A sizeable area of farmland to the east of Hunsdon was
requisitioned by the Air Ministry in 1939 to provide for additional fighter air
defence of London. Construction began in October 1940 and involved removal
of significant areas of woodland and field boundaries, as well as the Old Turkey
Cock pub and a number of cottages in Acorn street. The base became
operational in May 1941.
Sorties from the RAF Hunsdon provided a major
contribution to the Battle of Britain and, once the threat of attack to London
had diminished, the primary role turned from defence to attack. The De Havilland
Mosquito became the mainstay of its fighter bomber role and contributed to many
significant attacks during the later stages of the war. Operation Jericho
- the precision bombing raid on Amien Prison to release French Resistance
fighters on the eve of their execution - was flown from Hunsdon on 18th February
1944.
At its height more than 2000 personnel
were stationed at RAF Hunsdon, and the lives of the service personnel and of
village residents became wholly entwined. Operations from Hunsdon ceased within
days of VE Day in May 1945, although it was used to receive personnel and
materiel returning from Europe until June 1946. Post war it was returned
to agriculture, passing through a number of landowners up until its present
owners - Ropemakers Properties Limited, the property investment arm of the BP
Pension Fund. Ropemakers have on several separate occasions sought
approval for widespread housing development on the land, although there has been
strong local opposition and approval has been withheld on each occasion.
Several books on the wartime history of the RAF refer to the
detailed part played by RAF Hunsdon, and there is a good description of Hunsdon's
role at http://www.wartime-airfields.com/id9.html.
Fred and Vera Hitching (long-time residents of Hunsdon) have written an excellent
history which focuses on the impact of the airfield
on the village (The Royal Air Force at Hunsdon 1941-1945, Published by The Hunsdon
Local History and Preservation Society, 1990. ISBN 0-9506633-1-X).
Hunsdon airfield is also recorded by the Airfields
of Britain Conservation Trust http://www.abct.org.uk
In recent years there have been a number of initiatives
to ensure the history of RAF Hunsdon, and of the service given by the airmen and
airwomen who were stationed there, should be remembered.
In November 1995, a Mr F L Jones of Hoddesdon wrote to
the Parish Council to suggest that a memorial in the form of a rustic
bench should be erected in the Village, to commemorate, in his words,
the Royal Canadian Air Force personnel who served at RAF Hunsdon during
World War II. After discussion, the Parish
Council felt that the matter should be left in abeyance since a number
of commemorative benches in the Village had been vandalised, and it was
likely that another bench would suffer the same fate. However,
in January 1977, the Parochial Church Council agreed that a memorial of
some sort should be erected - probably in the form of a memorial plaque
fixed to the Village Hall - but that it should be dedicated to the men
and women of all air forces who served at RAF Hunsdon. A member of the
PCC, Steven Brereton Martin (a retired RAF Group Captain) undertook to
form and chair a RAF Hunsdon Memorial Committee to take the matter
forward.