RNAS Inskip (HMS Nightjar) explained

RNAS Inskip (HMS Nightjar)
Ensign:File:Naval Ensign of the United Kingdom.svg
Ensign Size:90px
Location:Inskip, Lancashire
Country:England
Pushpin Map:Lancashire#United Kingdom Borough of Wyre##United Kingdom Borough of Fylde
Pushpin Map Caption:Shown within Lancashire##Shown on border of Wyre Borough##Shown on border of Fylde Borough
Pushpin Label:RNAS Inskip
Ownership:Admiralty
Operator:Royal Navy
Controlledby:Fleet Air Arm
Used:1943-
Elevation:46feet
R1-Number:05/23
R1-Length:3000feet
R1-Surface:Concrete
R2-Number:09/27
R2-Length:3600feet
R2-Surface:Concrete
R3-Number:14/32
R3-Length:3900feet
R3-Surface:Concrete
R4-Number:18/36
R4-Length:3000feet
R4-Surface:Concrete

Royal Naval Air Station Inskip (RNAS Inskip, also known as HMS Nightjar), was a Royal Navy Fleet Air Arm airbase near the village of Inskip, Lancashire, England. It saw considerable aircrew training activity towards the end of the Second World War. In the 1960s and 70s it was a Royal Navy transmitting station known as HMS Inskip. It is now a military high frequency radio transmitting station known as MOD Inskip.

History

On 4 June 1942 the Admiralty acquired of farmland between Preston and Blackpool from Lord Derby. It planned to build an airfield, to be called RNAS Elswick, for the training of anti-submarine and two-seat strike crews. The location was chosen because of the relatively quiet airspace in the north-west of England and the proximity of coastal ranges in the Morecambe Bay area. Construction of the runways started immediately, and it was commissioned on 15 May 1943,[1] but with a name change to that of another nearby village, as RNAS Inskip, naming the establishment HMS Nightjar.

Four 100feet wide runways were built, along with accommodation for 145 aircraft consisting of 32 Mainhill hangars each 60feet wide by 70feet long and two maintenance hangars 110feet wide by 185feet long. These were grouped into six clusters around the airfield, and a 40feet perimeter taxiway linked them all.

Several local buildings were requisitioned for use as headquarters and hospitals, and accommodation was built at two off-site locations within walking distance for a total of 235 officers and 1,379 other ranks.

747 Naval Air Squadron was the first flying unit to arrive, on 9 June 1943, and No. 1 NOTU (Naval Operational Training Unit), of which 766 Naval Air Squadron had been a part,[2] was the last to operate there, closing down on 26 January 1946.

The airfield operated for just 30 months, but hosted 17 units operating 13 different aircraft types, and employing over 1,600 people. It had a great effect on the local economy and that of the local towns of Preston and especially Blackpool.

There had been one open day, held on 20 October 1945, to celebrate the end of the war. Many aircraft types were displayed, including one from the Americans based at nearby Warton Aerodrome.

Units

The following major units were based at RNAS Inskip:

Subsequent use

The airfield closed for flying in February 1946, and was decommissioned on 2 July that year, but the Navy kept it as a transport pool and storage depot. The RAF used the runways for driver training, and some hangars were used by British Nuclear Fuels Ltd for secure storage until 1994.

The runways were demolished in 1974 and the concrete from them was used in the construction of the nearby M55 motorway. The hangars were demolished in the 1980s and 90s, and the Navy finally left the site on 8 March 1995. Most of the taxiways, along with the original control tower, survive as evidence of the airfield's existence, and an entrance to part of the site, now a small industrial park, is named Nightjar Way.

Sea Cadet Training Centre (SCTC) Inskip, a national training centre for the Sea Cadet Corps, was situated on the site until its closure on 31 January 2010.[3]

In January 2012 the former SCTC reopened as the Inskip Cadet Centre and became the home of Cumbria & Lancashire Wing, Air Training Corps.[4] The Wing headquarters offices are situated in the old control tower.

Transmitter station

On 12 January 1959 the site opened as RN Wireless Station, Inskip. Around 90 radio masts and aerials were erected, including four masts of height, which remain notable features into the 2020s, illuminated by red warning lights and visible from a great distance. An accommodation block was built as an extension to the control tower. The site was commissioned in 1966 as HMS Inskip.

In the 1980s there were Marconi 50 kW transmitters operating in the Very Low Frequency (VLF) band, transmitting Morse code to ships close to the United Kingdom.

For long distance work, the shortwave bands were used, again transmitting Morse to ships mostly based on Marconi transmitters, typically 10 kW or less. The same information would be transmitted on different frequencies and it was the ship's responsibility to find the correct frequency to monitor. This was because of the different propagation characteristics of the various frequencies used.

The site is home to a high frequency transmitter station which prior to 2003 was operated by the Royal Navy. From 1998 to 2007 it was part of the Ministry of Defence (MoD) Defence High Frequency Communications Service (DHFCS), itself part of the Defence Communication Services Agency (DCSA) and was known as DCSA Inskip. The DCSA was disestablished in 2007, and the station is now operated by Babcock International Group on behalf of the MoD.[5] According to the sign on the gate it is now known as MOD Inskip.

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Web site: R.N.A.S. Inskip (H.M.S. Nightjar) . Fleet Air Arm Bases 1939-present day . Royal Navy Research Archive . 29 August 2023.
  2. Web site: 766 Naval Air Squadron . Wings-Aviation . 31 August 2023.
  3. Web site: DCSA Inskip . Wikimapia . 29 August 2023.
  4. Web site: ATC Wing Details: Cumbria & Lancashire Wing, Air Cadets . Air Cadets Squadron Finder . 29 August 2023.
  5. Web site: Defence High Frequency Communications Service . 11–12 . 2018 . 29 August 2023 . Doc Box . Babcock International Group.