I arrived at RAF Stradishall, Suffolk in September 1965, this was the RAF’s No: 1 School of Air Navigation. The station operated Varsities, Meteor NF14’s, a Meteor T7 and the newly acquired Dominies.
My job as an engine fitter was to report to No: 1 Hangar Station Servicing Flight on Meteors but as the Meteors were to be phased out (12th January 1966) I flitted around between SSF and the flight line and there was virtually nothing to do These meatboxes were being replaced with Dominies.
When 12th January 1966 came round I was then transferred to the Primary Servicing Team in No. 2 Hangar doing periodic servicing on Vickers Varsity Hercules engines. The worst job on this engine that I recall was the replacement of the oil cooler cross drive, an absolute swine of a job where most of the time you worked ‘blind’.
Home for me until I came top of the Married Quarter list was Trenchard Block, I very soon was allocated No: 65 AMQ which was situated in Poplar Drive diagonally opposite the guardroom. Discipline on ‘Strad’ appeared quite strict (must have been due to all these trainee fresh faced Navigators!) for within two days of starting work I had my name taken for knocking off work 10 minutes early, I wondered what they did with all these names?
My private diaries do not show too many incidents happening at Strad, I do recall a new Dominie doing a ‘wheels up’ at RAF Manston and a trolley accumulator being blown away in the wind which then hit the starboard engine of a Varsity propeller and was completely demolished whilst undergoing engine runs!
Much of my time at Strad was spent visiting Station Sick Quarters twice a day, a weekly visit to the ENT department at PMRAF hospital Ely and a three monthly visit to the CME in Goodge Street London resulting in a skin graft operation on my right ear drum at PMRAF hospital Halton in December 1966, thereafter I was ‘grounded’ for working above ground level due to vertigo.
In No: 3 hangar (used for ground equipment etc) was positioned a French Caudron GIIIc 1912/13 aircraft work could be done on this in our spare time as a volunteer, I worked on this to stop getting bored! This example is now in the RAF Museum at HendonÂ
Those names remembered at Stradishall
Those marked* I am in contact with
John [Gary Cooper] * Engines
Barry Salt * Engines
Eric Hedges *
Kevin Patience*
Bill Coles Engines
Ch/Tech Cyril Sharman
Laurie Montagu
Don East
F/Sgt Carrington (Deceased)
F/Sgt Haldean replacement aka Stripey
F/Lt Reid i/c SSF
Sgt Rose Engines
Dr Coghlan Unit Medical Officer Civilian
S/Ldr Davie Senior Medical Officer
Gordon Weekes * Engines (now in Canada)
Mac MacCullum
Stew Powney Engines
Sgt Alan Warner Engines
F/Lt Pass Education Officer
Mr Roberts Station Barrack Warden
SAC Cushion
Ch/Tech Bob Metson
Bill McManus
Johnny Wicks Airframes
‘Pincher’ Martin Engines
Johnny Cope
F/Lt Stavers
Warrant Officer Ingram
Roger Pierce
Pat Persse
Ch/Tech ‘Smudge’ Smith
Wing Commander Ramsden
‘Blacky’ Blackbourn Engines
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I have some photos that I will post in the days/weeks to come
My thanks to Kevin Peters for the following photographs of the aircraft at Strad, Kevin and I served together in ASF, when work was short instead of having to do some chores we could 'volunteer' to go to the next hangar and help refurbish this French Caudron GIII, this was how the 'kite' was received and then the finished article which is now in the RAF Museum at Hendon