Royal Air Force Milltown or RAF Milltown is a former Royal Air Force station located south of the Moray Firth and 3.6 miles (5.8 km) north east of Elgin, Scotland.
Flying stopped in 1977 and the site became a defence communication station. The site was returned to previous owners the Innes estate and will become the site of a solar farm.
History
Establishment
RAF Milltown, was originally established as a decoy airfield, for RAF Lossiemouth which is located 3 miles (4.8 kilometres) to the north west. Decoy airfields, known as 'Q sites', were typically located close to real airfields and would be illuminated at night in the hope that any attack by enemy aircraft would be carried out on the decoy rather than the actual airfield. On 27 October 1941, the decoy site was abandoned and work commenced on constructing a real airfield which was intended for use by an operational training unit of RAF Coastal Command with a secondary role as an RAF Bomber Command forward operating location.[2]
Three runways were constructed: 05/23 (5,700 ft (1,737.3 m) in length); 11/29 (4,620 ft (1,408.1 m)); and 17/35 (4,200 ft (1,280.1 m)), which were accompanied by twenty-seven aircraft hardstandings around a perimeter track.[2] Two hangars were built, a T2 type in the southern side of the airfield within the technical area and a B1 type on the northern side.[3] The eastern edge of the airfield accommodated a bomb store.[4]
RAF operations
At the time the airfield opened on 14 June 1943, Coastal Command no longer required its use, and therefore the first occupants were C-flight of Bomber Command's No. 20 Operational Training Unit (No. 20 OTU) which was based at RAF Lossiemouth. C-flight trained crews to fly the Vickers Wellington medium bomber until demand reduced and it left on 1 September 1944.[2]
Coastal Command subsequently took control of the station and the first unit arrived on 15 September 1944 was No. 224 Squadron from RAF St. Eval, flying the Consolidated Liberator GR.VI. The squadron flew patrols searching for GermanU-boats and ships in the seas around Norway and Denmark, with at least four U-boats being sunk or damaged by the squadron during September and October 1944. During the winter of 1944 and 1945, many stations located further south were fog-bound which resulted in Milltown being used as a diversion airfield for large numbers of bomber aircraft. This included on 21 December 1944 when forty-six aircraft diverted to Milltown, a mixture of Avro Lancasters, Boeing Fortresses and Liberators.[5]
Milltown was used during 1944 as base to launch missions to sink the German battleshipTirpitz which at the time was operating in Norwegian fjords. Twelve Lancasters of No. 617 Squadron left Milltown on 29 October 1944 as part of Operation Obviate and joined other aircraft operating from RAF Lossiemouth and RAF Kinloss. That mission was unsuccessful, however a further attempt known as Operation Catechism, finally resulted in the battleship being sunk near Tromsø on 12 November 1944.[5]
No. 224 Squadron began conversion to the Liberator GR.VIII in November 1944. The unit temporarily moved to Lossiemouth whilst one of Milltown's runways was repaired during January 1945, continuing patrols until 2 June and then returning to RAF St. Eval in July.[6]
No. 311 Squadron, a Czechoslovak-manned unit equipped with Liberators, moved to Milltown at the end of the war. It had been operating from RAF Predennack and RAF Tain, carrying out the anti-submarine operations, however it had recently been transferred to RAF Transport Command and whilst at Milltown re-quipped with the Liberator GR.VI. It disbanded in February 1946.[6] Meanwhile, two new units arrived, No. 111 Operational Training Unit equipped with the Liberator & the Handley Page Halifax and No. 1674 Heavy Conversion Unit also equipped with the Liberator.[6]
Milltown and Lossiemouth were transferred back to the RAF in September 1972.[8] Thereafter, no permanent flying units were based at Milltown, although the RAF continued to use the airfield for deploying aircraft on exercise as it had done during the navy's tenure. This included Lockheed C-130 Hercules on exercise during 1968; Hawker Siddeley Harriers of No. 1 Squadron in March and April 1971, supported by nine Hercules, three Hawker Siddeley Andovers, seven Armstrong Whitworth Argosys and a Short Belfast; and four Harriers in 1972 for Exercise Snowy Owl.[8] Milltown closed for flying in March 1977.[8]
The site was retained by the RAF as a high frequency signals station, with some 50 masts transmitting on the RAF VOLMET (using a 600W transmitter) and RAF STCICS systems. The signals station closed in December 2003 when the RAF's high frequency communications system was replaced by the Defence High Frequency Communications Service.[9] The site was sold in 2013 to the Innes Estate and returned to agriculture[10]
Units and aircraft
List of flying units permanently based at Milltown.
Source: Unless otherwise indicated details sourced are from: Hughes, Jim. (1999), A Steep Turn to the Stars. Peterborough, GMS Enterprises. ISBN1 870384 71 7, pp. 79–82
The majority of the runways and taxiways are intact but a number of the aircraft stands have been removed. The area has been used for a variety of activities, including storage, truck testing and livestock grazing.[12]
2018 – planning for construction of a Solar PV power plant
2017-12-06 the Planning and Regulatory Services Committee of Moray Council agreed to raise no objection to the 50 MW Milltown Airfield Solar PV proposal.[13] The project was approved in May 2018 by the Scottish Government as the first solar project to be approved by the Energy Consents Unit (ECU).[14] The Solar Power plant will have a peak power of 50 MWp and include 200 000 solar panels. Assuming an insolation of 1160 kWh/m2yr[15] this corresponds to a capacity factor of approximately 13% and an annual production of 58 GWh/yr, or 15 000 homes each with a consumption of 3 900 kWh/yr.
Falconer, J (2012). RAF Airfields of World War 2. UK: Ian Allan Publishing. ISBN978-1-85780-349-5.
Hughes, Jim (1999). A Steep Turn to the Stars. Peterborough, GMS Enterprises. ISBN978-1-870384-71-1
Jefford, C.G. RAF Squadrons, a Comprehensive Record of the Movement and Equipment of all RAF Squadrons and their Antecedents since 1912. Shrewsbury, Shropshire, UK: Airlife Publishing, 1988. ISBN1-84037-141-2.
Sturtivant, Ray, ISO and John Hamlin. RAF Flying Training And Support Units since 1912. Tonbridge, Kent, UK: Air-Britain (Historians) Ltd., 2007. ISBN0-85130-365-X.