The town and community of Sutton Bridge played a supportive role of national importance during the
Second World War; it was home to a
Royal Air Force (RAF) airfield and
prisoner-of-war camp. Its most pivotal role was when Sutton Bridge became the RAF's Central Gunnery School (CGS), training both fighter pilots from
RAF Fighter Command and air gunners from
RAF Bomber Command, and in the words of Group Captain
Allan Wright "the Central Gunnery School itself was the first of its kind in the world". on acquired farmland bordering Sutton Bridge village, adjacent the
River Nene, in close vicinity to
Cross Keys Bridge. Becoming well established and expanded, RAF Practice Camp Sutton Bridge was renamed to No. 3 Armament Training Camp Sutton Bridge and later simply
RAF Sutton Bridge. In 1937, the village of Sutton Bridge also attracted some 5000 people to its open day flying display on
Empire Day, RAF Sutton Bridge not only trained British combat pilots but also the RAF's commonwealth and foreign allied pilots, especially trainee Polish, Czech and French pilots. At the end of the Second World War, RAF Sutton Bridge was also used for dismantling aircraft such as the Vickers Wellington bomber, Avro Lancaster bomber and other British combat aircraft scheduled to be sold as
scrap metal. Today, small remnants of RAF Sutton Bridge airfield exist, in 1958 RAF Sutton Bridge was closed, its land site transferred to the Ministry of Agriculture and continues to be used by the
Potato Marketing Board as one of the UK's leading
agricultural experiment stations. In 1947, a memorial in Saint Matthew's church was dedicated in memory of Commonwealth and Allied airmen who gave their lives whilst serving at RAF Sutton Bridge. The church also includes a Roll of Honour as well as a
war grave cemetery. A memorial plinth-mounted propeller blade situated at the side of Cross Keys Bridge was also erected in 1993 in memory of all that served at RAF Sutton Bridge; the propeller blade came from a crashed Hawker Hurricane that was based at RAF Sutton Bridge. The marshland gunnery range itself, located along The Wash, survived as
RAF Holbeach Bombing Range becoming parented to
RAF Marham, it continues active service as a practice bombing range for the RAF as well as
NATO-allied air forces.
Dam Busters Raid 1943 During the early part of 1943 Sutton Bridge and Cross Keys Bridge was used by
617 Squadron from
RAF Scampton to practise their low-level flying needed for
Operation Chastise (the legendary Dam Busters raid). The mission was led by commanding officer Guy Gibson, who was familiar with the village of Sutton Bridge having participated in advanced training at RAF Sutton Bridge during the summer of 1937. RAF Sergeant George (Johnny) Johnson
DFM, Bomb-Aimer on board Lancaster bomber ED825/AJ-T commanded by
Joe McCarthy that attacked the
Sorpe Dam from a height of just 30 feet, recounts that in the village of Sutton Bridge there were electric cables that cross the River Nene just before the bridge itself and to hone their low-level flying skills they would regularly practice flying the Lancasters under the electric cables and skim up over Cross Keys Bridge, missing the bridge itself by only a few feet each time. Many German POWs throughout the UK were used as a labour force in agriculture and although interpreted as within the confines of Articles 27–32 of the
Geneva Convention (1929), it caused debate in the UK; words such as "slave labour" was increasingly used in the media and in the House of Commons (see
Treatment of POWs by the Western Allies). The Sutton Bridge POW camp was designed to hold up to 250 POWs, consisting of wooden barracks and
Nissen huts. Living conditions and facilities at the camp were sparse at best, with no electric lighting nor heating stoves until well after the War had ended. On 28 August 1948, an official inspection visit by the
International Committee of the Red Cross reported prisoner conditions at Sutton Bridge POW Camp had improved significantly since their previous visit; 160 German
Wehrmacht POWs were at that time interned in the camp quasi-hostel, electric lighting and coal heating stoves had found their way into the POW accommodation, each dormitory contained between 8 and 14 single beds, lockable lockers had just been delivered and doors had been fitted to toilet cubicles. The interned POWs became a familiar part of Sutton Bridge community life while working the local farmland during their years of captivity and long after the war ended awaiting their
repatriation (see
Termination of captivity,
unconditional surrender without
armistice). On being formally discharged from captivity that finally occurred in late 1948 and early 1949, the few ex-POWs who remained in local employment sponsorship settled in the local community. Sutton Bridge continued to function as a boarding camp well into the early 1950s for some billeted ex-POWs who were either still awaiting repatriation or had elected to remain settled in local employment, until vacating to suitable local dwellings in and around Sutton Bridge. Remnants of Sutton Bridge POW camp site (location at: ) and its buildings remained visible until the late 1970s–80s. ==Gallery==