Following the outbreak of
World War II former Cape Town mayor and businessman,
David Pieter de Villiers Graaff, sold the land to the government to aid the war effort on condition that it would revert to his estate when the war was concluded and the government had no further military use for it. This led to the establishment of the Wingfield Aerodrome. September 1939 saw the formation of 15 Squadron SAAF at
Germiston with three former
SAA Junkers Ju 86 airliners used for
maritime patrols. After moving to Wingfield the squadron was absorbed as A Flight of 32 Squadron SAAF. In 1939,
Alex Henshaw, Chief
Test Pilot for Britain's
Spitfire fighter planes, flying a modified
Percival Mew Gull registration number G-AEXF, set a number of records for solo flights between
Gravesend, Kent (now
RAF Gravesend) and Wingfield and back, which still stands today nearly seventy years later.
Royal Navy Wingfield was acquired for the
Royal Navy and subsequently transferred to
Admiralty control from the
South African Air Force. It was designated as
Royal Naval Air Station Wingfield (
RNAS Wingfield) and
commissioned as '
HMS Malagas'''
on 1 July 1942 under the command of Commander J. Friar. During its tenure as HMS Malagas'', the airbase supported the
Fleet Air Arm by accommodating six disembarked squadrons, as well as squadrons in training, with a capacity for 75 aircraft. It provided facilities for both fighter and torpedo, bomber, reconnaissance (TBR) units, a Fleet Requirements Unit, and a Royal Naval Aircraft Repair Yard, which had a capacity for 150 aircraft. During this period it had four
runways approximately wide.
789 Naval Air Squadron, a Fleet Requirements Unit, was established on 1 July 1942 and operated a variety of aircraft including
Avro Anson I,
Bristol Beaufighter Mk.IIF,
Boulton Paul Defiant TT Mk I,
North American Harvard,
Vought Kingfisher,
Miles Martinet TT.Mk I and
Supermarine Walrus, remaining until its disbandment on 25 November 1945.
799 Naval Air Squadron, a pool and aircrew refresher training squadron equipped with
Fairey Albacore torpedo bombers, was established on 10 September 1943 and disbanded on 20 June 1944. On 11 August 1944,
810 Naval Air Squadron with twelve
Fairey Barracuda Mk II, together with the fighter squadrons
1830 and
1833 Naval Air Squadrons, with
Vought Corsair Mk II, disembarked from and remained until 13 October 1944.
818 Naval Air Squadron, equipped with four
Fairey Swordfish II aircraft, disembarked from between 12 and 18 September 1944, while
1838 Naval Air Squadron disembarked from the same carrier on 12 September 1944 with ten Vought Corsair Mk II aircraft but was disbanded the following day, its personnel and aircraft being absorbed into 1830 and 1833 Squadrons.
804 Naval Air Squadron, equipped with twenty-four
Grumman Hellcat F. Mk. II
fighters, was established on 24 September 1944 and embarked in in January 1945.
898 Naval Air Squadron was established on 1 January 1945 with twenty-four Grumman Hellcat F. Mk. II aircraft and embarked on on 23 June 1945, while
896 Naval Air Squadron was formed on 5 January 1945 with the same aircraft type and moved to the Royal Navy Air Section at SAAF Stamford Hill, Durban, on 22 April 1945 to embark on HMS
Ameer.
881 Naval Air Squadron, also equipped with Grumman Hellcat F. Mk. II fighters, disembarked from on 24 April 1945 before later disbanding. In the post-war period,
827 Naval Air Squadron with eighteen Fairey Barracuda Mk II and
1846 Naval Air Squadron with Vought Corsair Mk II both disembarked from on 17 January 1946 and remained until 8 April 1946. HMS
Malagas was
decommissioned on 31 May 1946 and the airbase was subsequently placed under Care and Maintenance. ==The present==