Royal Air Force The airfield was originally opened in 1941, constructed in the typical
Class A airfield design, the main unit to use the airfield was
No. 22 Operational Training Unit RAF which flew
Vickers Wellingtons and
Avro Ansons for
RAF Bomber Command from 14 April 1941 until 24 July 1945. During the
Second World War the airfield was attacked several times by enemy bombers on their way home after bombing targets in the
Midlands such as
Coventry and
Birmingham. The nearby
Ettington railway station was used to transport troops and munitions from the rest of the country then to the airfield using RAF lorries and buses. Crews also attacked a number of German cities such as
Cologne,
Essen and
Bremen as part of the 1,000 bomber raids. The aircraft were crewed by instructors and students with some planes failing to return. The airfield was briefly home to the
No. 3 Glider Training School which started using Wellesbourne Mountford during July 1945 preparing for war in the far east using the
General Aircraft Hotspur before being disbanded on 3 December 1947, No. 9 Advanced Flying Training School from 1951 to 1954 with
Airspeed Oxford's,
North American Harvard's and
de Havilland Canada DHC-1 Chipmunk's, the
RAF School of Photography from 1948 to 1963 with Anson's, the
RAF School of Education 1950 to 1952 and the
Airfield Construction Branch from 1951 to 1964. In 1964 the airfield was closed and put on a care and maintenance basis due to the local flying pattern being too close to the
V bomber force at
RAF Gaydon around to the east, then returned to the original owners.
Civilian use The airfield has been reduced in size following the closure of the RAF station with a large number of the pan dispersals and dispersal track being removed in the 1970s for civilian construction projects and with the removal of one runway (which is now a concrete taxiway) and the shortened length of another. In the past, Wellesbourne was temporarily home to
Air Atlantique Douglas DC-3s between 1965 and 1981 also the site was used for vehicle testing by the
Rootes Group, Coventry and a number of different groups occupied the site for uses like
microlighting. ==Current use==