RAF Cranage

England

53.2231, -2.3967 — view on OpenStreetMap ↗

About

RAF Cranage was a Royal Air Force station in Cheshire, on the Cheshire Plain near Middlewich and the village of Byley. It opened in 1940 with grass landing surfaces and, despite lying in a region better known for its training role, it began life with a defensive function during the night Blitz on the industrial North West.

In its early period the station sat within No. 9 Group, Fighter Command, providing night air defence over Merseyside and the Liverpool docks. No. 96 Squadron formed here and flew Hawker Hurricanes and Boulton Paul Defiants, while a detachment of the Polish-manned No. 307 Squadron also operated Defiants from the field. From 1940 the airfield’s main purpose shifted to training: No. 2 School of Air Navigation flew Avro Ansons, later succeeded by the Central Navigation School using Ansons and Wellingtons, and a Beam Approach Training flight operated Airspeed Oxfords. Several pilot advanced flying units and a USAAF liaison detachment also passed through.

Flying continued after the war on a reduced basis before the station was wound down in the mid-1950s. Much of the former airfield has since reverted to farmland and industrial use, with the M6 motorway crossing part of the site and an underground gas-storage facility later developed nearby.

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People connected to this base

4 persons cross-referenced to this airfield — through a posting here, a squadron based here, or aircrew who flew from it.

NameRankConnectionDates
Lynes, Hamilton Maurice Flight Sergeant Aircrew (squadron based here)
Motherwell, David Flight Sergeant Aircrew (squadron based here)
Pavey, William Allen Flight Sergeant Aircrew (squadron based here)
Warren, Robert Douglas Flying Officer Aircrew (squadron based here)