






 |
RAF Scampton History
+The
official badge of RAF Scampton incorporates the diversion of the A15 Roman Road,
Ermine Street, in heraldic form. The arrow denotes the direction of the main
runway (North East-South West); the bowstring denotes the old A15 road, once
dead straight from the City of Lincoln northwards to the Humber Estuary, while
the curved bow denotes the new curve in the A15 constructed in the mid-1950s.
The motto Armatus non Lacessitur is translated as "An armed man is not
attacked" and was very appropriate for the squadrons of Vulcan V Bombers which
were based at Scampton from the late 1950s until the last day of 1981.
Only a few days after taking up my appointment as Public Relations Officer
for RAF Scampton and the Red Arrows in September 1989 I came across a rusty,
battered filing cabinet that had been put outside the building ready to be taken
to the tip as rubbish. The cabinet drawers were badly damaged and the hinges
broken but being a curious person I looked inside and found a collection of
loose and decidedly grotty papers at the bottom which I liberated and took to
my new office. Many of the papers comprised notes on the station's history
compiled by Flight Lieutenant C G Jefford but I have never been able to locate
him to ask him about the papers. There was even a complete but badly-faded Roneo'd and unsigned copy of the Top Secret Operation Order for the Dam Busters'
Raid of 1943! (HQ No 5 Group Operation Order B.976. The typist had classified it
MOST SECRET but the pages had been over-stamped TOP SECRET; about this time the
RAF had adopted the US classification nomenclature to avoid confusing our
Allies.) It seemed to me that the cabinet and contents were probably leftovers from when the Vulcans departed from Scampton at the start of 1983 and the
station temporarily went into Care and Maintenance (aka closed down).
In subsequent weeks I compiled a brief history of
Scampton from the station's earliest days making use of some of the material I
had found in the old filing cabinet. In 1990 I visited the RAF's Air
Historical Branch (AHB) in London but I was really surprised how very little information
there was about RAF Scampton - indeed the staff there were most grateful to accept a copy
of the history I had written. During my time at Scampton I gathered historical
material from many other sources and wrote several
Scampton history publicity articles for a variety of events - including the Save Our
Scampton Campaign waged by the Lincolnshire Echo in the mid-1990s. I also sent
copies of the history to any member of the public who wrote in asking about the
Station's history (and that was a lot).
I find parts of my many articles about Scampton and the Red Arrows keep cropping up in a wide variety of media
outlets, even Wikipedia. I know they are my words because often they have been copied word for word,
but I don't mind that. Click on the links on the left to read a transcript of
some of my stories about RAF Scampton.
Back to the top |