normandy France RAF, RCAF, FFAF[10] 49°18′17″N 000°33′43″W
B-3 Sainte-Croix-sur-Mer Airfield, Lower Normandy, France RAF FFAF[11] 49°19′08″N 000°31′06″W
B-4 Beny-sur-Mer, France (RCAF)[12] 49°17′54″N 000°25′49″W
B-5 Le Fresne-Camilly, France[13] 49°15′58″N 000°29′07″W
B-6 Coulombs, France[14] from August 1944 occupied by No. 137 Squadron RAF Typhoons 49°14′41″N 000°33′07″W
B-7 Martragny, France[15] 49°15′11″N 000°36′58″W
B-8 Sommervieu, France[16][17] 49°18′00″N 000°40′43″W
B-9 Lantheuil, France (RAF, RCAF)[18] 49°16′22″N 000°31′41″W
B-10 Plumetot, France 49°16′42″N 000°21′20″W (approximately)
B-11 Longues-sur-Mer, France [19] 21 June 1944 to 4 September 1944
No. 602 City of Glasgow Squadron RAF
No. 132 City of Bombay Squadron RAF, No. 453 Squadron RAAF, No. 441 Squadron RCAF.
49°20′34″N 000°41′27″W
B-12 Ellon, France[20] 18 July 1944 -
No. 122 Squadron RAF
1,700 m runway 49°12′58″N 000°39′52″W
B-14 Amblie, France 49°17′21″N 000°29′25″W
B-15 Ryes, France 49°18′46″N 000°37′25″W (approximately)
B-16 Villons-les-Buissons, France (RAF, RNAF)[21] 49°14′07″N 000°24′29″W
B-17 Caen/Carpiquet, France Captured from German forces in July 1944 during Battle for Caen Now Caen – Carpiquet Airport 49°10′36″N 000°27′26″W
B-18 Cristot, France 49°11′41″N 000°34′48″W (approximately)
B-19 Lingevres, France 49°10′30″N 000°40′23″W (approximately)
B-20 Demouville, France 49°10′41″N 000°16′08″W (approximately)
B-21 Sainte-Honorine, France 48°49′28″N 000°29′08″W (approximately)
B-22 Authie, France 49°12′23″N 000°25′52″W (approximately)
B-23 La Rue Huguenot, France 49°12′06″N 000°26′10″E (approximately)
B-24 St-André de l'Euree, France November 1944 – September 1945
No. 184 Squadron RAF
442d Troop Carrier Group USAAF
Runway 1: 5260x250 CON (14/32)
Runway 2: 5220x250 CON (06/24)
Now Saint-André-de-l'Eure Airport
48°53′43″N 001°15′05″E
B-25 Le Theil-Nolent, France 49°09′15″N 000°32′17″E (approximately)
B-26 Illiers-l'Évêque, France 48°49′18″N 001°16′01″E (approximately)
B-27 Boisney, France 49°09′16″N 000°39′21″E (approximately)
B-28 Évreux, France French Air Force base Évreux-Fauville Air Base 49°01′39″N 001°13′06″E
B-29 Valailles, France 49°07′18″N 000°36′06″E (approximately)
B-30 Creton, France 48°49′53″N 001°17′17″E (approximately)
B-31 Fresnoy Folny, France 49°53′16″N 001°29′43″E (approximately)
B-32 Prey, France 48°57′47″N 001°12′43″E (approximately)
B-33 Campneuseville, France 49°51′32″N 001°29′27″E (approximately)
B-34 Avrilly, France 48°32′21″N 000°36′52″W (approximately)
B-35 Godelemesnil, France 50°00′19″N 001°24′44″E (approximately)
B-36 Boussey, France now: La Couture-Boussey 48°53′52″N 001°24′21″E (approximately),
B-37 Corroy, France 48°42′08″N 003°56′20″E (approximately)
B-38 La Lande-sur-Eure, France 48°33′26″N 000°51′50″E (approximately)
B-39 Ecouffler, France (Undetermined)
B-40 Beauvais/Nivillers, France 49°27′23″N 002°09′58″E (approximately
B-42 re-designated as A-61 Beauvais/Tille)
B-43 St Omer/Ft Rouge, France 50°45′01″N 002°15′07″E (approximately
B-44 Poix, France Used by USAAF 314th Troop Carrier Group, February–October 1945 Runway: 5160x165 CON/ASP (04/22) RAF ALG, 48°57′52″N 004°36′57″E
B-45 St Omer/Lcnguenessen, France 50°44′16″N 002°14′43″E (approximately)
B-46 Grandvilliers, France 49°39′57″N 001°56′23″E (approximately)
B-48 Amiens, France 315th Troop Carrier Group, 6 April – May 1945
438th Troop Carrier Group, – 3 May August 1945
HQ, 52d Troop Carrier Wing, 5 March – 20 June 1945
RAF ALG, Used by USAAF. Now Amiens-Glisy Airport
Runway 1: 5310x164 CON (12/30)
Runway 2: 5244x164 CON (05/23)
49°52′20″N 002°23′20″E
B-50 Vitry-en-Artois, France Now Vitry-En-Artois Airport
Runway 1: 5400x160 CON (11/29)
Runway 2: 5250x160 TAR (05/23)
50°20′14″N 002°59′31″E
B-51 Lille/Vendeville, France Now Aéroport de Lille-Lesquin, 50°34′00″N 003°06′11″E
B-52 Douai/Dechy, France 50°21′09″N 003°07′43″E
B-53/AAF-182 Merville, France Runway 1: 5280x160 CON (04/22)
Runway 2: 5280x160 CON (14/32)
50°37′01″N 002°38′27″E
B-54 Achiet, France 313th Troop Carrier Group, 28 February – 4 August 1945
Runway 1: 3960x150 CON (11/29)
Runway 2: 4950x250 ASP (03/21)
50°06′19″N 002°47′04″E
B-55 Courtrai/Wevelghem, Belgium Now the Internationale luchthaven Kortrijk-Wevelgem airport 50°49′08″N 003°12′35″E
B-56 Brussels/Evere, Belgium 50°54′03″N 004°20′09″E
B-57 Lille/Wambrechies, France now Marcq-en-Baroeul Airport 50°41′14″N 003°04′33″E
B-58 Brussels/Melsbroek, Belgium 50°54′26″N 004°29′33″E
Located: 50°49′25″N 002°50′01″E
Located: 50°56′56″N 004°23′31″E
Located: 51°01′36″N 003°41′22″E
Located: 51°12′51″N 003°15′05″E (approximately)
Located: 51°00′07″N 005°03′52″E (approximately)
Located: 51°11′53″N 003°28′41″E
Located: 50°56′43″N 005°03′01″E
Located: 51°07′30″N 003°27′14″E

( now a Belgian Air Force reserve base) (ICAO code EBUR)

Located: 50°49′25″N 004°02′26″E (approximately)
Now: Antwerp International Airport
Located: 51°11′24″N 004°27′41″E
Located: 51°05′22″N 002°39′22″E
Located: 50°51′06″N 003°08′54″E
Located: 50°35′53″N 004°19′42″E (approximately)
Located: 51°10′01″N 005°28′03″E
Located: 51°33′50″N 004°56′18″E
Located: 51°27′04″N 005°22′29″E
Located: 51°26′55″N 004°20′31″E
Located: 51°39′27″N 005°42′22″E
  • B-81 Le Madrillet, France
49°23′11″N 001°04′15″E (approximately)
Now: Technopôle du Madrillet in Saint-Étienne-du-Rouvray near Rouen
  • B-82 Grave, Netherlands
Located: 51°45′32″N 005°44′18″E (approximately)
Located: 51°21′21″N 003°20′56″E
Located: 51°31′N 005°51′E
Located: 51°36′N 005°29′E (approximately)
Located: 51°28′41″N 005°39′04″E (approximately)
Located: 49°48′17″N 002°44′45″E
Runway 1: 5400x160 CON (04/22)
Runway 2: 5300x160 CON (16/34)
RAF ALG, Assigned to USAAF 387th Bombardment Group, 24 May – November 1945
  • B-88 Heesch, Netherlands
Located: 51°43′59″N 005°31′34″E (approximately)
  • B-89 Mill, Netherlands
Located: 51°41′11″N 005°47′01″E (approximately)
  • B-90 Kleine Brogel, Belgium
Located: 51°10′01″N 005°27′00″E (approximately)
Now: Belgian Air Force Base Kleine Brogel
  • B-91 Kluis, Netherlands
Located: 51°47′07″N 005°52′51″E
Located: 50°08′30″N 001°49′51″E
Runway: 4893x164 CON/ASP (09/27)
Use:
RAF ALG, Used by USAAF 61st Troop Carrier Group, 13 March – 19 May 1945
  • B-93 Valkenburg (near Katwijk/Leiden), Netherlands
Located: 52°10′15″N 004°25′29″E (approximately)
Located: 52°14′33″N 006°02′49″E
Located: 52°18′56″N 004°45′34″E
Later: RAF Laarbruch
Located: 51°36′08″N 006°08′31″E
  • B-101 Nordhorn, Germany
Located: 52°25′47″N 007°04′25″E (approximately)
  • B-102 Vorst, Germany
Located: 51°18′16″N 006°25′43″E (approximately)
Located: 52°26′03″N 007°24′09″E (approximately)
Later: RAF Plantlünne 1945
  • B-104 Damme, Germany
Located: 52°29′25″N 008°11′16″E (approximately)
Later: Verkehrslandeplatz Damme (EDWC)
  • B-105 Drope, Germany
Located: 52°34′42″N 007°29′43″E (approximately)
Located: 52°16′30″N 006°53′11″E
  • B-107 Lingen, Germany
Located: 52°31′33″N 007°19′27″E (approximately)
Located: 52°17′31″N 007°29′09″E
Now: Quakenbrück Glider Airfield[22]
Located: 52°39′47″N 007°55′29″E
Located: 52°22′39″N 007°54′43″E
became Fliegerhorst Ahlhorn (ICAO code EDNA) closed early 1990s
Located: 52°53′19″N 008°13′56″E
became Fliegerhorst Hopsten (ICAO EDNP-later ETNP)
Located: 52°17′31″N 007°29′09″E
Located: 52°54′30″N 008°02′35″E
Located: 52°35′07″N 008°20′27″E
  • B-115 Melle, Germany
Located: 52°11′59″N 008°20′06″E (approximately)
Located: 52°27′17″N 009°25′44″E
Located: 53°32′02″N 007°53′05″E
Located: 52°35′59″N 010°01′37″E
  • B-119 Wahn, Germany
Located: 50°51′57″N 007°08′34″E (approximately)
Later: RAF Wahn 1945
Now: Flughafen Köln-Bonn "Konrad Adenauer"
Located: 52°27′42″N 009°41′12″E
  • B-150 Hustedt, Germany
Located: 52°53′46″N 009°05′46″E (approximately)
Located: 52°16′41″N 009°04′49″E
Located: 52°55′09″N 010°10′59″E
  • B-153 Bad Oeynhausen, Germany
Located: 52°12′29″N 008°48′16″E (approximately)
Located: 53°08′50″N 009°47′41″E
Now: Segelfluggelände Glider Airfield[23]
Located: 52°42′58″N 010°31′58″E
Located: 53°14′50″N 010°24′31″E (approximately)
  • B-157 Werl, Germany
Located: 51°33′30″N 007°54′36″E (approximately)
Located: 53°48′18″N 010°43′07″E
Located: 55°37′13″N 012°38′57″E
  • B-162 Stade, Germany
Located: 53°35′32″N 009°28′21″E (approximately)
  • B-163 Dortmund, Germany
Located: 51°32′27″N 007°33′30″E
  • B-164 Schleswigland, Germany
Located: 54°27′34″N 009°30′59″E
Later: RAF Schleswigland 1945
Now: Fliegerhorst Schleswig (alt. Fliegerhorst Jagel)
Located: 54°46′25″N 009°22′36″E
Located: 54°22′46″N 010°08′39″E
Located: 53°37′49″N 009°59′27″E
Located: 54°54′51″N 008°20′27″E
Located: 54°30′55″N 009°08′41″E
Located: 53°38′50″N 009°42′21″E

See also

Notes

  1. The Air Force Engineer. Army Air Forces Engineer Command, MTO (Prov). Multiple editions. 1943–1945 (Pamphlet from USAFHRA)
  2. "ETO Airfields Airfield Layout". Archived from the original on 9 June 2019. Retrieved 8 September 2009.
  3. Johnson (1988)
  4. Maurer, 1982
  5. Maurer, 1983
  6. Maurer, 1982 p 336
  7. http://www.aerosteles.net/fiche.php?code=stlaurent-e1 A-21 memorial and information webpage
  8. Maurer, 1983 p202-203
  9. Maurer, 1983 p250
  10. "Aérodrome B-2 - Bazenville 1944". www.aerosteles.net (in French). Archived from the original on 21 September 2022. Retrieved 21 September 2022.
  11. "Aérodrome B3 et Group Captain Denys Gillam - Sainte-Croix-sur-Mer le 13 Juin 1944". www.aerosteles.net (in French). Archived from the original on 21 September 2022. Retrieved 21 September 2022.
  12. "Aérodrome B-4 - Bény-sur-Mer 1944". www.aerosteles.net (in French). Archived from the original on 21 September 2022. Retrieved 21 September 2022.
  13. "Aérodrome B-5 - Le Fresne-Camilly 1944". www.aerosteles.net (in French). Archived from the original on 21 September 2022. Retrieved 21 September 2022.
  14. "Aérodrome B6 et Air Commodore Christopher'kit North-Lewis - Thue et Mue le 16 Juin 1944". www.aerosteles.net (in French). Archived from the original on 21 September 2022. Retrieved 21 September 2022.
  15. "Aérodrome B7 (stèle) - Moulins en Bessin 1944". www.aerosteles.net (in French). Archived from the original on 21 September 2022. Retrieved 21 September 2022.
  16. "Aérodrome B8 (manoir de petit Magny) - Saint-Vigor-le-Grand 1944". www.aerosteles.net (in French). Archived from the original on 23 September 2022. Retrieved 23 September 2022.
  17. "Aérodrome B8 - Sommervieu le 19 Août 1944". www.aerosteles.net (in French). Archived from the original on 23 September 2022. Retrieved 23 September 2022.
  18. "Aérodrome B9 Lantheuil + Pumphouse Saint-Gabriel-Brecy - Creully sur Seulles 1944". www.aerosteles.net (in French). Archived from the original on 21 September 2022. Retrieved 21 September 2022.
  19. "Aérodrome B11 - Longues-sur-Mer 1944". www.aerosteles.net (in French). Archived from the original on 21 September 2022. Retrieved 21 September 2022.
  20. "Aérodrome B-12 (obélisque) - Ellon le 18 Juillet 1944" [Aerodrome B-12 (obelisk)]. www.aerosteles.net (in French). 5 July 2009. Archived from the original on 23 September 2022. Retrieved 23 September 2022.
  21. "Aérodrome B-16 (ancienne) - Villons-les-Buissons 1944". www.aerosteles.net (in French). Archived from the original on 21 September 2022. Retrieved 21 September 2022.
  22. "Luftsportverein Quakenbrück e.V. - Startseite". www.lsvq.de. Retrieved 14 May 2023.
  23. "Unser Segelflugplatz (Our glider airfield)". ivi-repke.de. 11 April 2012. Archived from the original on 5 November 2014. Retrieved 11 April 2012.

References

  • Johnson, David C. (1988), U.S. Army Air Forces Continental Airfields (ETO), D-Day to V-E Day; Research Division, USAF Historical Research Center, Maxwell AFB, Alabama.
  • Maurer, Maurer (1983). Air Force Combat Units of World War II. Maxwell AFB, Alabama: Office of Air Force History. ISBN 0-89201-092-4.
  • Maurer, Maurer (1982) [1969]. Combat Squadrons of the Air Force, World War II (PDF) (reprint ed.). Washington, DC: Office of Air Force History. ISBN 0-405-12194-6. LCCN 70605402. OCLC 72556.
  • War Diary 689 Coy Royal Engineers August 1945
  • War Diary 16th Airfield Construction Group August 1945

Public Domain This article incorporates public domain material from the Air Force Historical Research Agency.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.