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| abingdon, oxfordshire | |
| royal air force stations in oxfordshire | |
| abingdon | |
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The base was opened in 1932 , initially as a training station for RAF Bomber Command . It continued in this role through World War II . After World War II RAF Abingdon became part of RAF Transport Command , and also the home of 1 Parachute Training School. On 14 June 1968 a royal review was conducted at RAF Abingdon by Queen Elizabeth II to mark the 50th anniversary of the RAF. In the eighties and nineties Abingdon became a maintenance field, servicing BAE Hawk and SEPECAT Jaguar aircraft. From 1981 many ex-airline Vickers VC10 s were stored at the base following their purhcase by the MoD . By the early 1990s the aircraft were either converted to tanker configuration or scrapped. From 1986 - 1988 RAF Abingdon became home to the Thames Valley Police Air Support Unit, flying a helicopter in support of police operations. It was also the home of the London University Air Squadron in the seventies. An annual airshow took place at RAF Abingdon until the late eighties. On 23 September 1988 a Phantom FGR2 crashed at the airfield while practicing for the airshow, and on 14 September 1989 a Panavia Tornado crashed near the field. The station was closed in December 1992 . It was taken over by the British Army and renamed ''Dalton Barracks''. RAF Benson continues to use Abingdon as a diversion airfield and for helicopter training. 612 Volunteer Glider School continues to fly Grob motorgliders at Abingdon. 612 flys its Grob Vigilant power motor glider from Abingdon. It lets members of the Air Cadets to take part flying such as basic Gliding Induction Course (which normally last's 3 flights) then for cadets over 16 to progress onto a Gliding Scholarship which over a number of weeks let's cadets learn to fly the aircraft and this culminates in them undertaking in solo circuit at the controls of the aircraft. EXTERNAL LINKS |
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