In October 1937 St Merryn opened as a 52 acre civilian airfield and was operated by St Merryn Aerodrome Ltd. In December 1939 the airfield was surveyed by The Admiralty and rebuilt as a Fleet Air Arm Station. The runways were rather short as they were built to simulate what Fleet Air Arm crews would experience when taking off and landing on carrier decks. Between 1940 and 1952 the Fleet Air Arm operated from the airfield. During this time the station was known as HMS Vulture and many first and second line naval squadrons flew from the airfield. In Autumn 1940 & Spring 1941 the airfield received the attentions of the Luftwaffe who on several occasions bombed the station to disrupt training activities. Rebuilt and extended in 1942 the station incorporated the School Of Air Combat. In 1944 further extension took place with a new control tower being built. Post war the airfield was used by the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve and various training schools. In 1952 the station was re-commissioned as HMS Curlew and was used mainly for ground training. Flying ceased in December 1953 with the airfield finally closing on 10 January 1956. The site was sold off in 1959. Many types of aircraft flew from the airfield, these included, Defiants, Sea Hurricanes, Sea Gladiators, Masters, Martinets, Proctors, Lysanders, Albacores, Fulmars, Barracudas, Swordfish, Corsairs, Hellcats & Seafires.
Protected Communications Building - the structure is well and truly sealed and access is not possible
A blast wall protects the structure. Firing steps have been constructed to allow defence of the building
The 1944 control tower with the original civilian watch office behind
Mainhill Hangar
Gun Butts
Pillbox defending the bomb dump area
Fusing Shed
Internal lighting within bomb dump building
Bomb dump structure
Practice concrete 60 pound rocket projectile heads. These were used as practice warheads by Fleet Air
Arm Aircraft such as Swordfish. The real item was particularly effective against shipping
Bomb dump structure with bomb handling crane metalwork still in place
External lighting detail attached to bomb dump structure
Further bomb storage or fusing building
One of the disused runways
A huge fire bell
Building signage
Parachute Drying and Storage Shed
Pulleys inside parachute store roof structure
Some buildings still have the original cast iron radiators in place
Water tank sections being used as a silage clamp
A very derelict Volkswagen in one of the buildings
Thanks for looking
Protected Communications Building - the structure is well and truly sealed and access is not possible
A blast wall protects the structure. Firing steps have been constructed to allow defence of the building
The 1944 control tower with the original civilian watch office behind
Mainhill Hangar
Gun Butts
Pillbox defending the bomb dump area
Fusing Shed
Internal lighting within bomb dump building
Bomb dump structure
Practice concrete 60 pound rocket projectile heads. These were used as practice warheads by Fleet Air
Arm Aircraft such as Swordfish. The real item was particularly effective against shipping
Bomb dump structure with bomb handling crane metalwork still in place
External lighting detail attached to bomb dump structure
Further bomb storage or fusing building
One of the disused runways
A huge fire bell
Building signage
Parachute Drying and Storage Shed
Pulleys inside parachute store roof structure
Some buildings still have the original cast iron radiators in place
Water tank sections being used as a silage clamp
A very derelict Volkswagen in one of the buildings
Thanks for looking
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