Product Description: You will be buying a Photograph produced using professional photographic lab equipment and printed on high quality photographic paper. Please note that sometimes a small amount of image cropping is neccessary to produce your photograph. Produced on a Print & Supply basis from an image hosted on Geograph

Condition: New

Size: 6" x 4" - 150mm x 100mm

Copyright (Photograph and text in Photograph Notes): � Copyright Adrian S Pye and licensed for reuse under creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0 details available here: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/

Photograph Notes: Built for the USAAF and completed in 1943 Ellough airfield had the three concrete runways and a perimeter track typical of many bomber airfields in East Anglia. It was allocated the airfield number 132. It is possible that Ellough was intended to be used by the 3rd Air Division 95th Combat Wing. The 95th had two Bomber Groups the 489th at Halesworth and the 491st at Metfield. Other Combat Wings had three Bomber Groups but never used as a main operational base. It passed briefly to RAF Bomber Command as a secret research base before passing to Coastal Command in August 1944. Until closure in 1945 the airfield was used by various RAF and FAA squadrons operating such diverse types as Warwick Barracuda Walrus Swordfish Sea Otter and Albacore on air-sea rescue and anti-shipping duties as well as clandestine operations flying SOE personnel into France. At one time Ellough was called HMS Hornbill II. Many disabled aircraft landed here that were unable to make it back to their own base. The last military aircraft to land on the main runway was a Vampire which made an emergency landing there in about 1954. One of Ellough�s few claims to fame is that in 1944 it was used by Mosquitoes of 618 Squadron to practice dropping spinning bombs called 'Highball' which were prototypes of the bombs used by 617 �Dambuster� Squadron to breach the dams of the Rheur. During early development 40-gallon drums filled with sand were used to prove the theory. Barnes Wallis is known to have been there during this period. Two of the original hangars remain as well as many smaller administrative buildings and the hospital and mortuary which were little used at the time. After the war Beccles remained dormant until 1965 when it became a heliport serving North Sea oilrigs until that operation transferred to Norwich airport.

Postage & Packing: All items are posted securely packaged with card inserts to avoid damage in the post hence the higher postage cost than the standard cost of a 1st / 2nd class stamp. We discount postage for multiple photographs and slides purchased, please wait for the invoice to be sent with the discounted postage rate applied.