In 1917, the Experimental Aircraft Flight of the
Central Flying School was transferred from
Upavon, Wiltshire to a site on the heathland at Martlesham and, on 16 January 1917,
Martlesham Heath Airfield was officially opened, as an experimental airfield. The unit was renamed the "Aeroplane Experimental Unit,
Royal Flying Corps". After the end of
World War I the site continued to be used and was, once again, renamed as the
Aeroplane and Armament Experimental Establishment (A&AEE) of the
Royal Air Force. At the outbreak of the
Second World War, the A&AEE was removed to a site at
Boscombe Down, Wiltshire, owing to the proximity of Martlesham Heath to the East Coast and its vulnerability to enemy attack. The airfield then took on a new role as a base for fighter squadrons defending Britain.
Wing Commander (later
Group Captain)
Douglas Bader,
D.S.O.,
D.F.C. served at Martlesham Heath with 222 and 242 Squadrons, in 1940. At the end of hostilities, there was no longer a role for Martlesham Heath as an operational RAF airfield and no prospect of the A&AEE returning, but the site was again used for a number of experiments with planes and armaments. However, its use declined in the 1950s, and the airfield was closed in the early 1960s. Various proposals were put forward for the development of the site, including the proposal that it should become a civil airport. Parts of the old airfield were let out to light industry and storage companies. In 1963 the lease of the site was sold by the Air Ministry to Bradford Property Trust Ltd, for a price of £72,500. The control tower at the airfield was built in 1942/43 for the 356th USAAF Fighter Group. It contains a museum operated by the Martlesham Heath Aviation Society detailing the RAF and USAAF presence from 1916 until the 1960s. ==Adastral Park==