Royal Air Force Norton (or RAF Norton), was a non-flying RAF station on the southern edge of Sheffield in Yorkshire, England. The base had two distinct stages in its RAF career, being known as RAF Lightwood between 1939 and 1943, and later RAF Norton between 1943 and 1965. On opening it was part of Balloon Command designated to protect the city of Sheffield, and in its second iteration, the base was part of Signals Command and an aircrew refresher school was also based there.
History
In 1915, land on the south-eastern edge of Sheffield, was prepared to become a landing ground for the use of No.33 Sqn in the Home Defence role across Northern England.[1] The base was named Coal Aston and was to the west of RAF Norton by some 1.452 miles (2.337 km).[2][3] An altar made from the propellers of crashed aircraft on the Western Front was made here by RAF apprentices in 1919. It was installed in the Airmens Chapel at Southwell Minster.[4][note 2] This location closed in 1919.[7]
With the threat of another war, steps were taken for the defence of important industrial areas of Britain.[8] Sheffield was designated as No. 16 Balloon Centre with No. 33 Group, part of Balloon Command, and the 155-acre (63 ha) RAF Lightwood site was opened in 1939 off Lightwood Lane in Norton to provide a base for training and deployment of a balloon barrage around Sheffield.[9][10][11] The site had two squadrons, No. 939 and No 940 Squadrons who had 40 balloons (in five flights) and 32 balloons (in four flights) respectively. No 939 Sqn had a responsibility for Sheffield, and No. 940 had the responsibility for Rotherham.[12][13] The balloon squadrons soon were converted to being operated by the WAAF so that the men of the RAF could be released for active duty elsewhere. However, the women of the WAAF at Norton were billeted to two per bed, something which the director of the WAAF complained "bitterly" about in April 1940.[14]
After the threat of Luftwaffe action had receded in 1943, the balloons were moved south to defend London and the squadrons at Lightwood disbanded. The base was renamed RAF Norton, and handed over from Balloon Command to Signals Command, with No. 3 Ground Radio and Radar Servicing Squadron (3GRRSS) taking over.[15] 3GRSS used RAF Norton until its closure in 1965.[16] Unlike nearby RAF Coal Aston, RAF Lightwood/RAF Norton was never furnished with a runway or active airfield.[17]
Between 1943 and 1945, Norton was also the site of an aircrew refresher school, a place where those who were branded as having a "Lack of Moral Fibre" (LMF) within Bomber Command were sent to be "corrected".[18] Sometimes, those who endured the three-week course at Norton were sent there simply because their commanding officer believed they had lost their nerve.[19]
The role of the base post Second World War was to train and support the RAF Signals cadre; in 1956, No. 90 Signals Group sent a convoy from Norton to Famagusta in Cyprus.[20] Between 1955 and 1961, Supermarine Spitfire F24 (no. PK724) was used for instructional purposes at Norton, having been sent from No. 9 Maintenance Unit at Cosford.[21] Another Spitfire (TB308) was also based at Norton in the late 1950s, like PK724, it was used as an instructional aircraft.[22] TB308 was scrapped at RAF Bicester in the early 1960s, but PK724 was preserved in the national collection at the museum in Hendon.[21][23] During the 1950s, the base held many air shows, but aircraft flew in from other bases as the site was not equipped with a runway (despite sometimes being referred to as an aerodrome).[15][17]
The site was used to accommodate rescue and relief workers in February 1962 after storm-force gales had hit the Sheffield area killing four, wounding 250 and damaging 70,000 homes.[24] The ensign at RAF Norton was lowered for the last time on 29 January 1965, with complete closure happening in the same year.[10]
A badge was approved and issued for Norton in June 1954. The blazon on the badge shows two gauntlets grasping a chain being crossed by a flash of lightning. The symbolism was the signals and communications nature of the base which tested and provided mobile radar and radio convoys.[32][33] The motto was test and prove.[34]
Post closure
After the RAF vacated in 1965, the site had many uses, including up to 2019 as a driver training area. In 2022, an application was made to build 270 homes on the site.[35] It has also been used as a filming location for the TV series Full Monty.[36]
^The site operated between 1939 and 1965. The area it was located in was the West Riding of Yorkshire until 1974, when the part that it was in became South Yorkshire.
^The altar is credited with being made at RAF Norton (Sheffield) in 1919, but the base did not exist until the late 1930s, and was originally RAF Lightwood, being renamed Norton in 1943. As the altar was used in the church at Norton Woodseats, it is assumed that this is how the error arose.[5][6]
References
^Lomax, S. C. (2014). The home front : Sheffield in the First World War. Barnsley: Pen & Sword. p. 168. ISBN978-1781592960.
^"Sheffield south". maps.nls.uk. Retrieved 22 November 2022. Coal Aston was located at SK306808, Norton was at SK376826. The measurement tool (for distance), can be found on the top right of the NLS map window
^James, T. C. G. (2013). The Battle of Britain: Air Defence of Great Britain, Volume II. London: Routledge. p. 334. ISBN9781135273989.
^Collier, Basil (1957). The defence of the United Kingdom. London: HMSO. p. 477. OCLC1001054300.
^Escott, Beryl E. (1989). Women in air force blue: the story of women in the Royal Air Force from 1918 to the present day. Wellingborough: Patrick Stephens Limited. p. 99. ISBN1852600667.
^Holliss, Barry R. (1988). Knights of the sky: the link between the heraldry and history of the Royal Air Force Part 3. Newport Pagnell: Enthusiast Publications. p. 43. ISBN0907700144.
^Pine, L. G. (1983). A Dictionary of mottoes. London: Routledge & K. Paul. p. 231. ISBN0-7100-9339-X.
^Mitchinson, James, ed. (15 November 2022). "270 homes for former airfield". The Yorkshire Post. p. 8. ISSN0963-1496.
Handley, Christine; Rotherham, Ian D., eds. (2023). WW1 Airfield to City Suburb: Meadowhead, Norton, Greenhill. Sheffield: Wildtrack Publishing. ISBN9781904098737.
Sturtivant, R.; Hamlin, J. (2007). Royal Air Force flying training and support units since 1912. UK: Air-Britain (Historians). ISBN978-0851-3036-59.