Gamston (Retford) Airfield
Personnel photograph at RAF Gamston 30 OTU
Newark Air Museum Archive
Memorial stone to a Gamston crew at Creswell Crags
Howard Heeley
Light aircraft operating from Gamston 2014
Howard Heeley
By Howard Heeley
Grid Ref: Sheet 120; SK693762; 3 miles S of Retford
Opened: December 1942
Squadrons: 14 (P) AFU; 82 OTU; 30 OTU; 211 AFS
Aircraft: Oxford; Wellington; Martinet; Hurricane; Meteor; Vampire; Bulldog
Nationalities: Commonwealth; Polish
Things of note: Post World War II was major holding centre for RAAF; three phases of RAF use 1942 – 1945, 1953 – 1957 & 1976 - 1977.
The dedication and formal unveiling of an aviation memorial took place on Saturday 21st May 2011 at the Creswell Crags Visitor Centre on the Nottinghamshire / Derbyshire county border. This commemorates a crew of five Canadian airmen that were lost when their Wellington X bomber, HE821 crashed on 5th August 1944. The aircraft was flying on a training exercise from the Operational Training Unit at RAF Gamston.
Located in the car park area of the Creswell Crags Visitor Centre the memorial is approximately fifty metres on the Derbyshire side of the county boundary with Nottinghamshire. Each of the crew members is buried in the Stonefall Cemetery in Harrogate, North Yorkshire.
Current status: Currently an active airfield for light aircraft and business jets; it is possible to take trial flying lessons from the airfield, which is located close to the A1 road.
The Newark Air Museum is keen to locate any in-service photographs of aircraft and personnel that were operating from Gamston.
(This information was originally published in the 2011 booklet “Aviation in Nottinghamshire”, which was produced by the Newark Air Museum thanks to a Local Improvement Scheme grant from the Nottinghamshire County Council. Photographs sourced from the Newark Air Museum Archive.)