The first use of Lakenheath Warren as a
Royal Flying Corps airfield was during the
First World War, when the area was made into a bombing and ground-attack range for aircraft flying from
RFC Feltwell and RFC Thetford.[2]
Second World War
In 1940, the
Air Ministry selected Lakenheath as an alternative for nearby
RAF Mildenhall and used it as a decoy airfield.[3] Surfaced runways were constructed in 1941, with the main runway being 3,000 feet (910 m), and the two subsidiary runways at 2,000 feet (610 m).[4]
In late 1941, Lakenheath was used by RAF flying units on detachment. The station soon functioned as a Mildenhall satellite base with
Short Stirling bombers of
No. 149 Squadron dispersed from the parent airfield as conditions allowed. The squadron exchanged its
Vickers Wellingtons for Stirlings late in November 1941. After becoming fully operational with its new aircraft, the squadron moved into Lakenheath on 6 April 1942 and remained until mid 1944 when the squadron moved to
RAF Methwold in Norfolk.[5]
One Stirling pilot,
Flight Sergeant Rawdon Middleton, was posthumously awarded the
Victoria Cross for valour on the night of 28–29 November 1942, when despite serious face wounds and loss of blood from shell-fire during a raid on the
Fiat works at
Turin in Italy, he brought the damaged aircraft back towards southern England. With fuel nearly exhausted his crew were ordered to bail out.[6]
On 21 June 1943,
No. 199 Squadron was established as a second Stirling squadron.[7] It conducted mine laying operations at sea before moving to
RAF North Creake in Norfolk on 1 May 1944.[8] No. 149 Squadron ended its association with RAF Lakenheath the same month, taking its Stirlings to RAF Methwold.[5] The reason for the departure of the two bomber squadrons was Lakenheath's selection for upgrading to a Very Heavy Bomber airfield, which left the airfield closed to aircraft until 1948.[3]
Following French president
Charles de Gaulle's insistence in 1959 that all non-French nuclear-capable forces should be withdrawn from his country, the USAF began a redeployment of its
North American F-100-equipped units from France. The
48th Fighter Wing left its base at
Chaumont-Semoutiers Air Base, France on 15 January 1960, its aircraft arriving at Lakenheath that afternoon.[3]
The tactical components of the 48th TFW upon arrival at Lakenheath were:[14]
The period between 1972 and 1977 can be described as a five-year aircraft conversion. Beginning in late 1971, the 48th TFW started its conversion to the
McDonnell Douglas F-4D Phantom II. The conversion to the F-4D took several years, with initial operational capability being achieved on 1 July 1975.[15] The F-4's service with the 48th Tactical Fighter Wing was short, as operation "Ready Switch" resulted in 48th Tactical Fighter Wing receiving
General Dynamics F-111sMountain Home AFB,
Idaho in October 1976.[15]
African-American Servicemembers during the Cold War
After the US desegregated the military in 1948, a little community of mixed-race children, whose mothers were British and whose fathers were black American servicemembers based at Lakenheath, formed in
Norwich.[16]
Vanessa Baird, whose father was a black GI based in Lakenheath airfield and whose mother was a Liverpudlian, was born in April 1958. Her father did not know about the birth. Her mother's family was very disapproving after they found out. So Vanessa and her mother went to Norwich. There, according to Baird, some of the women married black GIs and went to the US with them.[17]
Elaine Brown had a similar experience to Vanessa. Her mother met black GI Harold Grigsby when he was based at Lakenheath in the early 1950s. Her father was sent back to the US before Elaine was born in 1953. Elaine's mother told her her father's name and that he was from
Washington DC. In 1996 with her husband Elaine finally found her father and met her American family.[17]
Strike Eagle, 1992–2014
Lakenheath received its first
McDonnell Douglas F-15E Strike Eagles in 1992. On 16 December 1992, the last F-111 departed the base. Along with its departure, the 493d FS was inactivated, but then reactivated as an
F-15 Eagle squadron.[18]
On 2 March 2011, members of the 48th Security Forces Squadron were involved in a
shooting at Frankfurt Airport in Germany. The members were on a bus bound for
Ramstein Air Base in Germany when they were attacked by a lone gunman.[19]
On 22 March 2011, F-15E 91-0304 crash-landed and was destroyed in eastern
Libya after reportedly suffering from a mechanical failure. Both crewmen ejected and were safely recovered.[20] On 7 January 2014, a
Sikorsky HH-60 Pave Hawk from the base crashed following a bird strike while on a low-level training exercise with another helicopter (also a Pave Hawk), into the
Cley Marshes near
Cley next the Sea on the nearby North Norfolk coast. All four occupants died in the crash.[21][22]
On 8 October 2014, F-15D 86-0182 belonging to the 493rd Fighter Squadron crashed during a training flight in a field outside Spalding, Lincolnshire. The pilot successfully ejected and was shortly recovered back to Lakenheath on board a Pave Hawk.[23]
In January 2015, the
U.S. Department of Defense announced that from 2020, Lakenheath would become home to 54 of the US Air Force's
Lockheed Martin F-35A Lightning II multi-role fighters.[28][29] The aircraft would be split between two squadrons and there would be an increase of 1,200 military personnel and between 60 and 100 civilian workers at the station. The F-35 would operate alongside the two existing F-15E squadrons based at Lakenheath.[30]
The
495th Fighter Squadron was reactivated on 1 October 2021 to be the first Lightning II squadron at Lakenheath, with the first aircraft arriving on 15 December 2021.[31][32]
F-35 Infrastructure
To accommodate the new aircraft, a F-35 Campus is being constructed on the south side of the airfield.[33] The main new operational buildings being developed as part of the F-35 project are as follows:[34]
Two six-bay maintenance hangars – Space for service, maintenance, storage, and staff support facilities (to be known as Hangars 4-1 and 4–2).
Hangar 6 (Consolidated Parts Store) – Single-storey extension to the southern side of Hangar 6, including offices and warehouses and the storage of aircraft equipment and parts.
Dual Squadron Operations/Aircraft Maintenance Unit – A three-storey building to provide combined facilities for two squadrons comprising Squadron Operations and Aircraft Maintenance Unit (AMU) facilities, including mission planning, administration space in the operations section and offices to manage the maintenance of aircraft and storage space.
Corrosion control and wash rack facility – Comprising single-storey hangar to maintain aircraft including a paint and sanding booth and wash rack.
Flight simulator facility – Comprising a single-storey building to accommodate six F-35A flight simulators, administration, records, classrooms, brief/debrief rooms, and storage space.
A Field Training Detachment Facility, comprising A three-storey building to provide F-35A training programme to maintain the aircraft, incorporating classrooms and administration rooms. Field Training Detachment Facility – A three-storey building to provide F-35A maintenance, including classrooms and administration rooms.
Aircraft Ground Equipment (AGE) Facilities – A single storey building extension and new covered storage associated with an existing building used for maintenance and storage of AGE related to the F-35A.
Fuel System Maintenance Dock – A single storey hangar with fuel system maintenance dock to support the operation of the F-35A.
Munitions Maintenance Facility – A single storey building extension and new covered storage to an existing building for the maintenance of munitions used by the F-35A.
Residential accommodation – A three or four-storey dormitory for up to 144 beds to accommodate the increase in station personnel.
Flight-line Dining Facility
Munitions Storage Administration Maintenance building
Hospital – Replacement medical facility up to four storeys to provide inpatient services, outpatient and speciality care clinics, ancillary services, support and medical administrative functions.
High school – A three or four-storey building to house approximately 560 students.
The airfield operational surfaces are also being expanded as follows:[35]
Charlie Apron, currently used by F-15s will be redeveloped and extended to allow the parking of up to forty-two F-35A aircraft in dual-occupancy shelters constructed from a light weight, canopy structure with open sides. The total area of Charlie Apron once extended will be approximately 78,392 square metres, combining the retained area of 58,780 square metres with the new area of 19,612 square metres. It will be connected to Maintenance Hangars 4-1 and 4-2 and the Squadron Operations/AMU building.
Alpha-Bravo Apron will be extended to accommodate existing F-15 aircraft currently using Charlie Apron. The total area of Alpha-Bravo Apron once extended will be approximately 54,179 square metres, combining the retained area of 39,750 square metres with the new area of 14,429 square metres. Up to thirty-eight F-15 aircraft will be capable of being accommodated on the open apron which would not feature any shelters.
Infrastructure delivery
Investment of $148.4 million (£116.7M) for the delivery of F-35A infrastructure at Lakenheath was authorised by the US administration in August 2018.[36]
To make way for the F-35 Campus, demolition of the first of eighteen buildings began in March 2019.[38] The work on Alpha-Bravo Apron was completed in August 2020, allowing F-15E Strike Eagle operations of the 492nd and 494th Fighter Squadrons to be consolidated on one ramp.[39]
The base also has 1,500 British and US civilian staff, that serve the base at the site.[42]
Nuclear Weapons
Although never officially confirmed, US nuclear weapons were based at Lakenheath from the first deployment of SAC aircraft to the base in the 1950s until the 1990s. As of 2024, no US nuclear weapons are known to be based in the UK. In February 2024, US documents detailing the awarding of contracts to build new storage facilities for nuclear cores stimulated public discussion in East Anglia that nuclear weapons may be redeployed to Lakenheath in the near future.[43]
Heritage
Gate guardian
RAF Lakenheath's
gate guardian is
North American F-100D Super Sabre, serial number '54-2269'. The aircraft was originally delivered to the
French Air Force. On return it was moved to the "Wings of Liberty Memorial Park" at RAF Lakenheath. Firstly it was painted as '55-4048', latterly as '56-3319'.[44]
Lakenheath was one of the proposed sites of the NATO Pershing II Missile System. The deployment of the Missile system sparked protests all over Western Europe, and RAF Lakenheath was one of the most prominent military sites. The radical historian
E.P. Thompson wrote in a pamphlet that basing the system at RAF Lakenheath directly endangered the lives of those in the nearby city of
Cambridge:
"...Lakenheath is, by crow or cruise, just over twenty miles from Cambridge. It is possible that Cambridge but less probable that Oxford will fall outside the CEP. Within the CEP we must suppose some fifteen or twenty detonations at least on the scale of Hiroshima, without taking into account any possible detonations, release of radio-active materials, etc., if the strike should succeed in finding out the cruise missiles at which it was aimed."[45]
A semi-permanent 'peace camp' was set up outside RAF Lakenheath.[46] In 1985, the future Archbishop of Canterbury
Rowan Williams was arrested for singing psalms at a CND protest at Lakenheath.[47][48]
The
2003 invasion of Iraq sparked a new wave of peace protests. In one incident, 9 protestors gained access to the base by cutting through its perimeter fence. The protestors rode bicycles along the main runway, before chaining themselves together.[50]
Activists later established a 'peace camp' outside RAF Lakenheath to draw attention to the base.[51]
In 2006, a group of 200 people protested against the alleged nuclear weapons stored at RAF Lakenheath. Addressing the crowd was
Jeremy Corbyn, who cycled to RAF Lakenheath from
the railway station in
Ely.[52][53] There were further protests on this issue in 2008.[54]
Gallery
48th Fighter Wing
A 492d Fighter Squadron F-15E Strike Eagle from Lakenheath lifts off from the airfield's runway
The F-100 is displayed on a permanent stand. It was the second aircraft to represent the Liberty Wing. It flew for the 48th Fighter Wing between 1956 and 1972 before it was replaced by the F-4 Phantom.
A F-15C Eagle aircraft from the 493rd Fighter Squadron, 48th Fighter Wing, parked on the apron at RAF Lakenheath
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