Airfields - France PDF
Airfields - France PDF
Airfields - France PDF
Clermont-Ferrand
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
Airfields
France
(with Corsica and Channel Islands)
Introduction
Conventions
1. For the purpose of this reference, “France” generally means the territory
belonging to it on 1 September 1939, including Alsace-Lorraine.
2. All spellings are as they appear in wartime German documents with the
addition of diacritical pronunciation markings where necessary.
3. See the General Introduction for matters concerning other conventions
such as format, limitations of data, abbreviations, glossary, sources, etc.
Preface
Prior to the beginning of the war on 1 September 1939, France had a very
large network of airfields, landing grounds and emergency landing grounds
that stretched across the entire country. Many of the civil and military
airfields were well-developed and had been in use since World War I and
before. Further development after the start of the war can be best
summarized in a number of stages:
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
supply installations and the installation of landing aids (i.e., beam approach,
visual Lorenz systems, etc.).
Airfields Listed
A total of 726 airfields, landing grounds and field airstrips are listed below,
along with more than 200 satellites and alternate landing grounds.
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A
Abbeville-Drucat (FR) (a.k.a. Le Plessiel) (50 08 30 N – 01 50 43 E)
General: airfield (Fliegerhorst) in NE France 4 km N of the city, 1.7 km SW
of the village of Drucat and 1 km S of Le Plessiel.
History: In existence since 1922 for civil use with runway extended in 1936
for military purposes. The Luftwaffe further developed the runways and
dispersal areas in 1941. Used principally by fighters, but none based there
after Jan 43 in accordance with decisions made to withdraw Luftwaffe assets
from the coastal sector.
Dimensions: approx. 2010 x 1100 meters (2,200 x 1,200 yards).
Surface and Runways: firm grass surface. The Luftwaffe expanded Drucat
in 1941 and by 1942 there were 3 concrete runways measuring approx.
1650 meters (1,800 yards) aligned NW/SE, 1600 meters (1,750 yards)
aligned NE/SW and 1465 meters (1,600 yards) aligned E/W x c. 50 meters
(55 yards) each. Had paved assembly areas at N and W ends plus
connecting taxiways and perimeter tracks. Permanently equipped for
instrument landings with a flare-path, a beam approach system and all 3
runways outfitted with permanent illumination and visual Lorenz systems.
Fuel and Ammunition: had a refueling loop in the North dispersal area with
bulk storage reportedly off the center of the S boundary. Ammunition
dumps were believed to be in a small wood at the N end of the landing area
and off the SE corner.
Infrastructure: full service and support facilities with at least one medium
hangar, workshops and administrative buildings. Had a rail spur connection
with the north dispersal area. Several small barrack huts, but station
personnel mostly billeted in the villages of Drucat and Le Plessiel, with a few
others in Abbeville.
Dispersal: as of Nov 43, 24 large and 10 small aircraft shelters at the N end
of the airfield, and 12 large at the S end. A few months later, 6 more small
shelters were added.
Defenses: by 1 Oct 43, the airfield was protected by a 6-gun and two 4-gun
heavy Flak positions together with 21 light Flak positions, all of these within
3 km of the center of the field. A system of defense trenches with
numerous machine gun positions surrounded the airfield.
Satellites and Decoys:
Abbeville – Port-le-Grand (50 10 00 N – 01 44 50 E), dummy 7.5 km
NW of Abbeville-Drucat airfield and 1.6 km N of the village of Port-le-Grand.
Situated in open agricultural land and fully illuminated.
Estrées-les-Crécy (50 15 00 N – 01 57 10 E), decoy c. 13.5 km NNE of
Abbeville-Drucat airfield. A former French landing ground with replica
aircraft parked around the landing area that was obstructed with poles and
wires. However, Estrées-les-Crécy was listed as operational in May 1942
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with airfield code number 416. This was changed on 26 Jul 42 to code
number 271 S (the “S” almost certainly an abbreviation for Scheinflugplatz
(decoy field).
Remarks:
29 Jun 40: Germans reported airfield attacked by approx. 15 Blenheims and
20 Spitfires – 1 hangar set on fire and airfield Flak claimed 1 Blenheim.
1942-44: airfield bombed and strafed frequently between July 1942 and May
1944. Most of these frequent attacks were carried out by 5 to 25 aircraft
and were more harassing in nature than an attempt to knock out the airfield
permanently. After the end of 1942, Drucat was used mainly to stage
missions and as a fuel stop rather than as a permanent base for units.
26 Jul 42: airfield issued new code number 246.
19 Aug 42: bombed by 22 B-17s - 4 men from the station command KIA.
3 Apr 43: day raid by approx. 12 RAF Mosquitos – no significant damage.
15 Mar 44: all 3 runways were mined during the preceding month and by 27
May the mines had been detonated and trenches dug across all remaining
landing runs.
Aug 44: airfield evacuated.
Operational Units: II./JG 51 (Jun 40); II./ZG 76 (Jun-Sep 40); Stab, II.,
III./JG 26 (c.Nov 40 – Jan 43); I./JG 51 (Feb-Mar 41); Erprobungsgruppe
210 (Apr 41); I./SKG 210 (Apr-May 41); II./JG 2 (Jun-Dec 41).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 16/VI (Jun 40 – Mar 44); Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v)
227/XI (Apr 44 - ?).
Station Units (on various dates on the airfield, in the city or nearby – not
complete): I./Flak-Rgt. 64 (gem.mot.) (Jun 40); elements of gem.Flak-Abt.
122(v) (Nov 42); elements of gem.Flak-Abt. 157(v) (Jul 42); gem.Flak-Abt.
314 (Jul-Aug 44); gem.Flak-Abt. 417(v) (Dec 42, Feb 43); elements of
le.Flak-Abt. 712 (Nov 42); elements of le.Res.Flak-Abt. 773 (Aug 42);
le.Flak-Abt. 880 (Aug 43); le.Flak-Abt. 958 (ETr.) (Apr 43); Flak-Trsp.Bttr.
135/XII (Aug 44); elements of Lw.-Bau-Btl. 18/XVII (Jul 42).
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 pp.1654-61 (25 Apr 43 updated to 15 Mar 44);
chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Achery (FR) (49 41 N – 03 23 E)
General: landing ground in NE France 22 km NW of Laon, 12 km NW of
Laon-Couvron airfield and immediately SW of the village of Achery. History:
prepared late spring/early summer 1944 and fully serviceable and in use by
Aug 44. Surface and Dimensions: farm land measuring approx. 1280 x
365 meters (1400 x 400 yards). Infrastructure: none noted. Dispersal:
aircraft could be concealed in hedges along the N, W and E boundaries.
[Sources: A.I.2.(b)/Air Ministry Amendment dated 5 Aug 44 in
BNA(PRO)/AIR 40]
Achiet (FR): see Grévillers.
Agen (FR) (Agen – La Garonne) (44 10 30 N – 00 35 49 E)
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Reserve Training & Replacement Units: elements of JGr. 200 (Jun – Aug
44).
Station Commands: Flugplatzkdo. of Fl.H.Kdtr. A 224/XII (Salon) (Mar 44);
Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v) 227/XII (Apr-Aug 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): Stab/Jagdfliegerführer
Südfrankreich (c.Dec 42 – Jun 44); 6./gem.Flak-Abt. 592 (Jun-Aug 44);
Stab and Stab I./Ln.-Rgt. 51 (Nov 43?, Mar 44); Stab II./Ln.-Rgt. 51 (c.Nov
43 – Aug 44); 25.(Ln.-techn.)/Ln.-Rgt. 51 (Mar 44); Stab IV.
(Flum.Mess)/Ln.-Rgt. 213 (c.Apr-Nov 43); Stab and 1.Kp. Lw.-Bau-Btl.
106/XII (K) (Oct/Nov 43 – Aug 44).
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 pp.025- (29 Mar 43 updated to 4 Apr 44) and
A5261 p.1192 (29 Mar 43); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site
ww2.dk]
Aix-l’Enfant (FR) (a.k.a. Aix-Marseille-l’Enfant) (43 28 45 N – 05 23 50
E)
General: landing ground in S France 21 km N of Marseille, 7.25 km SW of
Aix-en-Provence and 1.6 km W of the road from Aix to Marseille. History:
built as a private field for a flying club. After the armistice in June 1940, it
fell into disuse and was obstructed. The Luftwaffe removed the obstructions
in summer 1943 and for the next year it was used as a satellite for
Marseille-Marignane. Surface and Dimensions: firm all-weather gravel
surface measuring approx. 915 x 500 meters (1000 x 550 yards) with a very
irregular shape. No paved runway. Fuel and Ammunition: no details
found. Infrastructure: had 2 small hangars and a workshop-type building
at the SW corner that were served by a concrete road. A former clubhouse
was next to the hangars and personnel were reportedly accommodated in
buildings on the property of the Château de l’Enfant, also near the hangars.
In Dec 43 barrack huts were being built in the same vicinity. The nearest
rail connection was in the village of Luynes, approx. 3 km E of the landing
ground. Dispersal: no organized dispersal facilities in Dec 43. Defenses:
none noted.
Remarks: none.
Operational Units: none identified.
Station Commands: Flugplatzkdo. of Fl.H.Kdtr. A 223/XII (Montpellier)
(Mar 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: AFHRA A5261 pp.1106-07 (30 Dec 43); chronologies; BA-MA;
NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Aix-les-Bains – Chambéry (FR) (45 38 38 N – 05 52 45 E)
General: airfield in SE France at the S end of lake Le Bourget 9.25 km NNW
of Chambéry and 5.5 km SSW of Aix-les-Bains.
History: opened as a civil airfield in 1933 and may later have been used as
a French Air Force recruit depot. Although construction continued over the
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
years, there was little of no flying activity there. No record found of any
Luftwaffe units having been stationed at this airfield.
Dimensions: approx. 915 x 1100 meters (1000 x 1200 yards) with an “L”-
shape.
Surface and Runways: gravel surface on marshy ground.
Fuel and Ammunition: triple refueling points were located in both NE and
NW corners.
Infrastructure: had 4 large double span hangars on the W boundary, one of
which was still being built and lacked a roof in Feb 43, and 2 medium-size
flat roofed buildings. Barracks and offices were located behind the hangars
off the W boundary. The nearest rail connection was in Le Viviers, just off
the W boundary.
Dispersal: no organized dispersal facilities.
Defenses: no Flak defenses noted on 18 Mar 43. A barbed wire fence
reportedly ran along the W boundary.
Remarks:
14 Jan 44: the double span hangar under construction has now been roofed
and fronted with a paved apron.
1 May 44: landing area partially obstructed with wire.
Operational Units: none identified.
Station Commands: none identified.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 pp.022-24 (18 Mar 43 updated to 1 May 44);
chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Ajaccio (FR/Corsica) (a.k.a. Ajaccio – Campo del Oro) (41 55 20 N – 08
47 50 E)
General: landing ground 5.5 km E of the city of the same name in SW
Corsica. History: used mainly as a stopover field for Vichy aircraft flying
back and forth to Tunisia, and then by a few Italian reconnaissance aircraft
from May to September 1943. No Luftwaffe units are known to have been
based here. Surface and Dimensions: artificially drained sandy soil with
marshy areas that measured approx. 915 x 730 meters (1000 x 800 yards).
No paved runway. Infrastructure: had 1 medium hangar at the SW corner
with a few small buildings just S of the hangar that were probably used for
accommodations and office space. Paved servicing hardstands were located
halfway along perimeter tracks on the E and W sides of the landing area.
Defenses: there were 2 heavy and 1 light Flak positions in the vicinity of the
landing ground.
Operational Units (Regia Aeronautica): 65º Gruppo OA (c. Aug-Sep 43);
146ª Squadriglia RM (May 43).
[Sources: AFHRA A5258 pp.1317 (20 Mar 43) and A5264 p.1117 (25 Apr
43); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Ajaccio (FR/Corsica) (41 55 45 N – 08 44 30 E)
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3 Nov 43: both runways noted as repaired and serviceable following damage
from recent attacks.
20 Dec 43: bomb craters on the W side of the landing area now filled in.
8 Jan 44: the hangars and buildings damaged on 31 Aug 43 had been left
unrepaired.
6 Feb 44: airfield hit by 9th AAF B-26 Marauders.
2 Mar 44: airfield attacked by a large force of 9th AAF Marauders – NE/SW
runway and landing area heavily cratered and made unserviceable. The
ESE/WNW runway observed to be repaired and mostly serviceable.
20 Mar 44: ESE/WNW runway serviceable, but NE/SW runway and
surrounding landing area still under repair.
3 Jun 44: the WNW/ESE runway noted as being prepared for demolition.
7 Aug 44: low-level attack by VIII Fighter Command P-47s – claimed 3 x Me
410s destroyed, plus 1 x Bf 109 and 1 x Me 410 damaged.
Operational Units: III./KG 1 (Jun 40); II./KG 1 (Jun-Sep 40); Stab/KG 1
(Sep 40 – Jun 41); II./KG 26 (Sep-Dec 40); I./KG 1 (Jan-Mar 41);
Transportstaffel IX. Fliegerkorps (Dec 41); II./SKG 10 (May 43).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 8/I (Jun 40 – mid-1942); Fl.H.Kdtr. E 3/I
(Sep-Nov 40); Fl.H.Kdtr. A 209/XI (c.Nov 42 – c.Aug 43);
Teilkommandantur of Fl.H.Kdtr. A 205/XI Cambrai-Épinoy (or of A 209/XI at
Toul-Rosières?) (c.Sep 43 – Mar 44); Flugplatzkdo. Amiens-Glisy of
Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v) 224/XI (Apr-Aug 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): see above under Amiens –
Lw. Garrison and Station Units.
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1388-92 (4 Jun 43) and A5260 pp.1670-79 (4
Jun 43 updated to 4 Mar 44); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web
site ww2.dk]
Amiens-Monsures (FR) (c. 49 42 N – 02 10 E)
General: former landing ground in NE France 23 km SSW of Amiens. No
further information or evidence of use by the Luftwaffe found. Inactivated
after 1940 according to comprehensive Allied intelligence sources. Mattiello
states that it was operational in June 1944.
[Sources: Mattiello; AFHRA]
Amiens-Montjoie (FR) (c. 49 52 N – 02 18 E)
General: former landing ground in NE France and on the southern outskirts
of Amiens. No further information or evidence of use by the Luftwaffe
found. Inactivated after 1940 according to comprehensive Allied
intelligence sources. Mattiello states that it was operational in June 1944.
[Sources: Mattiello; AFHRA]
Amy (FR): see Roye-Amy.
Andainville (FR) (a.k.a. Fresneville) (c. 49 53 05 N – 01 49 06 E)
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offices and limited accommodations. The nearest rail connection was just
550 meters from the seaplane station. Defenses: unknown.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): Seenotkdo. 25 (Oct 43 –
Aug 44).
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 pp.032-33 (24 Nov 42); chronologies; BA-MA;
NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Arbois (FR) (46 55 12 N – 05 45 35 E)
General: former landing ground in east-central France 28 km SE of Dôle
and 2 km NNW of Arbois. No further information or evidence of use by the
Luftwaffe found. Inactivated after 1940 according to comprehensive Allied
intelligence sources. Mattiello states that it was operational in June 1944.
[Sources: Mattiello; AFHRA]
Arengosse (FR) (c. 44 00 N – 00 47 W)
General: former landing ground in SW France 26.5 km SE of Mont-de-
Marsan. No further information or evidence of use by the Luftwaffe found.
Inactivated after 1940 according to comprehensive Allied intelligence
sources. Mattiello states that it was operational in June 1944.
[Sources: Mattiello; AFHRA]
Argentan (FR) (c. 48 45 50 N – 00 02 16 W)
General: landing ground in Normandy/NW France 57 km SSE of Caen and 3
km NW of Argentan. History: following limited use from Jul 40 to early
1941, Argentan was inactivated and obstructed for the next 3 years.
Rehabilitated in spring 1944. Surface and Dimensions: grass surface
measuring approx. 1000 x 365 meters (1100 x 400 yards). An additional
and parallel strip 730 meters (800 yards) in length was off the NW
boundary. No paved runway. Fuel and Ammunition: Infrastructure:
none. The nearest rail connection was in Argentan. Dispersal: approx. 20
aircraft parking bays were along the edge of 2 orchards at the NE corner had
been cleared of earlier overgrowth and were in use in early Jul 44.
Additional dispersal was available in fields off the SW boundary.
Remarks:
25 Nov 43: landing area observed to be obstructed by trenches and possibly
by portable obstacles also.
9 Jun 44: station HQ completely destroyed in Allied air attack.
14 Jun 44: not permanently obstructed – landing area probably serviceable.
6 Jul 44: landing area serviceable and now in use.
Operational Units: III./St.G. 77 (Jul 40 – Mar 41).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 11/VII (Jul-Oct 40); Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v)
244/XII (Apr-Aug 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): Stab/Höh.Kdr.d.Festungs-
Flakartillerie III (Sep 40); Flak-Sondergerätwerkstatt (mot.) 3/VI (Jun-Aug
44); Stab III./Ln.-Rgt. 53 (Oct 43 – Jan/Feb 44).
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 p.1396 (9 Jun 43) ana A5260 pp.1686-87 (9 Jun
43 updated to q5 Nov 43); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site
ww2.dk]
Arles (FR) (43 40 N – 04 37 E)
General: there were 5 emergency landing grounds in the vicinity of Arles -
Arles-sur-Rhône, Arles-La Grosse, Arles-Retour des Aires, Arles-Tartonne
and Arles-Trouniaire. No record of Luftwaffe use found.
[Sources: Mattiello; AFHRA]
Arnay-le-Duc (FR) (c. 47 11 15 N – 04 23 40 E)
General: emergency landing ground in E France 46.5 km SW of Dijon, 9.5
km NW of the village of Arnay-le-Duc and 2 km SW of the village of Huilly.
History: no record found of use by the Luftwaffe. Surface and Dimensions:
grass surface measuring approx. 505 x 595 meters (550 x 650 yards).
Infrastructure: none noted.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 p.2475 (27 Aug 43); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA;
PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Arpajon (FR): see Bretigny/I.
Arques (FR) (St-Omer – Arques, St-Omer – Fort Rouge) (c. 50 43 55 N
– 02 19 30 E)
General: airfield in NE France 5.25 km ESE of Saint-Omer, 2 km ESE of the
village of Arques and lying between a railway line off the N boundary and a
canal off the S boundary.
History: Arques was first developed by the Germans in Aug 40 for use as a
fighter base. Units were based there until Sep 42 and thereafter it was
used mainly as a forward field for staging missions.
Dimensions: approx. 670 x 1370 meters (730 x 1500 yards) and nearly
rectangular in shape. The landing area was camouflaged to blend in with
the surrounding countryside.
Surface and Runways: grass surface that became water-logged in wet
weather. Had 1 concrete runway 670 meters (730 yards) in length and
aligned ENE/WSW. Equipped for night landings.
Fuel and Ammunition: there was a single refueling loop in the North
dispersal and a bulk fuel dump NE on the fringe of the Clairmarais Forest.
Other fuel storage may have been off the NW corner. The main ammunition
dump was probably in the Clairmarais Forest with smaller, ready to issue
storage in sheds in the North and South dispersal areas.
Infrastructure: had 1 small repair hangar off the NW corner in the dispersal
area and another 1.5 km to the NE on the fringe of the Clairmarais Forest
that was connected to the airfield by a taxi track. Small huts near the NW
and NE corners were most likely workshops. The station HQ was off the NW
corner, with offices and barracks of both the NE and NW corners. Station
flight control was believed to be on the S boundary. Small buildings in the
South dispersal were used as billets and for storage. A number of barrack
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
buildings in the Clairmarais Forest may have housed base personnel, while
flying personnel and some officers were quartered in Arques. Railway lines
passed close to the W and S boundaries and to the NE corner.
Dispersal: the 2 dispersals – North and South – had a total of 35 medium
and 24 small aircraft shelters. Most of the shelters were uncovered and all
were camouflaged to look like hillocks and houses. The dispersals were
connected to the landing area by taxiways.
Defenses: consisted of 2 heavy and 14 light Flak positions in Apr 43
reduced to 2 heavy and 7 light Flak positions by Jan 44. Barbed wire
surrounded both dispersal areas.
Satellites and Decoys:
St. Omer – La Borne (c. 50 42 N – 02 18 E), dummy 2 km SSW of
Arques airfield.
Remarks:
8 Feb 41: low-level attack – 1 x Bf 109 E-4 from 4./JG 3 shot up while
taking off and damaged.
13 May 43: bombed by 14 B-17 Fortresses.
29 Jul 43: bombed by 19 8th AAF B-26 Marauders.
2 Aug 43: bombed by 18 8th AAF B-26 Marauders.
15 Aug 43: bombed by 31 8th AAF B-26 Marauders.
9 Sep 43: bombed by 14 B-24 Liberators – concentrated bursts on the NW
side of the airfield and a direct hit on the runway. Most of this damage had
been repaired by 22 Sep 43.
18 Oct 43: airfield bombed.
25 Nov 43: dive-bombed by 2 groups of P-47s – runway undamaged and
landing area remained serviceable.
10 Apr 44: runway and landing area temporarily obstructed with portable
tripods, and runway thought to be mined.
11 Jun 44: now permanently obstructed with mines detonated on the
runway and numerous closely spaced holes dug in the landing area.
Operational Units: 1.(F)/Aufkl.Gr. 22 (Jun 40 - ?); elements of III./ZG 26
(Jun-Dec 40); I./JG 20 (Jun-Jul 40); II.(Schlacht)/LG 2 (Sep 40)?; II./JG 3
(Sep 40 – Feb 41); II./JG 53 (Mar-Jun 41); I./JG 26 (Nov 41 – Sep 42); 10.
(Jabo)/JG 26 (Mar-May 42).
Reserve Training & Replacement Units: Erg.St./JG 26 (Oct - Nov 40).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 46/XI (Aug 40)?; Teilkdtr. Arques of
Fl.H.Kdtr. E 5/VI St-Omer (1941-42); Fl.Pl.Kdo. B 65/XI (Jan 43)?
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): elements of le.Flak-Abt.
694(v) (Aug 42); elements of le.Flak-Abt. 712 (Nov 42).
[Sources: AFHRA A 5259 p.1871 (11 Jun 44) and A5260 pp.2353-61 (23
May 43 updated to 10 Apr 44); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web
site ww2.dk]
Arras (FR) (a.k.a. Arras - St.-Léger, Arras-Duisans) (c. 50 18 19 N – 02
40 43 E)
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Station and Town Units (on various dates – not complete): 22.
(s.Flum.)/Ln.-Rgt. Belgien-Nordfrankreich (1941-43).
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1398-1400 (28 May 43) and A5260 pp.1690-93
(28 May 43 updated to 23 Apr 44); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA;
web site ww2.dk]
Audinghen (FR) (c. 50 51 06 N – 01 35 51 E)
General: landing field or landing ground 20.5 km SW of Calais in NE France
and 1 km W of the village of Audinghen. No further information or evidence
of use by the Luftwaffe found. It was the location of large coast defense
and observation bunkers so it is possible that an occasional Fi 156 Storch
liaison aircraft landed there.
Auffains (FR): see Bouard.
Aulnay-aux-Planches (FR) (48 49 07 N – 3 56 53 E)
General: field airstrip in NE France 119 km E of Paris, 48 km S of Reims
and 1 km W of the village of Aulnay-aux-Planches. No further details found.
It was probably nothing more than a farm field or pasture pressed into use
for a day or two during the retreat from France.
Operational Units: I./JG 1 (Aug 44).
Station Commands: none identified.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Autun-Bellevue (FR) (a.k.a. Bellevue) (46 58 00 N – 04 15 36 E)
General: former landing ground in E France c. 70 km SW of Dijon and 3.5
km NW of Autun. Apparently not used after 1940 because of its rather
remote location too far from the front areas.
Remarks:
Sep 40: airfield assigned code number 393.
Operational Units: none identified.
Station Commands: none identified.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): 21.(Flum.Mess)/Ln.-Rgt.
57 (Autun, ? – Aug 44).
[Sources: chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Auxerre (FR) (a.k.a. Monéteau) (47 50 05 N – 03 34 30 E)
General: airfield in C France 68 km SSW of Troyes, 3.25 km N of Auxerre
and 3 km S of Monéteau.
History: a former French civil airfield that remained relatively unaltered by
the Germans. Heavily used by Luftwaffe fighter and dive bomber units
during the Jun 40 advance through France. No evidence found of use by
aircraft after the landing area was obstructed in summer 1942.
Dimensions: approx. 1100 x 775 meters (1200 x 850 yards).
Surface and Runways: grass surface. No paved runways. Equipped with a
permanent flare-path and special distance markers used in conjunction with
instrument flight training.
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
during the Vichy period to Nov 42 or its later use by the Luftwaffe, but there
was little or no activity there until spring 1944. Surface and Dimensions:
insufficiently drained grass surface measuring approx. 1000 x 1000 meters
(1100 x 1100 yards) and irregular in shape. No paved runway. Fuel and
Ammunition: made available as needed. Infrastructure: had 1 small and 2
long narrow hangars in the NE corner. A few accommodation huts were on
the W boundary. Dispersal: no organized dispersal facilities - aircraft
were parked in surrounding fields and in bays cut into hedges between the
fields. Defenses: had 3 heavy and 6 light Flak positions in Jul 43.
Remarks:
30 Oct 43: the small hangar at the NE corner has been removed.
4 Apr 44: a dispersal area N of the airfield was under construction with 3
aircraft parking hardstands already built.
15 Jun 44: strafed by 15th AAF P-38 Lightnings and P-51 Mustangs – claimed
1 aircraft as probably destroyed on the ground.
Operational Units: none identified.
Station Commands: none identified.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 pp.035-36 (12 Nov 42) and A5261 p.1110 (24 Aug
43); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Avignon/Ost (FR) (e. Avignon-East) (a.k.a. Le Thor) (c. 43 56 09 N –
04 59 52 E)
General: satellite and dispersal field c.15 km E of Avignon in SE France and
c. 1 km NE of the town of Le Thor. History: the origin of this landing
ground has not been found but appears to date from spring 1943 shortly
after the Germans took over in S France. Surface and Dimensions: not
found. Infrastructure: no information.
Remarks:
21 Aug 44: airfield ordered evacuated and destroyed.
Operational Units: Stab, I., II./TG 1 (Jun-Jul/Aug/Sep 43);
Transportstaffel/1. Fallschirmjägerdivision (Aug 43).
Station Commands: Flugplatzkdo. Avignon/Ost (Apr 44); Flugplatzkdo. of
Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v) 242/XII Orange-Caritat (Apr-Aug 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): 2. Flugh.Betr.Kp. TG 1 ( ?
– 8 Oct 43); 2. Flugh.Betr.Kp. TG 5 ( ? – 8 Oct 43); gem.Flak-Abt. 343 (Jul
44); Stab III.(Tel.Bau)/Ln.-Rgt. 13 (L’Isle-sur-la-Sorgue, Jun-Jul 44);
Flugbetriebsstoffausgabestelle 2/XII (Le Pontet, Feb 44); Ldssch.Zug d.Lw.
18/XI (Le Thor, Jul 44); Ldssch.Kp. d.Lw. 18/XIII (Le Pontet, Feb 44);
4./Flieger-Rgt. 63 (Jun-Aug 44).
[Sources: chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Avignon-Pujaut (FR) (a.k.a. Avignon/West) (43 59 45 N – 04 44 45 E)
General: airfield in S France 5.8 km NNW of Avignon and 1.6 km WSW of
the village of Pujaut.
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
History: a major and well-equipped French Air Force base to Jun 40, when it
was taken over by the Luftwaffe and used mainly by reserve training and
replacement bomber units.
Dimensions: approx. 1830 x 1830 meters (2000 x 2000 yards).
Surface and Runways: clay on firm chalk subsoil, general in good condition.
Had 2 concrete runways in the form of a cross measuring approx: (1) 1600
meters (1750 yards) aligned NE/SW; (2) 1555 meters (1700 yards) aligned
NW/SE. Equipped with a beam approach system and a visual Lorenz
system for night landings.
Fuel and Ammunition: refueling points were in front of the hangars on the E
boundary and in front of the hangars at the SE corner.
Bulk fuel storage was in 5 separate locations on the S, W and N sides of the
airfield. The bases bomb dump was in a wood close to the Northwest
dispersal and other munitions were stored in 3 former French dumps off the
W, N and E boundaries.
Infrastructure: a very large concentration of buildings was at the S corner
including 2 small hangars, workshops and numerous storage buildings.
Additionally, there was 1 large hangar and 8 medium hangars on the E
boundary, 5 large double hangars and 1 small hangar on the SW boundary,
and 1 small repair hangar in the Northwest dispersal area for a total of 18
hangars. Station HQ was located in the Château d’Aubilly, 4 km SE of the
airfield, and extensive barrack accommodations existed to the S of the field.
A branch rail connection off the main Tours-Nevers line served the airfield.
Dispersal: had a Northwest dispersal with 12 or 13 large covered aircraft
shelters and a new Northeast dispersal with 5 large covered aircraft shelters
plus 8 parking sites that was built beginning in late 1943.
Defenses: protected by 2 heavy and 6 light Flak positions within 4 km of the
airfield in Aug 43. Machine gun strongpoints and emplacements with
barbed wire defenses protected the hangar areas and the munitions dumps.
Remarks:
20 Apr 41: employed 1,270 non-German workers.
5 Feb 44: airfield bombed by 50 B-17 Fortresses – 5 hangars and a number
of the workshops destroyed or severely damaged and several of the barrack
buildings S of the airfield were destroyed while others were damaged.
28 Apr 44: bombed by 116 Fortresses – 2 x He 177 A-1s from FFS B 15
destroyed or damaged on the ground.
23 May 44: airfield bombed by 88 B-24 Liberators.
4 Jun 44: bombed by 56 B-24 Liberators – 3 x Ju 188s from 2./KG 66
destroyed on the ground along with most of the airfield’s hangars.
25 Jun 44: airfield bombed in mid-morning by 59 B-24s – 3 x Fw 190s
damaged, many bursts on the runways and landing area, electricity cut and
the airfield left unserviceable.
Operational Units: III./KG 27 (Jul-Aug 40); I./KG 1 (Aug 42); part of
III./KG 40 (Feb-Mar 44); I./KG 66 (Mar-Jun 44); III./SG 4 (Jun 44).
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
B
Bacqueville (FR) (c. 49 18 N – 01 22 E)
General: field airstrip or landing ground in north-central France c. 33 km
WSW of Beauvais. No details found. Operational in 1941, according to
Beauvais, but not listed in Allied directories.
Remarks:
1941 airfield used code number 572. Subordinated to Koflug 19/XI
(Beauvais).
26 Jul 42: airfield assigned new code number 249.
[Sources: Mattiello]
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
measuring approx. 990 x 1465 meters (1080 x 1600 yards) with an irregular
shape. No paved runway. Fuel and Ammunition: refueling points on the S
and W boundaries. Infrastructure: none. The nearest rail connection was
the main line to Metz which passed by the N side of the field. Dispersal:
aircraft were parked in the N boundary and along the fringe of the wood on
the E boundary. Defenses: none identified.
Remarks:
Jun 44: listed as serviceable in Luftwaffe documents.
Operational Units: none identified.
Station Commands: none identified.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): Fallschirmjäger-Ausb.Rgt.
(1943).
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 p.1705 (29 May 43); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA;
PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Barly (FR) (c. 50 15 02 N – 02 32 49 E)
General: landing ground in NE France 17 km W of Arras. History: after
brief occupancy in summer 1940, the Luftwaffe chose not to enlarge and
improve this field and deactivated it as soon as the heavy rains began that
fall. Surface and Dimensions: agricultural and pasture land. No
information found as to dimensions. Infrastructure: none noted.
Remarks:
Sep/Oct 40: airfield assigned code number 363. Came under Koflug 8/III
(Saint-Omer).
Operational Units: IV.(Stuka)/LG 1 (Jun 40); I./St.G. 76 (Jun-Jul 40);
III./St.G. 77 (Jul 40); elements of III./ZG 26 (Aug 40); I./St.G. 3 (c. Oct
40).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 20/XI (Jul 40); Fl.H.Kdtr. E 13/VIII (Aug
40).
[Sources: chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Baromesnil (FR) (c. 49 59 08 N – 01 24 32 E)
General: landing ground in NE France 24.6 km ENE of Dieppe. History:
briefly used by the Luftwaffe after the June 1940 armistice and then
relegated to inactive caretaker status. Surface and Dimensions:
agricultural and pasture land. No information found as to size.
Infrastructure: none noted.
Remarks:
Sep 40: airfield assigned code number 552.
Operational Units: III./JG 3 (Jun-Jul 40).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 40/XIII (Jul 40 – c.Nov 40)?;
Flugplatzkdo. of Fl.H.Kdtr. E 2/I Paluel (c. 1941 – Mar 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Baron (FR) (49 09 30 N – 02 42 40 E)
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
Abt. 192 (Jul 41); elements of gem.Flak-Abt. 122 (Sep 43, Mar 44); Stab
I./Ln.-Rgt. 1 (Jun-Sep 40); 17.(Flum.Mess)/Ln.-Rgt. 52 (c.1943 – Aug 44);
12.(Flum.Res.)/Luftgau-Nachr.Rgt. Belgien/Nordfrankreich (c.Jul 40 – spring
43); Sanitätsbereitschaft (mot) d.Lw. 4/VI (c.1941 – Aug 44).
Beauvais-Nivillers (FR) (a.k.a. Beauvais-Villiers) (49 28 00 N – 02 10
25 E)
General: landing ground 7.75 km NE of Beauvais, adjacent to Beauvais-
Tillé and connected to it by a 2.5 km taxiway. For all practical purposes, it
was a satellite of Beauvais-Tillé. History: unknown. Surface and
Dimensions: grass surface measuring 1465 x 915 meters (1600 x 1000
yards) and irregular in shape. Not hard-surfaced during the war.
Infrastructure: none noted. Dispersal: had a West dispersal area, and a
new dispersal off the S boundary was under construction in Apr 44. In May
44 a North (remote) dispersal was being built.
Satellites and Decoys:
Beauvais/I - satellite immediately W of Beauvais-Nivillers landing
ground and 5.5 km NE of Beauvais-Tillé airfield. Had 2 airstrips in the form
of a cross and both measured 1190 x 185 meters (1300 x 200 yards). The
satellite was still under construction on 12 May 44 and not yet serviceable.
Remarks:
Sep/Oct 40: airfield assigned code number 500.
26 Jul 42: airfield assigned new code number 251.
24 Oct 43: bombed by 9th AAF B-26 Marauders – center of landing area
cratered and 1 aircraft shelter in the West dispersal destroyed.
16 Nov 43: craters from the 24 Oct attack not yet filled in.
22 Feb 44: the craters from the attack of 24 Oct 43 had not been filled in
and only an auxiliary strip on the N boundary was serviceable.
12 May 44: a new taxi track linking the West dispersal to the new North
(remote) dispersal was under construction.
8 Jun 44: low-level attack by VIII Fighter Command P-47s – claimed 1 x Fw
190.
11 Jun 44: bombed by 27 B-24 Liberators.
13 Jun 44: bombed by 56 B-17 Fortresses.
Operational Units: used by units based at Beauvais-Tillé.
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 9/VI (Jun 40 – c.May 41); Flugplatzkdo.
Beauvais-Nivillers of Fl.H.Kdtr. E 11/XVII Beauvais-Tillé (1941-42).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified. Service
and support was provided by Beauvais-Tillé.
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1421-22 (6 Jun 43 and updated to 12 May 44)
and A5260 pp.1716-22 (6 Jun 43 and updated to 12 May 44); chronologies;
BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Beauvais-Tillé (FR) (49 27 00 N – 02 06 30 E)
General: major airfield in NE France 65 km NNW of Paris and 3 km NE of
Beauvais.
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
History: a pre-war French Air Force base, it was taken over by the Luftwaffe
in Jun 40 and greatly improved for use by bombers. The adjacent satellite
at Nivillers gave the complex a large capacity for aircraft. Greatly reduced
activity after mid-1943 due to heavy Allied bombing.
Dimensions: approx. 1255 x 1255 meters (1370 x 1370 yards) and roughly
diamond shaped.
Surface and Runways: converted from grass on clay surface by the
Luftwaffe to 2 concrete runways measuring approx: (1) 1690 meters (1850
yards) aligned NW/SE, and (2) 1690 meters (1850 yards) aligned SW/NE.
A perimeter track surrounded the landing area and connected with the
runways. Equipped with permanent runway illumination, flare-paths, beam
approach and visual Lorenz systems for night operations.
Fuel and Ammunition: refueling points were located on the servicing
hardstands in all three of the dispersal areas. Bulk fuel came from the
former Standard Oil depot near the railway 3.25 km WSW of the town of
Beauvais. Munitions were stored in 4 sites in adjacent woods and in an
orchard by the West dispersal area.
Infrastructure: had a total of 5 hangars – 2 small prewar hangars in the W
corner of the airfield, 1 large hangar in the West dispersal area that was
probably used for repairs, and 2 small repair hangars with one each in the
North and Northeast dispersals. Personnel were billeted in Tillé and other
nearby villages. Station HQ and admin offices were said to be in the
Château La Folie. The nearest rail connection was in Beauvais, a major
railway center.
Dispersal: the 3 dispersal areas – North, Northeast and West – had a total
of 44 large covered aircraft shelters and 8 parking sites. The Northeast
dispersal was by far the largest.
Defenses: there were 4 heavy and 14 light Flak positions within 6.5 km of
the airfield in May 43. Ground defenses included 12 strongpoints and
barbed wire barriers around the ammo dumps and several of the Flak
positions.
Remarks:
Sep 40: airfield assigned code number 501.
26 Jul 42: airfield assigned new code number 252.
9 Sep 43: bombed by 59 B-17 Fortresses – both runways cratered, the large
hangar in the West dispersal destroyed and direct hits in the adjacent ammo
dump; 1 x Do 217 E-2 from II./KG 2, 1 x Ju 52 from III./TG 4, 1 x LeO 451
from IV./TG 4, 1 x Caudron C 445 from Transportstaffel IX. Fliegerkorps and
1 x Ju 88 A-4 from Flugbereitschaft Gen.d.Kampfflieger destroyed or
damaged on the ground.
18 Sep 43: bombed by 25 B-26 Marauders – at least 4 direct hits on a
ammo dump off the NE side of the airfield. Airfield bombed 5 more times
by B-26s before the end of September, and a 6th time on 3 Oct 43.
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
3 Nov 43: following the heavy attacks of Sep and Oct, both runways had
been roughly repaired and returned to partial serviceability by this date.
5 Nov 43: low-level attack - 1 x SM 81 from Flugbereitschaft
Gen.d.Kampfflieger destroyed on the ground.
4 Jan 44: the Feldbauleitung of Fl.H.Kdtr. A 207/XI reported 49 German and
1,188 non-German civilian workers on strength.
10 Feb 44: bombed by 9th AAF B-26s.
3 Mar 44: bombed by 9th AAF B-26s.
6 Mar 44: bombed by 9th AAF B-26s.
17 Mar 44: low-level attack by VIII Fighter Command P-47s – claimed 1 x
He 111 damaged.
23 Mar 44: bombed by 9th AAF B-26s – most of the aircraft shelters in the
West dispersal and several in the Northeast dispersal destroyed in this and
earlier attacks. Extension of the North dispersal seen to be underway.
Both runways and the landing area are serviceable.
6 Jun 44: low-level attack – 3 x Bf 109Gs from 4./JG 11 destroyed (1) or
damaged (2) on the ground.
7 Jun 44: low-level attack by VIII Fighter Command P-47s – claimed 1 x Bf
109 destroyed and 5 more damaged.
25 Aug 44: low-level attack by 9th AAF P-51 Mustangs – claimed 10 fighters
shot up and destroyed, all or mostly Fw 190s, and a hangar set on fire and
destroyed.
Operational Units: I./KG 76 (Jun-Oct 40); 5.(F)/Aufkl.Gr. 122 (Nov 40 –
Jun 41); II./KG 77 (Mar-May 41); III./KG 40 (Aug-Oct 41); II./KG 54 (Jul-
Aug 42); Höhenkampfkdo./Versuchsstelle für Höhenflüge (a.k.a.
Einsatzkommando Ju 86) (Jul-Aug 42); 16./KG 6 (Sep-Oct 42); II./KG 6 (c.
Sep-Dec 42); I./KG 6 (Dec 42 – Feb 43, Mar-Jun 43); Flugbereitschaft
Angriffsführer England (c.Apr-Sep 43); II./JG 26 (Aug-Oct 43); III./JG 1
(Jun 44).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 10/XVII (Jul-Nov 40)?; Fl.H.Kdtr. E
11/XVII (Sep 40 – Dec 42); Fl.H.Kdtr. A 207/XI (c.Jan 43 – Mar 44);
Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v) 221/XI (Apr-Aug 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): Koflug Beauvais (Jul 40 –
Mar 41); Koflug 19/XI (Apr 41 – Aug 44); Werft-Abt. d.Lw. (v) 101/XI (Apr-
Aug 44); Werftzug 650 (1943-44); Luftminen-Zug 3 (Jul 41 - ? )); le.Flak-
Abt. 694 (c.1943 – Mar 44)?; le.Flak-Abt. 732 (Oct 43); Ln.-Kp. z.b.V. 4
(Jun-Aug 44); Feldbauamt Beauvais (1940-44); Nachschub-Kp. d.Lw. 9/VI
(May 44)?; Ldssch.Zug d.Lw. 35/IV (Mar 44); Ldssch.Zug d.Lw. 92/IV (Mar
44); Ldssch.Zug d.Lw. 96/XI (Mar 44); Ldssch.Zug d.Lw. 127/XI (Mar 44);
Ldssch.Zug d.Lw. 134/XI (Mar 44); Ldssch.Zug d.Lw. 222/XI (Mar 44).
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1423-26 (6 Jun 43 updated to 18 Sep 43) and
A5260 pp.1723-29 (6 Jun 43 updated to 23 Mar 44); chronologies; BA-MA;
NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Beillé (FR) (48 05 00 N – 00 31 30 E)
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
- 43 -
Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1429-30 (10 Jun 43 updated to 25 Feb 44) and
A5260 pp.1732-35 (10 Jun 43 updated to 21 Dec 43); chronologies; BA-MA;
NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Bergerac (FR) (44 49 38 N – 00 30 49 E)
General: airfield in SW France 82 km E of Bordeaux and 3.25 km SE of
Bergerac.
History: a civil airfield that was enlarged and improved by the French
military in 1939 and reportedly used as a flight training school. After the
armistice in Jun 40, it was used as an aircraft maintenance depot. The
Luftwaffe used it for the advanced training of fighter pilots.
Dimensions: approx. 640 x 455 meters (700 x 500 yards) in Sep 43 after
the rest of the landing area obstructed with logs and motor vehicles.
Surface and Runways: grass surface in relatively good condition. No paved
runway.
Fuel and Ammunition: underground fuel storage was located on the S
boundary.
Infrastructure: had 1 large hangar with a paved apron, 3 medium hangars
and 2 small hangars, all on the S boundary. Behind the hangars was a
group of sheds and a building that were probably used as workshops and for
storage. Station HQ, offices, barracks and storage buildings were all near
the hangar area on the S boundary. The nearest rail connection was in
Bergerac.
Dispersal: no organized dispersal facilities in Jan 43. Aircraft could park in
an open area off the E end of the airfield.
Defenses: there were 7 light Flak positions around the airfield in Aug 43, all
on the N, E and S sides.
Remarks:
24 Sep 43: 2 medium hangars with paved aprons erected off the NW and a
taxi track connecting them to the landing area. The medium hangars on
the S boundary have been outfitted with paved aprons and a taxi track
running in front of them. A few additional barrack huts have been erected
in a group off the S boundary.
5 Mar 44: bombed by 62 B-24 Liberators from 8th AAF – S side of the landing
area cratered, 1 small hangar on the S side gutted by fire, 2 medium and 1
small hangar on the S side severely damaged and barracks on the Sside
damaged.
11 Jun 44: mid-morning low-level bombing and strafing attack by some 50
long-range fighters – 1 barrack building destroyed and 2 others slightly
damaged, base communications knocked out, 1 man WIA.
Operational Units: none identified.
Reserve Training & Replacement Units: 3./(Erg.) JGr. Ost (Aug 43 – Feb
44).
Station Commands: Flugplatzkdo. Bergerac of Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v) 234/XII
Cazaux (Apr-Aug 44).
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
Defenses: 9 light Flak positions, almost all of them with 3 guns, encircled
the landing ground out to a radius of 3 km in May 43. Ground defenses
consisted of 2 strongpoint protected by barbed wire.
Satellites and Decoys:
Bernay/I (49 07 00 N – 00 33 00 E), satellite strip 1.2 km WNW of
Bernay – Saint-Martin airfield. Measured approx. 1000 x 185 meters (1100
x 200 yards). Still under construction in Jul 44 and not yet serviceable.
Remarks:
20 Apr 41: employed 810 non-German workers.
9 May 43: low-level attack – 1 x Fw 190 A-4 from I./JG 2 damaged on the
ground.
16 Aug 43 bombed by 31 B-26 Marauders.
25 Aug 43: bombed – 1 x Bf 109 G-6 and 1 x Bü 131 from Jagdfliegerführer
3 (Lfl.3) destroyed or damaged on the ground.
27 Sep 43: craters across the landing area filled in and landing ground once
again serviceable.
7 Nov 43: airfield attacked - the 2 small hangars on the S boundary seen to
be severely damaged and rendered unusable, and bursts observed on the S
boundary.
5 Jan 44: no attempt made to repair the hangars and 2 aircraft shelters in
the South dispersal destroyed; work to further develop the East dispersal
temporarily abandoned.
11 Apr 44: Bernay – Saint Martin seen to be permanently obstructed with
ditches and part of the landing area under cultivation.
11 Jun 44: bombed by 50 B-17 Fortresses.
21 Jun 44: a new strip measuring 1000 x 185 meters was being built 1.2 km
WNW of Bernay – Saint Martin landing ground, and 5 additional small
aircraft shelters had been erected in the East dispersal area.
Operational Units: 4.(F)/Aufkl.Gr. 11 (Jun?-Sep 40); III./JG 2 (Oct 40 – Apr
41); 3./JG 2 (Aug-Oct 42); I./JG 27 (Feb-Apr 43); 4.(F)/Aufkl.Gr. 123 (Feb-
Jun 44).
School Units: 5.(Jagdlehrerstaffel)/JFS 5 (Oct 41 – Aug 42).
Station Commands: Fl.Pl.Kdo. A 9/XII (c.Jan 43 – 1944); Flugplatzkdo.
Bernay of Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v) 230/XII Beaumont-le-Roger (Apr-Aug 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): Bauleitung Bernay (1940-
44).
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1431-33 (17 May 43 updated to 21 Jun 44) and
A4260 pp.1736-44 (17 May 43 updated to 11 Apr 44); chronologies; BA-MA;
NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Bernay-Valailles (FR) (49 07 N – 00 35 E)
General: airfield in Normandy 49 km SW of Rouen, 3.6 km N of Bernay and
on the outskirts of the hamlet of Valailles. Bernay-Saint-Martin airfield was
3.5 km to the SW of it. History: although no specific information has been
found, Valailles is thought to have been used as a satellite and dispersal
- 46 -
Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
- 47 -
Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
Dimensions: the Étang de Berre (shallow lake) afforded plenty of space for
all-weather take-offs and landings.
Anchorage: equipped with 4 slipways. There were 2 jetties and 5 electric
cranes. Aircraft were moved about along the quay on trolleys between the
jetties, hangars and slipways.
Fuel and Ammunition: fuel was stored at the S end of the station.
Infrastructure: had 3 large double hangars and a very large factory
workshop building, all of which fronted a concrete quay near the water’s
edge. Further N were 2 small hangars. Station HQ, admin offices, married
quarters, barracks, mess and movie theater were all at the N end. The
nearest rail connection was in Berre.
Defenses: none identified.
Remarks: none.
Operational Units: 2./SAGr. 128 (c. Jun 43 – Aug 44); 3. Seenotstaffel (Jan
43 – Aug 44).
School Units: Flieger-Rgt. 63 (1942-43); Fluganwärter-Btl. III (Jun 42 –
Apr 43)?; III./Flieger-Rgt. 90 (Apr 43 – 1944?).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 123/XI (See) (Apr 43 – Aug 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): Seenotbereichskdo. XIII
(Dec 42 – Aug 44); Seenotflotille 13 (Dec 42 - ?).
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 pp.042-44 (24 Nov 42); chronologies; BA-MA;
NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Bertangles (FR): see Amiens-Bertangles.
Bertreville-Saint-Ouen (FR) (a.k.a. Auppegard) (c. 49 48 57 N – 01
02 31 E)
General: landing ground in NE France 40 km WSW of Dieppe and 1 km ENE
of the hamlet of Saint-Ouen. History: pasture land that may have been
briefly used by the Luftwaffe in June 1940. Maintained as a dispersal field
for Paluel until spring 1944 and then inactivated and obstructed. Surface
and Dimensions: not found. Infrastructure: none.
Sep 40: airfield assigned code number 554.
26 Jul 42: airfield assigned new code number 256.
Operational Units: none identified.
Station Commands: Flugplatzkdo. of Fl.H.Kdtr. E 2/I Paluel (c. 1941 – Mar
44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Berville-sur-Mer (FR) (c. 49 25 N – 00 22 E)
General: landing ground in N France 12.5 km ESE of Le Havre on the S
bank of the Seine. No information. No record found of any Luftwaffe units
being stationed here. Not listed in comprehensive Allied intelligence
sources. Mattiello states that it was operational in June 1944.
[Sources: Mattiello]
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
- 49 -
Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
private then civil airfield that opened in early 1936. Not known to have
ever been used by aircraft of either the French military or the Luftwaffe.
Surface and Dimensions: rough grass surface measuring approx. 550 x 550
meters (600 x 600 yards. Fuel and Ammunition: Infrastructure: there
was 1 small hangar on the S boundary. A single shed or hut on the S
boundary may have been used for accommodations. The Toulouse-
Marseille main railway line formed the S boundary of the landing ground.
Dispersal: no organized dispersal facilities. Defenses: had 2 heavy and 1
light Flak position in Sep 43, all unoccupied.
Remarks:
5 Sep 43: landing area permanently obstructed by a grid pattern of ditches.
Operational Units: none identified.
School Units: III./Flieger-Rgt. 71 (Béziers, 1944).
Station Commands: none identified.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 p.045 (18 Jun 43 updated to 5 Sep 43);
chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Bezue-la-Foret (FR) (see Étrépagny/Bezu).
Biache-Saint-Vaast (FR): see Fresne-les-Montauban.
Biarritz-Parme (FR) (a.k.a. Biarritz - La-Négresse, Bayonne-Anglet)
(43 28 05 N – 01 32 00 W)
General: landing ground in SW France 6 km SW of Bayonne, 3 km ESE of
Biarritz and 2 km SSW of the village of Anglet.
History: a pre-war civil landing ground that was taken over by the Luftwaffe
and between Aug 40 and Mar 42 considerably extended and artificial
drainage installed. Inactive during much of the construction period, then
temporarily obstructed from Jun to Dec 42.
Dimensions: approx. 1190 x 505 meters (1300 x 550 yards) and irregular in
shape.
Surface and Runways: grass on sandy subsoil. No paved runways.
Equipped with perimeter lighting.
Fuel and Ammunition: fuel storage tanks were located in the NE corner. A
small ammunition dump was off the center of the S boundary and another
off the SW corner.
Infrastructure: had 1 medium hangar with a paved apron off the NE corner.
A long narrow building just E of the hangar was either a workshop, offices or
accommodations. Personnel were billeted in private homes surrounding the
landing ground and in hotels in Biarritz. The nearest rail connection at La
Négresse, 1.2 km SW of the landing area.
Dispersal: had 1 small aircraft shelter in the NE corner and 2 small shelters
with blast walls along the perimeter in mid-1943. By Jun 44 there were 2
dispersals – Perimeter and Northeast – with a total of 4 large open aircraft
shelters, 23 small open shelters and at least 7 aircraft parking sites.
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
Defenses: there were 5 light Flak positions in mid-1943, most with 3 guns.
Remarks:
20 Apr 41: employed 30 non-German workers; station not yet operational.
27 Mar 44: bombed by 49 B-24 Liberators – medium hangar off the NE
corner and accommodations off the E boundary damaged, but serviceability
of the landing area not affected.
25 Jun 44: the workshop adjacent to the hangar off the NE corner had been
removed.
Operational Units: 2.(H)/Aufkl.Gr. 41 (Nov 40)?; 2.(H)/Aufkl.Gr. 12 (Feb
41)?; part of 1. Minensuchstaffel (Jul 44).
Reserve Training & Replacement Units: Kommodore der
Ergänzungsjagdgruppen (Mar – May 44); 2./(Erg.) JGr. West (Feb 43 – Feb
44); 1./(Erg.)JGr. Ost (Dec 43 – Feb 44); (Erg.) JGr. West (Feb – May 44).
Station Commands: Fl.Pl.Kdo. B 17/XII (Jan 43 – Jul 44?); Fl.Pl.Kdo. B
38/XII (See) (c.Mar 43? – Jan 44?); Flugplatzkdo. Biarritz of Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v)
235/XII Mont-de-Marsan (Apr-Aug 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): Luftgaustab z.b.V. 31
(1941 – Mar 42); 31.(Flum.Mess)/Ln.-Rgt. 54 (spring 43 – Aug 44); Lw.-
Bauleitung Biarritz (c.1940-44).
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1435-39 (7 Aug 43 updated to 25 Jun 44) and
A5260 pp.1746-51 (7 Aug 43 updated to 27 Mar 44); chronologies; BA-MA;
NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Biscarrosse (FR) (44 23 20 N – 01 11 00 W)
General: factory seaplane station in SW France 65 km SW of Bordeaux and
1.6 km SW of Biscarrosse.
History: dates from 1930 as a factory for producing Latécoère seaplanes.
Not believed to have been used by the Luftwaffe, which used the
Biscarrosse-Etang seaplane station instead.
Dimensions: Biscarrosse Lake offered ample take-off and landing space.
Anchorage: a protected all-weather lake with a sand and gravel bottom, and
a tidal shift of approx. 1.5 meters (5 feet).
Infrastructure: there was 1 large factory hangar on the S boundary and
some adjacent building to the E that may have been workshops. In front of
the hangar were 2 slipways (launching ramps) and possibly another just to
the W of those. A small jetty was located just E of the hangar. Offices and
stores were believed to be in several small buildings near the hangar. The
nearest rail connection was in Biscarrosse.
Defenses: there were 3 multi-gun Flak towers around the hangar.
Satellites and Decoys:
Biscarrosse-Hourtiquets - satellite.
Biscarrosse-Latecoere - satellite.
Biscarrosse-Plage 1 - satellite.
Biscarrosse-Plage 2 - satellite.
Remarks: no evidence found of Allied air attacks on the station.
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): le.Flak-Abt. 923 (Jul 44);
Feld-Flakinstandsetzungswerkstatt 6/XII (1941); Flakschiessplatz
Biscarrosse (1941-44); Lw.-Bauleitung Biscarrosse (c.1940-44).
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1440-44 (29 Dec 43) and A5260 pp.1756-61
(29 Dec 43 updated to 10 Mar 44); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA;
web site ww2.dk]
Bissay (FR): see Grandville.
Bissey-la-Côte (FR) (c. 47 55 N – 04 42 E)
General: field airstrip or landing ground in E France approximately 64 km
SE of Troyes. No information found. Not identified in Allied intelligence
documents. Said by source to be operational in Jun 44.
[Sources: Mattiello]
Bisseuil (FR): see Athis.
Bitche (FR) (49 03 N – 07 25 E)
General: landing ground in E France 38 km SE of Saarbrücken. No
information or records of Luftwaffe flying units being stationed there found.
Operational in Jun 44, according to Matiello.
Operational Units: none identified.
Station Commands: none identified.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): le.Flak-Abt. 744 (Sep 44).
[Sources: Mattiello; chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site
ww2.dk]
Blagnac (FR): see Toulouse-Blagnac.
Blaringhem (FR) (c. 50 42 N – 02 23 E)
General: landing ground in NE France 11 km SE of Saint-Omer. No
information or records found of Luftwaffe flying units being stationed there.
Operational in Jun 44, according to Matiello.
[Sources: Mattiello]
Blecquencques (FR): see Marquise-Hydrequent.
Bléré (FR) (47 18 35 N – 00 57 25 E)
General: field airstrip 23 km SE of Tours airfield, 3.25 km SW of Bléré, 1.6
km W of the village of La Roche and 1.2 km NW of the hamlet of Les
Ouches. History: new in spring 1944 and serviceable - believed to be a
satellite or dispersal strip for Tours airfield. Surface and Dimensions:
agricultural land – dimensions not known. Infrastructure: none.
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 p.1445 (13 Jul 44 updated to 4 Aug 44);
chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Blois (FR) (a.k.a. Le Breuil, La Chapelle) (47 40 40 N – 01 12 24 E)
General: landing ground in north-central France 56 km SW of Orléans,14
km NW of Blois and 2.5 km WNW of La Chapelle-Vendômoise.
History: a French airfield that was only partially completed when the
German took it over in Jun 40. Although the Luftwaffe erected a small
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hangar and a few sheds, the landing ground was used very little. Blois was
mainly used as a major wartime training center for Luftwaffe recruits
shipped there from Germany. There were many thousands of them and
they were billeted in former French military barracks in and around the city.
Dimensions: approx. 1325 x 1190 meters (1450 x 1300 yards) with an
irregular shape.
Surface and Runways: grass surface. No paved runways.
Fuel and Ammunition: fueling was from 5 or 6 camouflaged storage tanks
near the landing ground.
Infrastructure: there was 1 small hangar and a few small huts on the SE
boundary. Foundations for several hangars were laid in the same place by
the French but were never completed by the Luftwaffe. Personnel were
billeted in adjacent farms and villages. A light branch rail line from La
Chapelle-Vendômoise to the landing ground had been build but may not
have been in use.
Dispersal: a Northeast dispersal with 6 sites and a Southeast dispersal with
5 sites were planned, but had not been developed as of May 43.
Defenses: none identified in May 43.
Remarks:
24 Jun 40: German report this date gave measurements of 1500 x 1500
meters and that it was under construction and sould only be used as an
auxiliary airfield.
9 Nov 42: landing area temporarily obstructed with portable barricades.
20 Apr 44: low-level attack by VIII Fighter Command P-51 Mustangs –
claimed 1 x Fw 190, 1 x He 111 and 1 x Ju 52 destroyed, plus 1 x Ju 88
damaged.
27 Apr 44: landing area remains temporarily obstructed.
Operational Units: none identified.
School Units: Fl.Ausbildungs-Rgt. 61 (Oct 41); Fl.Ausbildungs-Rgt. 62
(1941-42); Flieger-Rgt. 91 (1943-44); III./Flieger-Rgt. 63 (Dec 43).
Station Commands: Flugplatzkdo. Blois of Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v) 217/XII Tours
(Apr-Aug 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): Feld-Luftmunitionslager
2/XII (1940-43); Munitionsausgabestelle d.Lw. 34/XII (Jan 42).
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1446-47 (17 Jul 43) and A5260 pp.1762-66 (17
Jul 43 updated to 27 Apr 44); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web
site ww2.dk]
Blyes (FR): see Saint-Vulbas.
Boirville (FR): see Châteaudun/I.
Bois de Chizeuil (FR): see Digoin.
Bois Jean-Écuires (FR) (c. 50 26 00 N – 01 45 42 E)
General: landing ground in NE France 37 km SSE of Boulogne, 13 km ENE
of Berck and just S of the tiny village of Écuires. History: farm or pasture
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
land pressed into service as a temporary Luftwaffe fighter strip during the
May-June 1940 campaign in France. No further information but believed to
have been abandoned and deactivated in 1941. Surface and Dimensions:
not found. Infrastructure: none.
Sep 40: airfield assigned code number 376. Came under Koflug 8/III
(Saint-Omer).
Operational Units: Stab, II./JG 26 (Jun 40).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 13/VIII (Aug 40 - ?).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Boissy-le-Bois (FR) (49 17 00 N – 01 56 00 E)
General: field airstrip and dispersal field in N France 20 km SW of Beauvais
and 21 km N of Cormeilles airfield. History: used in 1944 as a dispersal
field for Cormeilles. The landing area was camouflaged to appear trenched.
Surface and Dimensions: measured approx. 1280 x 730 meters (1400 x 800
yards) with a very irregular shape. Infrastructure: none noted. Aircraft
were parked in bays that had been hacked out of woods on the N and NW
sides.
Remarks:
26 Jul 42: airfield assigned new code number 257.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 amendments (25 Jul 44)]
Bonne-Voisine (FR) (48 38 00 N – 04 03 00 E)
General: satellite strip and dispersal field in NE France 25 km ENE of
Romilly-sur-Seine airfield, 6.5 km ENE of La Perthe landing ground and 3.5
km ENE of the village of Champfleury. History: prepared early summer
1944 and serviceable by August. Surface and Dimensions: measured
approx. 1145 x 185 meters (1250 x 200 yards). Infrastructure: none
noted.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 amendments (18 Aug 44)]
Bonningues-lès-Calais (FR) (c. 50 53 24 N – 01 46 25 E)
General: satellite or dispersal field in NE France 9 km SSW of Calais and
close to the small village of Bonningues-lès-Calais. History: unknown –
probably a satellite, dispersal field or even a decoy of either Saint-Inglevert
or Pihen-lès-Guînes. Surface and Dimensions: not found. Infrastructure:
none.
Remarks:
Sep 40: airfield assigned code number 382. Came under Koflug 8/III
(Saint-Omer).
Operational Units: none identified.
Station Commands: Teilkommandantur of Fl.H.Kdtr. E 63/XI (c.Sep 42 –
Mar 43).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
(550 yards) in length. Fuel and Ammunition: refueling points were on the
W and S boundaries. Infrastructure: there was 1 small hangar with a
paved apron on the N boundary. Personnel were generally billeted in the
village of La Salle, less than 1 km E of the landing ground. The nearest rail
connection was in Le Portel. Dispersal: the 2 dispersals, Northeast and
Southeast, had a total of 3 covered and 4 open aircraft shelters. Defenses:
protected by 8 heavy Flak and 15 light positions during 1940-41.
Remarks:
Nov 42: temporarily obstructed by closely spaced portable tripods.
3 Apr 43: now observed to be permanently obstructed by a grid-pattern
trenching system.
Operational Units: none identified.
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 4/XI (c.Jul 40 – Jun 41); Flugplatzkdo. of
Fl.H.Kdtr. E 13/VIII Marquise (1941 – Aug 42).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): Lw.-Bau-Btl. 20/XI (Feb
41).
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1455-57 (17 Jun 43) and A5260 pp.1776-78
(17 Jun 43); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Boulogne-See (FR) (50 43 40 N – 01 35 50 E)
General: seaplane station in Boulogne harbor. History: used extensively
by air-sea rescue aircraft until May/June 1942, but very little after that.
Anchorage: aircraft landed and took off from the outer harbor where there
was ample space. Fuel and Ammunition: both available. Infrastructure:
had 1 large hangar on the quay immediately W of the Maritime Railway
Station in the inner harbor. Defenses: protected by the robust Flak
defenses around Boulogne.
Remarks:
24 Aug 40: bombed - 2 x Ar 196s from 1./Bordfliegergruppe 196 damaged
at their moorings during an RAF cross-Channel raid.
Sep 40: assigned codenumber 384. Came under Koflug 8/III (Saint-Omer).
13 Sep 40: air attack – 1 x He 59 from 3. Seenotstaffel destroyed at its
moorings during an RAF raid.
Operational Units: 3. Seenotstaffel (Jun 40 – c. Jun 42); detachment of
1./Bordfliegergruppe 196 (Aug-Sep 40).
Station Units: none identified.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified, but see
above under Boulogne Lw. Garrison and Station Units.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 p.2459 (30 Aug 43); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA;
PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Boulogne-Wimereux (FR) (c. 50 46 N – 01 36 E)
General: airstrip in NE France 5.5 km NNE of Boulogne. History: a
pasture land or farm land strip that served as a satellite of Le Portel airfield.
Rarely used. Surface and Dimensions: not found. Infrastructure: none.
Operational Units: Stab/JG 51 (Jun 40); Stab, I., III./ZG 1 (Jun 44).
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likely were Si 204Ds from the Siebel factory that had not yet been delivered
to the Luftwaffe and were very similar in appearance to the Bf 110.
10 Apr 44: bombed by 151 B-24 Liberators and strafed by VIII Fighter
Command P-51 Mustangs – 10 x Fw 58s, 11 x He 111Ps, 2 x He 177 A-1s, 1
x Ju 52 and 6 x Si 204s from FFS B 15, plus 6 x Ar 66s, 4 x Ar 68s, 3 x Ar
96Bs, 1 x Bf 108, 2 x Bf 109Gs, 14 x Bü 131s, 10 x Fw 56s, 1 x Junkers W
34 and 10 x NA 57s from JG 105 destroyed or damaged on the ground, a
total of 81 aircraft; also, 1 x Ju 290 A-4 from 1.(F)/FAGr. 5. According to
French sources, there were many civilian casualties in Bourges.
28 Apr 44: low-level attack by VIII Fighter Command P-51s – claimed 4 x He
111s, 2 x Ju 88s and 1 x unidentified aircraft shot up and damaged.
23 May 44: bombed by 84 B-24s – 1 x Fw 58 F-6 and 3 x Si 204 D-1s from
FFS B 15, plus a Bü 131 from SG 101 destroyed or damaged on the ground.
4 Jun 44: bombed by 23 B-24s – no losses and only minor damage inflicted.
25 Jun 44: low-level attack by VIII Fighter Command P-47s – claimed 4 x
Me 410s destroyed.
26-27 Aug 44: hit by 9th AAF – aircraft destroyed on the ground claimed.
Operational Units: II./KG 27 (Jul 40 – Mar 41); Stab/Geschwader Bongart
(Jun-Aug 44).
School Units: FFS C 15 then FFS B 15 (Jan 43 – May 44); Stab and I./JG
105 (Mar – Jun 44).
Reserve Training & Replacement Units: Erg.St./KG 28 (Jun – Dec 41);
IV./KG 100 (Dec 41); IV./KG 77 (Jul – Aug 42).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 1/VII (Jun 40 – Dec 42); Fl.H.Kdtr. A
211/XII (Jan 43 – Jun 44?); Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v) 229/XII (Jul-Aug 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): 4. FBK/KG 27 (Jan 43);
le.Flak-Abt. 674 (Oct 42 - 1943); le.Flak-Abt. 673 (Apr 44, Jul 44);
6./gem.Flak-Abt. 496(o) (May 44); 3./Res.Flak-Abt. 984 (Sep 41); 13.
(Flum.Res.)/Feldluftgau-Nachr.Rgt. Belgien/Nordfrankreich (1943 – Jan 44);
23./Feldluftgau-Nachr.Rgt. Westfrankreich (c.Jan-Aug 44)?; Ln.-Betr.Zug
(mot) z.b.V. 24 (Jun-Aug 44); Lw.-Bauleitung Bourges (c.1940-44);
elements of Lw.-Bau-Btl. 7/XII (Jul 40)?; 1.Kp. Lw.-Bau-Btl. 2/XIII (Jan
41)?; Flieger-Geräteausgabestelle (Eisb.) 2 (Jul 40); Flieger-
Geräteausgabestelle 9/XII (Aug 44); Ldssch.Zug d.Lw. 393/VI ( ? – Dec 41);
Luftwaffen-Kontrollinspektion (Aug 40 – Jun 43); Luftwaffen-
Kontrollkommission V (Oct 40 – Mar 43).
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1458-62 (19 Jun 43), A5260 pp.1779-84 (19
Jun 43 updated to 10 Apr 44) and A5261 pp.32-37 (updates to Jul 44);
chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA]
Bourgogne (FR): see Saint-Étienne-sur-Suippes.
Bourthes (FR) (see Desvres-Bourthes).
Boussens (FR) (c. 43 11 N – 00 57 E)
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were annexed, leveled and artificial drainage installed with the work finally
completed in Oct 43.
Dimensions: approx. 1100 x 1100 meters (1200 x 1200 yards) and roughly
“L” shaped.
Surface and Runways: mostly firm and dry level grass. Had a single
camouflaged concrete runway measuring approx. 565 meters (620 yards)
with an ENE/WSW alignment. A perimeter road encircled the landing area.
Fuel and Ammunition: refueling points were probably on the S boundary.
Bulk fuel was brought in by rail to Landerneau and then by fuel tanker to the
airfield. A small ammunition dump was 1 km SSW of the landing area.
Infrastructure: there was 1 small hangar with a paved apron on the S
boundary with adjoining workshop buildings. A long 7-gabled building that
was probably for garages or additional workshops was located at the SW
corner. Off the S boundary, the SW corner and around the dispersal areas
were clusters of some 25 huts of various sizes, many of them protected by
blast walls. These were thought to be used for storage and dispersal area
billeting. Personnel were mainly accommodated in a barracks complex 2.5
km SE of the airfield and in nearby farms and villages. The nearest rail
connection was in the village of Gouesnou, 3.25 km W of the airfield.
Dispersal: there were 3 areas – Northeast, South and West – with a total of
3 large covered, 39 small covered and 5 open aircraft shelters.
Defenses: protected by 5 heavy and 7 light Flak positions out to a radius of
5 km from the center of the airfield. Most of the positions were for 2 to 6
guns and several of the light positions were mounted in Flak towers. The
entire airfield was surrounded by a belt of barbed wire and there were 5
fortified strongpoints plus several defensive trench systems.
Satellites and Decoys:
Brest-Guilers (48 26 05 N – 04 34 07 W), decoy approx 11.5 km W
of Brest-Guipavas airfield.
Remarks:
1940-44: Brest port, airfields and other nearby military facilities were
bombed and strafed scores of times by Allied aircraft, so only a few
examples are given here.
4 Mar 41: strafed by a single Spitfire – 4 x Bf 109Es from II./JG 77 shot up
and damaged.
20 Apr 41: employed 72 non-German workers.
24 Jun 43: bombed – 18 hits on the runway, hangar, barracks and
parachute stores damaged.
9 Jun 44: ordered destroyed by Feld-Luftgaukdo. Westfrankreich with all
personnel, equipment and stocks to reinforce Angers airfield.
Operational Units: Stab/KG 40 (Jul-Aug 40); II./JG 77 (Nov 40 – Mar 41);
Stab, I./JG 26 (Apr-May 41); Stab/JG 2 (Dec 41 – Apr 42); II./JG 2 (Dec 41
– Jan 42); 1./JG 2 (Jan-Feb 42); 8./JG 2 (Apr 42 – c. Feb 43).
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
Equipped for night landings with runway illumination, beam approach system
and a visual Lorenz system.
Infrastructure: there was a refueling loup E of the South dispersal area.
Fuel was stored near the main hangars, and in the woods where the
dispersal areas were located. The fuel was brought by rail from Bordeaux
and Nantes to the railway yards at Brétigny-sur-Orge. There were 3 large
hangars (one four-bay and two double-bay) with concrete aprons at the NW
corner along with several workshop buildings. A motor pool and garages
were located in Brétigny village. Two munitions dumps were situated off
the E and S boundaries, both served by a light rail spur. A block of 6
barrack buildings lay just to the SE of the South dispersal area.
Dispersal: there were 3 areas: the East dispersal had 21 covered aircraft
shelters, the South dispersal had 12 covered and 1 open aircraft shelters
and the Northwest dispersal had 3 covered aircraft shelters.
Defenses: there were 4 heavy Flak positions within 3 km of the airfield and 4
light Flak positions around the perimeter of the field on 10 June 1943.
Satellites and Decoys:
Bretigny/I (a.k.a. Arpajon) (48 33 55 N – 02 16 35 E), new satellite
for Bretigny on the site of the former landing ground known as Arpajon that
was first identified as active on 5 Jul 44 and located 5.25 km SW of Bretigny
airfield. Not yet fully rehabilitated and operational, the grass was being
leveled and rolled at that time to create a strip measuring 1370 x 185
meters (1500 x 200 yards). Aircraft would be dispersed on the edge of
woods surrounding the landing area on the N and S sides.
Bretigny/II (a.k.a. Courcouronnes?) (48 35 00 N – 02 23 00 E),
satellite strip 4 km ENE of Bretigny airfield with a length of approx. 915
meters (1000 yards). Under construction and not yet serviceable in Jul 44.
Plans called for it to be connected by taxiway with a planned Northeast
(remote) dispersal area for Bretigny airfield.
Bretigny/III (48 37 00 N – 02 22 00 E), satellite strip 4 km NE of
Bretigny airfield and immediately S of the village of Fleury-Mérogis.
Measured approx. 1190 x 185 meters (1300 x 200 yards). Prepared
summer 1944 and serviceable in Aug 44.
Bretigny/IV (48 35 00 N – 02 20 00 E), satellite strip 2.5 km S of
Bretigny airfield and immediately NW of the village of Rue-Croix-Boissee.
Measured approx. 1325 meters (1450 yards) in length and connected to the
South dispersal area of Bretigny airfield. Under construction and not yet
serviceable in Aug 44.
Bretigny-Leudeville (48 34 00 N – 02 18 00 E), dummy located 3.25
km SSW of Bretigny airfield.
Remarks:
20 Apr 41: employed 2,391 non-German workers.
4 May 42: bombed by the RAF – 1 x Fw 44, 1 x Bü 131 and 1 x K1 35 from
IV./KG 30 all destroyed on the ground.
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C
Cabanac (FR) (Cabanac-et-Villagrains) (44 36 44 N – 00 34 43 W)
General: emergency landing ground in SW France 25 km S of Bordeaux, 4.5
km SSE of Saucats and 2 km WNW of the village of Cabanac-et-Villagrains.
History: a former French military landing ground. No record of use by the
Luftwaffe. Surface and Dimensions: sandy grass surface measuring
approx. 730 x 455 meters (800 x 500 yards). Infrastructure: none noted.
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 p.2475 (27 Aug 43); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA;
PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Caen (FR) (49 10 58 N – 00 22 14 W)
Lw. Garrison Units (stationed in and around this key city in Normandy on
various dates but not identifiable with a specific airfield– not complete):
Stab/9. Flak-Div. (c.Sep 41 – Feb 42); Stab/13. Flak-Div. (c.Feb-Mar 42);
Koflug 8/VII (Sep 41 – Jul 44); elements of Res.Flak-Abt. 441 (Apr 41, May
44); 3./le.Flak-Abt. 955 (Jun 44); Stab and III.(Tel.Bau)/Ln.-Rgt. 13 (Aug
40, Jan 41); 15.(Flum.Res.)/Luftgau-Nachr.Rgt. Westfrankreich (c.1941-43);
16.(Flum.Res.)/Luftgau-Nachr.Rgt. Westfrankreich (spring 43 – Jul 44); Ln.-
Abt. 129 (c.Sep 41 – Feb 42); Ln.-Abt. 133 (Feb-Mar 42); 4.(Flum.)/Ln.-
Lehr-Abt. (Jun-Jul 40); elements of Ln.-Verbindungs-Kp. z.b.V. 16 (Jun 44);
Stab/Lw.-Bau-Rgt. 2/VII (Feb 42 - ? ); Stab/Lw.-Bau-Rgt. 1/XII ( ? - Feb
42); Lw.-Bauleitung N I Caen (c.1940-44); Stab/Lw.-Bau-Btl. 15/VI (Jun 40
- ?); elements of Lw.-Bau-Btl. 2/XII (Dec 42)?; Lw.-Bau-Btl. 12/XIII (Apr
42); Lw.-Bau-Btl. 9/XVII (Apr-Nov 42)?; Lw.-Bau-Gerätezug 3/XIII
(1940/41 – c.Jun 42); Kfz.Instandsetzungszug d.Lw. 4/WF (Sep 41);
Kfz.Werkstatt (o) d.Lw. 107/XIII (1943-44); Kfz.Werkstatt (o) d.Lw.
108/XIII (1943-44); Kfz.Werkstattzug (o) d.Lw. 114/XII (1942-44);
Ldssch.Kp. d.Lw. 2/XIII (Jul 42?; Fluganwärter-Btl. V (spring 42 – Mar/Apr
43); San.Bereitschaft (mot.) d.Lw. 3/XII (Jul 40 - ?).
Caen-Carpiquet (FR) (49 10 40 N – 00 27 15 W)
General: airfield (Fliegerhorst) in Normandy immediately S of Carpiquet
village and 7 km W of Caen.
History: Carpiquet was a pre-war French Air Force base that was completed
about 1938 and its workshops were used to assemble aircraft for the
S.N.C.A. du Nord. Taken over by the Luftwaffe in late June 1940, it became
an important bomber, single- and twin-engine fighter and long-range
reconnaissance base for the air offensive against England. After that, from
June-July 1941, it became a forward staging and refueling field
(Absprunghafen) for units based further inland that were tasked to fly
missions over the U.K., and then in 1942-43 as a base for cross-Channel
fighter-bomber operations.
Dimensions: approx. 1692 x 1100 meters (1850 x 1200 yards) and
rectangular in shape with an NW/SE alignment on the long side.
Surface: grass.
Runways: a single 1650 meter (1800 yard) NW/SE concrete runway with a
paved assembly area at the SE end. Built by the Germans in 1941, it was
originally 1,000 meters in length. There was also a second paved area at
the N end of the W boundary. A direction finding station was located 9 km
SE of the airfield. Equipped with permanent illumination and a visual
Lorenz system for night landings.
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Fuel and Ammunition: re-fueling points along the W and N boundaries and
bulk fuel storage was in Carpiquet Woods. There was a large ammo dump
off the SE corner of the landing area and another 3.65 km W of the airfield.
Infrastructure: 4 large double hangars and a small repair hangar on the N
boundary, 3 large double hangars on the S boundary and 1 very large
double repair hangar on the E boundary – all with paved aprons; the main
grouping of station buildings was off the E boundary and a second and
smaller group was located just behind the main hangar area that included a
mess, hospital and barracks; a second cluster of barracks was in a woods off
the NW corner. The station HQ was reportedly set up in the Château de
Beauregard, 5.5 km NE of Caen.
Dispersal: there were 3 dispersal areas in mid-May 1943 - North with 21
large covered aircraft shelters, West with 11 large covered aircraft shelters
and South with 5 large covered aircraft shelters.
Defenses: had 7 heavy Flak positions and 14 light Flak positions in mid-May
43. The airfield was also protected by a network of ground defenses that
included 6 strong points.
Remarks:
20 Apr 41: employed 895 non-German workers.
4 Apr 43: bombed mid-day by RAF Venturas – several aircraft lightly
damaged, fuel dump hit and several Wehrmacht personnel wounded.
15 May 43: bombed by 6 RAF B-25 Mitchells with a Hurricane escort –
runway, barracks and a food warehouse damaged.
29 May 43: bombed - 2 x Fw 190 A-5s from IV./SKG 10 damaged.
26 Aug 43: bombed by 36 B-26 Marauders – runway and landing area
cratered but these had been filled in by mid-September; also, the very large
double repair hangar on the E boundary was damaged.
3 Mar 44: runway serviceable but the landing area only partly serviceable
due to craters.
10 Apr 44: no attempt had been made to repair the damaged hangars on
the N boundary, according to photo reconnaissance.
23 May 44: bombed by 18 B-17s – results not found.
6 Jun 44: runway demolished by station personnel and the remainder of the
infrastructure by 17 June.
9 Jul 44: airfield taken by the 8th Canadian Infantry Brigade, made
serviceable again and assigned Allied airfield number B.17.
Operational Units: 1.(F)/Aufkl.Gr. 121 (Jun-Aug 40); 4.(F)/Aufkl.Gr. 121
(Aug 40 – Mar 41); KGr. 806 (Sep 40 – Jun 41); 10.(Jabo)/JG 26 (Mar-Jul
42); 10.(Jabo)/JG 2 (Jul-Sep 42, Dec 42 – Apr 43); II./SKG 10 (Dec 42 –
Apr 43).
School Units: Fl.Anwärter-Btl. V (1942-43).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 41/XIII (Jul 40 – Jan/Feb 41); Fl.H.Kdtr. E
60/XIII (c.Jun 41 – c.Feb 43); Fl.H.Kdtr. A 229/XII (c.Feb 43 – Mar 44);
Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v) 229/XII (Apr-Jun 44).
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): 128. Flugh.Betr.Kp. (Qu)
(1943 – Jun 44); Stab/Flak-Rgt. 30 (Aug 40); elements of II./Flak-Rgt. 64
(Jul-Aug 42); 5./gem.Flak-Abt. 266 (May-Jun 44); elements of gem.Flak-
Abt. 683 (May 43); 2./le.Flak-Abt. 835 (May-Jun 44)?; elements of le.Flak-
Abt. 931 (Feb 43)?; 2./le.Flak-Abt. 991 (May 43); elements (2. And 4.?) of
le.Flak-Abt. 996 (May-Jun 44); Lw.-Bauleitung IV Caen-Carpiquet (c.1940-
44).
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.733-38 (updated to Apr 44) and pp.1484-87 (8
May 43); A5260 pp.1816-22 (8 May 43 updated to 10 Apr 44); chronologies;
BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA]
Caen-Cormelles (FR) (49 09 N – 00 20 W)
General: landing ground in N France 3.8 km SSE of Caen city-center in the
suburb of Cormelles-le-Royal. History: existed pre-war and may have been
briefly used by the Luftwaffe in June-July 1940 but no record has been found
of any units being stationed there. Surface and Dimensions: not found.
Infrastructure: none specifically associated with the landing ground.
Remarks:
20 Apr 41: employed 567 non-German workers.
Operational Units: none identified.
Station Commands: none identified.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Caen-Rocquancourt (FR) (49 04 35 N – 00 19 35 W)
General: landing ground in Normandy 9.5 km SSE of Caen, 2.5 km SE of
the village of Fontenay-le-Marmion and 2 km S of the village of
Rocquancourt. History: Rocquancourt was being developed by the French
when it was taken over by the Germans in Jun 40. It briefly served as a
field air park in summer-fall 1940 and as a fighter field during the air
offensive against England (Battle of Britain), but then relapsed into inactivity
after spring 1941. Used for parachute training by the 1. Fallschirmjäger-
Div. at the end of 1942 and the first 5 months of 1943. Surface and
Dimensions: grass surface measuring approx. 1415 x 1000 meters (1550 x
1100 yards). No paved runway, but possibly equipped with boundary
lighting. Fuel and Ammunition: possible fuel storage at the NE corner and
a small bomb storage dump was located 1.2 km NE of the landing area.
Infrastructure: no hangars or workshops. Some barrack huts were on the
outskirts of Rocquancourt and another village a short distance to the SE.
Dispersal: had 2 areas – Southeast and West – with a total of 50 small
aircraft shelters located along hedges and tree lines. Defenses: there were
9 light Flak positions in Jul 43. Had 2 strongpoints for ground defense and
belts of barbed wire surrounded the Southeast dispersal and the bomb
storage dump.
Remarks:
20 Apr 41: employed 170 non-German workers.
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9 May 44: both runways reported to have been prepared for demolition.
Additionally, the Southwest dispersal had been developed into a remote
dispersal with 9 additional large open aircraft shelters under construction.
Photos at http://www.anciens-aerodromes.com/terrains
%20aviations/Cambrai%20Niergnies.htm .
Operational Units: I./JG 3 (May 40); 4.(H)/Aufkl.Gr. 22 (Jul 40); III./KG 2
(Jul 40 – Mar 41); Stab/KG 2 (Nov 40 – Mar 41); II./JG 26 (Mar-Apr 44).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 11/XII (Jun 40 - ?); Fl.H.Kdtr. E 36/VI
(1942 – Mar 44); Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v) 216/XI (Apr-Sep 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): elements of le.Flak-Abt.
875 (Aug 42); Feldluftpark Cambrai (1940-42); Feldluftpark 2/IV (1942-44);
Ln.-Frontreparaturbetrieb 9/XI (c.1942-44).
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1497-99 (4 Jul 43 updated to 9 May 44) and
A5260 pp.1836-43 (4 Jul 43 updated to 9 May 44); chronologies; BA-MA;
NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Campagne-lès-Guînes (FR) (50 50 N – 01 53 E)
General: airstrip in NE France 14 km SSE of Calais and 1.2 km WNW of the
village of Campagne-les-Guînes. History: a forward fighter field set up in
summer 1940 for the air offensive against England. Abandoned and
obstructed in 1941-42. Surface and Dimensions: farm land or pasture land
surface. No information found regarding dimensions. Infrastructure: little
or none.
Satellites and Decoys:
Campagne/West - a nearby auxiliary strip that was assigned
separate airfield code number 388 in Sep 40.
Remarks:
Sep 40: assigned airfield code number 387. Came under Koflug 8/III
(Saint-Omer).
Operational Units: I./JG 54 (Jul-Sep 40); Stab/JG 54 (Aug-Dec 40); II./JG
54 (Sep-Nov 40).
Station Units: none identified.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Cannes-Mandelieu (FR) (43 32 45 N – 06 57 18 E)
General: airfield in SE France 5.5 km W of Cannes.
History: built in the early 1930’s as a civil airport. No activity noted there
after Jun 40.
Dimensions: approx. 825 x 825 meters (900 x 900 yards), but possibly
extended in 1943.
Surface and Runways: grass landing area that was soft in wet weather.
Fuel and Ammunition: both were available but details lacking as to storage.
Infrastructure: had 1 medium and 2 small hangars with several workshop
buildings at the N end of the landing area. A few of the original airport
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buildings were near the hangars and these were used for offices and some
accommodations.
Dispersal: no organized dispersal facilities.
Defenses: there was 1 unoccupied light Flak position in Nov 43. Ground
defenses included 5 strongpoints, mainly on the coast just off the SW, S and
SE sides of the airfield, an anti-tank ditch on the S side, land mines planted
on the N side and barbed wire strung around the hangars. Guard and
defense personnel were Italian.
Remarks:
11/12 Nov 43: bombed by 134 RAF Halifaxes and Lancasters – instead of
hitting the targeted marshaling yards in Cannes, the bombs fell on the
working class suburb of La Bocca and the airfield just to the W of it.
29 Nov 43: unserviceable - the W half of the landing area seen to be
obstructed with trenches and stones or possibly concrete blocks while the
other half was obstructed by unfilled bomb craters. A small hangar on the
N boundary was damaged.
Operational Units: none.
Station Commands: none.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 pp.046-47 (15 Jun 43 updated to 29 Nov 43) and
A5261 p.1267 (12 Nov 42); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site
ww2.dk]
Capelle (FR) (a.k.a. La Capelle?) (50 28 N – 01 38 E)
General: landing ground in NE France 7.5 km SE of Le Touquet on the
Channel coast and near the villages of Cucq and Villiers. History: a
Luftwaffe fighter unit stopped here for a few days during the first half of
June 1940 but no further use reported. Never developed into a formal
base. Surface and Dimensions: grass land. Infrastructure: none noted.
Remarks:
Sep 40: assigned airfield code number 389 or 398. Came under Koflug
8/III (Saint-Omer).
Operational Units: III./JG 26 (Jun 40).
Station Commands: none identified.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Captieux (FR) (c. 44 17 N – 00 15 W)
General: landing ground in SW France 66.5 km SSE of Bordeaux and 47
km NNE of Mont-de-Marsan. No information found or record of Luftwaffe
use. Listed as operational in Jun 44.
[Sources: Mattiello]
Carcassonne (FR) (a.k.a. Carcassonne-Salvaza) (43 13 00 N – 02 18
20 E)
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[Sources: Mattiello]
Castres-Mazamet (FR) (43 33 N – 02 17 E)
General: landing ground in SW France approx. 7 km SSE of Castres. No
information found or record of Luftwaffe use. Listed as operational in Jun
44.
[Sources: Mattiello]
Caudebec-en-Caux (FR) (49 31 25 N – 00 44 40 E)
General: minor seaplane station in NE France on the N bank of the Seine
River 24 km WNW of Rouen and 1.2 km ESE of Caudebec-en-Caux.
History: S.N.C.A. du Nord firm located here and made parts for the Do 24
flying boat. No evidence found that any Luftwaffe seaplanes or flying boats
were ever here. Anchorage: ample take-off and landing room on the river.
Infrastructure: a very large building belonging to the S.N.C.A. du Nord firm
that was served by 3 slipways on the river front and 1 small jetty to the E.
A secondary rail line serviced the town.
Operational Units: none identified.
Station and Town Units (on various dates – not complete): V./Flak-Rgt. 155
(W) (1944 – Aug 44).
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 p.1500 (29 May 43) and A5260 p.1844 (29 May
43); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Cavaillon-Orgon (FR) (c. 43 47 N – 05 02 E)
General: landing ground in S France approx. 5 km S of Cavaillon town
center. No information found or record of Luftwaffe use. Listed as
operational in Jun 44.
[Sources: Mattiello]
Caylus (FR) (c. 44 13 N – 01 43 E)
General: landing ground in south-central France 3.5 km SW of the town of
Caylus. No information found or record of Luftwaffe use. Listed as
operational in Jun 44.
[Sources: Mattiello]
Cazaux (FR) (44 32 00 N – 01 07 45 W)
General: airfield in W France 57 km SW of Bordeaux and 2.5 km E of the
town of Cazaux. There was a disused seaplane station at the NW end of Lac
de Cazaux approx. 3 km WSW of the airfield.
History: Cazaux was an important French bomber base before the war that
after German occupation was used mainly by reserve training fighter units.
Dimensions: approx. 1600 x 1370 meters (1750 x 1500 yards) and
rectangular in shape.
Surface and Runways: hard-packed sand surface. A concrete runway with
a planned length of 1830 meters (2000 yards) and aligned NE/SW was in the
early stages of construction in Oct 43 and had been completed and in use by
late Mar 44 with a revised length of 1785 meters (1950 yards). There was
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destroyed and the roofs severely damaged on 2 more large double hangars;
on the E boundary 4 small hangars were hit with 1 destroyed and 3 severely
to moderately damaged; on the W boundary 5 small hangars were destroyed
and 1 severely damaged; and off the SW corner a large double repair hangar
was severely damaged. The runway was not hit.
19 Jun 44: bombed by 39 B-17s – results not found.
Operational Units: I./NJG 2 (Nov 42); III./ZG 1 (Mar-Jun 44); II./JG 26
(Apr 44).
School Units: Einweisungsstelle im Bombenwerfen für Jäger und Zerstörer
(c. Apr 41 – Jul 42).
Reserve Training & Replacement Units: Erg.St./JG 51 (Nov 40 – Feb 41);
Erg.St./JG 54 (Nov 40 – Mar 41); Erg.Gr./JG 51 (Mar – Jun 41); Erg.Gr./JG
54 (Mar – Apr 41); Erg.Gr./JG 2 (Oct 41 – Feb 42); Erg.JGr. West (later JGr.
West) (Feb 42 – Feb 44).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 6/XVII (Dec 40 - Dec 42); Fl.H.Kdtr. A
207/XII (Jan 43 – Mar 44); Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v) 234/XII (Apr-Aug 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): Erprobungsstelle Süd
d.Lw. (May 42 – Jul 44); 2. Flugh.Betr.Kp. ZG 52 (Oct 43); 4./le.Flak-Abt.
923 (Jun 44); 29.(Flum.Mess)/Ln.-Rgt. 54 (c.Jul 43 – Aug 44); Lw.-
Bauleitung Cazaux (c.1940-44); Flieger-Geräteausgabe- und Sammelstelle
3/XII (Jun 41); Flieger-Geräteausgabe- und Sammelstelle 2/WF (May 41).
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1501-06 (12 Oct 43 updated to 30 Jul 44) and
A5260 pp.1845-54 (12 Oct 43 updated to 28 Mar 44); chronologies; BA-MA;
NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Cervione (FR/Corsica) (42 20 N – 09 28 E)
General: airstrip on Corsica 40 km S of Bastia. No record found of use by
the Luftwaffe.
Operational Units: none.
Station Commands: none.
Station Units: none.
Challerange (FR) (c. 49 18 N – 04 44 E)
General: a former landing ground in E France approx. 52 km E of Reims
and 10 km SSE of Vouziers. Probably on the site of the present-day airfield
of Vouziers-Séchault, 3.5 km S of the village of Challerange and 14 km SSE
of Vouziers. No record found of Luftwaffe use.
Remarks:
10 May 40: Challerange airfield bombed by aircraft from III./KG 2.
Jun 44: listed as operational.
[Sources: Mattiello; chronologies]
Châlons-sur-Marne (FR) (a.k.a. L’Épine, Écury-sur-Coole) (48 54 N –
04 19 E or 48 54 20N – 04 21 05 E?)
General: a former landing ground in E France 6 km S of Châlons-sur-Marne
that was inactive and unserviceable from 1940 until late spring 1944 (Jun
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
28 Apr 44: low-level attack by VIII Fighter Command P-47s and P-51s –
claimed 1 x Fw 200 and 1 x unidentified aircraft destroyed, plus 3 x He 111s
and 1 x unidentified aircraft damaged.
23 May 44: bombed by 18 B-17s.
14 Jun 44: bombed in early morning by 103 B-24s – 6 x Bf 110s destroyed,
4 x Ju 88s damaged and 1 x Ju 52 destroyed – all from II./NJG 5, 4 x Ju 88s
destroyed and 11 x Ju 88s damaged – all from I./NJG 2, and 2 x Fw 190s
damaged; heavy cratering of runways and taxiways, power to airfield
lighting system cut, airfield out of service for nearly a week as repair work
hampered by delayed action bombs; 4 hangars destroyed, 3 hangars
severely damaged, 1 hangar moderately damaged.
24 Jun 44: bombed by 45 B-24s – 2 aircraft destroyed, 3 damaged, 1 large
hangar destroyed or damaged, runways and landing area hit. Airfield now
unserviceable.
Operational Units: 3.(F)/Aufkl.Gr. 121 (Jun-Jul 40); III./LG 1 (Jun 40 – Jan
41); II./KG 76 (Feb-Apr 41); I./KG 76 (Mar-Apr 41); III./KG 76 (Mar-Apr
41); KGr. 106 (Aug 42); II./KG 6 (Sep 42); elements of I./KG 40 (Dec 43 –
Mar 44); I./KG 100 (Jan-Apr 44); detachment of II./NJG 5 (c. May-Aug 44);
2./ZG 1 (Jun-Jul 44); I./NJG 2 (Jun-Aug 44); Einsatzkdo. Schenck (Jul-Aug
44).
Reserve Training & Replacement Units: IV./KG 40 (Sep 42 – Dec 43); 2.
and 3./Erg.Zerst.Gr. (Nov 43).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 21/VII (Jun 40 – Dec 42); Fl.H.Kdtr. A
214/XII (Jan 43 – Mar 44); Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v) 216/XII (Apr-Aug 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): 4. Flugh.Betr.Kp./KG 40
(Jan-Dec 43); Werft-Abt. d.Lw. 120/XII (May-Jul/Aug 44); Feldwerft-Abt.
z.b.V. 2 (Dec 43 – Aug 44); I./Flak-Rgt. 49 (gem. mot.) (Jun 40); Res.Flak-
Abt. 391 (Oct 42); elements of gem.Flak-Abt. 196 (Jan-Feb 44); le.Flak-Abt.
z.b.V. 13200 (Aug 44); Lw.-Bauleitung Chateaudun (c.1940-44); Lw.-Bau-
Btl. 2/XII (Jan 41)?; Trsp.Kol. d.Lw. 144/XII (Jun 44); Trsp.Kol. d.Lw.
154/XII (Jun 44).
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1512-16 (12 Jun 43 updated to 27 May 44),
A5260 pp.1862-70 (12 Jun 43 updated to 28 Mar 44) and A5260
amendments (17 Jul 44); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site
ww2.dk]
Châteauneuf-en-Thymerais (FR) (c. 48 34 N – 01 14 E)
General: former landing ground in W France approx. 86 km WSW of Paris
and 19.5 SSW of Dreux. No record found of use by the Luftwaffe. Listed
as operational in June 1944.
[Sources: Mattiello; AFHRA]
Châteauroux-Déols (FR) (46 51 20 N – 01 43 09 E)
General: factory airfield in C France 60 km SW of Bourges, 6 km NNE of
Châteauroux and 4 km NNE of the village of Déols.
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History: dates from April 1936 when Bloch announced plans to build an
aircraft factory there under the name SNCASO Déols to manufacture Bloch
151 and 152 fighters and bombers. After the armistice in Jun 40, the
factory changed over to making component parts for the Bloch 175. The
Luftwaffe used the airfield for fighter training during 1943-44.
Dimensions: approx. 1280 x 1050 meters (1400 x 1150 yards).
Surface and Runways: firm grass surface. No paved runway.
Fuel and Ammunition: both available – no details.
Infrastructure: had 1 large hangar and 2 very large workshops belonging to
S.N.C.A. on the W boundary and 1 small hangar on the N boundary. The
factory admin buildings and offices were in between the factory workshops
on the W boundary, while a number of barrack-type huts were off the NW
corner. A special branch rail line served the factory buildings.
Dispersal: no organized dispersal facilities.
Defenses: a single heavy Flak position with 4 guns was located 6.5 km ENE
of the airfield.
Satellites and Decoys:
Châteauroux/I (c. 46 50 46 N – 01 42 19 E), auxiliary landing strip off
the SW boundary of Châteauroux-Déols airfield measuring approx. 1415 x
275 meters (1550 x 300 yards). Gaps had been cut in nearby hedges for
parking aircraft. Built summer 1944 and became serviceable around mid-
July.
Remarks:
27 Jun 40: 180 almost completed aircraft captured by the Germans at the
Bloch Déols plant.
5 Feb 44: bombed – 1 x Ar 68, 9 x Ar 96 B-1s, 3 x Bf 108s, 9 x Bf 109s, 3 x
Bloch 155s, 3 x Bü 131s, 2 x Dewoitines, 1 x Fi 156, 1 x Junkers W 34 and 1
x NA 57 from JG 103 destroyed or damaged on the ground, leaving the
school with just 4 or 5 serviceable aircraft.
10/11 Mar 44: bombed by 30 RAF Lancasters - quite a few S.N.C.A. factory
buildings destroyed and damaged along with 1 x Ar 96 B-3 and 8 x Bf 109s
from JG 101 destroyed or damaged on the ground. The SW half of the
landing area heavily cratered.
5 Jul 44: low-level attack by VIII Fighter Command P-51s – claimed 2 x Ju
88s destroyed.
22 Aug 44: airfield ordered evacuated and demolished.
Operational Units: 2./ZG 1 (Jun-Jul 44).
School Units: Stab and I./JG 103 (Mar 43 – Mar 44); 2./JG 105 (Mar-Jun
44).
Station Commands: Flugplatzkdo. of Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v) 220/XII Clermont-
Ferrand (Apr-Aug 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): Werft-Abt. d.Lw. 123/XII
(May-Aug 44); Trsp.Kol. d.Lw. 11/XII (Jun 44).
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[Sources: AFHRA A5260 pp.054-56 (15 Nov 42 updated to 16 Mar 44) and
p.053 (16 Jul 44) and A5261 pp.1269-70 (15 Nov 42); chronologies; BA-MA;
NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Châteauroux – La Martinerie (FR) (46 49 05 N – 01 45 55 E)
General: airfield in C France 5.25 km E of Châteauroux and adjacent to the
hamlet of La Martinerie.
History: a French military airfield that was mainly used as an aircraft park
prior to the armistice. A Vichy fighter group was based at Châteauroux - La
Martinerie from 1941 to Oct 42. The Luftwaffe used it for fighter training
during 1943-44.
Dimensions: approx. 1190 x 1465 meters (1300 x 1600 yards) with an
irregular shape.
Surface and Runways: artificially drained grass on clay soil. No paved
runway in Aug 43. A perimeter road encircled the landing area. Equipped
with a visual beacon for night landings.
Fuel and Ammunition: underground fuel storage was off the NE corner and
fuel tankers (bowsers) were used to fill the aircraft. The ammunition dump
was reportedly near the W end of the N boundary.
Infrastructure: (1) off the N boundary – 2 large double bay hangars and 4
small hangars joined together with workshops and storage buildings behind
the small hangars; (2) at the SE corner – 4 large double hangars where
aircraft were reportedly assembled; (3) on the NW corner – 2 large double
hangars. Station HQ and admin offices were at the center of the N
boundary. Off the N boundary and behind the hangars were quarters for
civilian workers, married quarters, a large complex of barracks, 2 small
storage huts containing dismantled aircraft, motor pool, fire station, stores
buildings, etc. Officers were billeted in a local château and other personnel
were faccommodated in hotels in Châteauroux. The nearest rail connection
was in Châteauroux.
Dispersal: there were no organized dispersal facilities in Aug 43.
Defenses: protected in Aug 43 by 3 heavy and 6 light Flak positions.
Remarks:
5 Feb 44: bombed by 50 B-17 Fortresses from 8th AAF – on the N boundary,
1 bay of 1 large double bay hangar destroyed, 1 large double hangar
severely damaged, 4 small hangars all but destroyed and the workshop and
stores buildings behind these damaged. Most of the landing area rendered
unserviceable.
16 Mar 44: landing area still mostly unserviceable but the craters in the
paved apron adjoining one of the large double hangars on the SE boundary
had been filled in and repaired. Work was continuing on development of
the East (remote) dispersal area with 4 large aircraft shelters and 3 parking
hardstands so far built.
21 Jul 44: mention of Châteauroux – la Martinerie as the new forwarding
airfield for replacement aircraft for JG 27.
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
Defenses: there were 3 heavy Flak positions (6 guns each), 19 light Flak
positions and 4 antiaircraft machine gun positions in a 5 km radius around
the airfield in Jan 44. The light positions included at least 8 Flak towers
which were primarily located in the dispersal areas. Ground defenses
included 4 reinforced strongpoints and belts of barbed wire around much of
the airfield.
Remarks:
10 Aug 40: bombed – 1 x Bf 109 E-4 from I./JG 27 damaged on the ground.
20 Apr 41: employed 907 non-German workers.
29 May 43: low-level attack by 12-14 RAF fighter-bombers – 1 x Bf 109 G-4
from 4.(F)/Aufkl.Gr. 123 destroyed and 2 x Fw 190s damaged.
24 Jun 43: bombed and strafed by RAF medium bombers and Spitfires – 2 x
Bf 109s and several vehicles destroyed.
3 Oct 43: leveling and extension work seen to be underway in the West
dispersal area.
7 Jan 44: bombed by 35 9th AAF B-26 Marauders – bursts were observed on
the station HQ buildings at the SW corner and on parts of the landing area,
although serviceability was not affected.
8 Mar 44: some of the craters on the landing area had been repaired,
according to reconnaissance reports.
22 May 44: bombed by 9th AAF medium bombers – results not found.
Operational Units: I./St.G. 2 (Aug 40); 4.(H)/Aufkl.Gr. 21 (Oct 40)?; 4.
(F)/Aufkl.Gr. 123 (Nov 42 – May 44).
Reserve Training & Replacement Units: Erg.Gr./JG 2 (May – Dec 41).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 15/XII Théville (Jul 40 – Mar 44);
Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v) 218/XII (Apr-Jun 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): 5.(Flum.Mess)/Ln.-Rgt. 53
(1942 – Jun 44); 12.(Flum.Mess)/Ln.-Rgt. 53 (1943 – Jun 44); Stab
I./Luftgau-Nachr.Rgt. 12 (Sep 41)?; 21.(schw.Flum.)/Luftgau-Nachr.Rgt.
Westfrankreich (c.1941 – Dec 42); Lw.-Bauleitung II Theville (c.1940-44);
Ldssch.Kp. d.Lw. 6/XIII ( ? – Jun 44); two Züge of Ldssch.Kp. d.Lw. 15/XIII
( ? – Jun 44); Fluganwärter-Btl. II (c.Sep 42 – Apr 43); II./Flieger-Rgt. 90
(Apr 43 – Jun 44); Wetterberatungszentrale d.Lw. (mot) 1/WF ( ? – Jun 44).
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1520-22 (8 Jan 44) and A5260 pp.1876-85 (19
May 43 updated to 8 Jan 44 and 8 Mar 44); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA;
PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Cherbourg-Querqueville (FR) (a.k.a. Cherbourg/West) (49 40 10 N
– 01 41 20 W)
General: airfield in N France 5.25 km WNW of Cherbourg and immediately
NE of the village of Querqueville on the Querqueville promontory adjacent to
an old fort.
History: an old French military landing ground that was developed into an
airfield after the Germans took it over in Jun 40. Used by fighters and
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reconnaissance units during the Battle of Britain, but fell into relative disuse
after mid-1941.
Dimensions: approx. 960 x 825 meters (1050 x 900 yards) and irregular in
shape.
Surface and Runways: firm, leveled turf with artificial drainage. No paved
runway. A periment road encircled most of the landing area and a taxiway
connected the landing area to the South dispersal.
Fuel and Ammunition: refueling was in the hangar area and ammunition
was stored in the old fort adjacent to the airfield.
Infrastructure: there were 2 large and 1 small hangar at the NE end of the
airfield. HQ, offices and accommodations were in a barracks compound
(Caserne Dixmude) immediately SSE of the airfield. The nearest rail
connection was in Cherbourg.
Dispersal: had 2 dispersal areas – North and South – with a total of 20
small covered aircraft shelters with 4 more shelters under construction in
May 43. Both dispersals had concrete taxi tracks.
Defenses: protected by 3 heavy 4-gun and 6-gun Flak positions and 11 light
Flak positions within 5 km of the airfield in Jun 43. Ground defenses
included 11 reinforced strongpoints.
Remarks:
20 Apr 41: employed 728 non-German workers.
Oct 42: landing area observed to be temporarily obstructed with portable
sawhorses and tripod devices.
17 May 43: a E/W strip down the center of the landing area cleared of
obstacles and now serviceable.
24 Feb 44: landing area again obstructed with portable devices; additionally,
part of the area was permanently obstructed by trenches.
22 May 44: bombed by 9th AAF medium bombers.
Operational Units: 2.(F)/Aufkl.Gr. 123 (Jul 40 – Jan 41); 4.(F)/Aufkl.Gr. 14
(Jul-Nov 40); Stab/JG 27 (Jul-Aug 40); 7./JG 77 (Dec 40 – Feb 41); II./JG
54 (Feb-Mar 41); III./JG 54 (Mar 41).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 8/VII Cherbourg (Jul 40 – c.Oct 41);
Fl.Pl.Kdo. C 30/XII (Jan 43 – Jun 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1523-24 (21 Jun 43) and A5260 pp.1886-90
(21 Jun 43 updated to 24 Feb 44); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA;
web site ww2.dk]
Cherbourg-See (FR) (a.k.a. Cherbourg-Chantereyne) (49 38 55 N –
01 37 40 W)
General: seaplane station on the SW side of Cherbourg’s inner harbor.
History: the station hangars and workshops were used by the Amiot firm
before the war. The Luftwaffe stationed seaplane units here until Apr 41,
but after that date it was used mainly by individual air-sea rescue aircraft or
small detachments of them that rarely stayed very long.
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Dimensions: the inner harbor afforded an E/W take-off run of some 2470
meters (2700 yards) and the outer harbor an E/W run that was almost
unlimited.
Anchorage: a protected harbor with a long quay that had a crane at the N
end. There was also a floating crane available.
Fuel and Ammunition: bulk fuel storage was NW of the main hangars. An
underground bomb dump was reportedly W of the hangars on the quayside.
Infrastructure: there were 6 hangars grouped fairly close together on and
near the quay – 1 large double, 1 large single, 1 medium double and 3
medium. At the SE end of the quay were 1 very large repair of assembly
shop with 4 engine testing beds close by, and 1 smaller repair shop. The
station HQ was also at the SE end of the quay and a group of at least 12
barracks was to the W of the hangars.
Defenses: the Cherbourg harbor area was heavily defended by 5 heavy Flak
positions (most with 6 guns) and 14 light Flak positions. Ground defenses
included 4 reinforced strongpoints protected by barbed wire.
Remarks: none.
Operational Units: Seenotflugkdo. 2 (Jun-Nov 40); 2. Seenotstaffel (Nov 40
– Dec 42); 5./Bordfliegergruppe 196 (Sep 40 – Apr 41); 2./Kü.Fl.Gr. 106
(Aug-Nov 40); 3./Kü.Fl.Gr. 906 (c. Nov 40 – Feb 41).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 111/XI (See) (c.Jul 40 – Apr 43);
Fl.H.Kdtr. A 305/XI (See) (Apr 43 - Jun 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): Seenotzentrale (L)
Cherbourg (Jun 40 – Jun 41); Seenotbezirkstelle (L) Cherbourg (Jun 40 –
May 42); Seenotflotille 2 (Jun 40 – Jun 44; Seenotdienstführer 3 (Mar 41
- ?); Seenotzentrale (L) Normandie (Jun 41 – May 42); Seenotkdo. 3 (Jun
42 – Jun 44); Seenotbereichskdo. II (Jun 42 – Jun 44).
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1518-19 (17 Jun 43) and A5260 pp.1873-75
(17 Jun 43); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Chigny (FR) (49 54 00 N – 03 46 00 E)
General: satellite strip and dispersal field 12 km ESE of Guise landing
ground and 1.2 km SSW of the village of Chigny. History: recently
prepared and serviceable in Aug 44. Surface and Dimensions: measured
approx. 1465 x 185 meters (1600 x 200 yards) and irregular in shape.
Infrastructure: none noted.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 amendments (14 Aug 44)]
Chinon-Le-Ruchard (FR) (c. 47 10 N – 01 14 E)
General: former landing ground in west-central France approx. 43 km SW of
Tours. No evidence found of use by the Luftwaffe. Listed as operational in
June 1944.
[Sources: Mattiello; AFHRA]
Chissey (FR) (47 01 25 N – 05 44 00 E)
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
permanent illumination and visual Lorenz systems, and the landing area with
a flare-path and a beam approach system.
Fuel and Ammunition: fuel tanks were located in each dispersal area with
the main fuel storage probably at the NE end of the airfield. A suspected
ammunition dump was under construction off the NW corner along both
sides of a road in mid-Jan 44. Prior to that, bomb and ammunition storage
was SE of the landing area and off the SW corner.
Infrastructure: there was a small hangar for repairs in the Southwest
dispersal and some probable workshop buildings at the SE corner. Station
HQ, admin offices and stores were in a group of small buildings at the SE
corner. Personnel were accommodated in barrack huts erected in Clastres
as well as in requisitioned quarters in the nearby village of Essigny-le-Grand.
A special branch rail line served the airfield.
Dispersal: there were 3 dispersals in Jun 43 – Northeast, Southwest and
Northwest – with a total of 37 covered aircraft shelters constructed of blast
walls and some with camouflage netting. All 3 were connected to the
landing area by taxi tracks. A ladder-type servicing hardstand was located
in the Northeast dispersal.
Defenses: protected by 1 heavy and 3 light Flak positions in May 43.
Ground defenses consisted of 3 reinforced strongpoints and short trenches
with machine gun pits. There was some use of barbed wire around the
strongpoints.
Satellites and Decoys:
Clastres/I (a.k.a. Artemps) (49 45 05 N – 03 10 30 E), new satellite
strip for Clastres airfield located 4 km to the SW and 1.6 km SSW of the
village of Artemps. Consisted of a single strip measuring 1190 x 185
meters (1300 x 200 yards). Not paved. Believed to be serviceable when
first discovered by Allied photo reconnaissance on 17 Jul 44.
Remarks:
17 May 43: the landing area and all 3 runways were seen to be temporarily
obstructed.
14 Jan 44: runways and landing area remain temporarily obstructed.
Prepared strips 90 meters (100 yards) wide have been constructed on the W
side of both runways, and all roads leading to airfield have been obstructed
with road blocks.
18 Mar 44: runway and landing area obstructions have been removed.
25 Aug 44: bombed and strafed by 9th AAF P-38 Lightnings – runways,
hangars, buildings and fuel dumps hit.
Operational Units: I., II./JG 27 (Jun 40); 2.(F)/Aufkl.Gr. 123 (Jun 40);
III./SG 4 (Feb-Jun 44); Stab/JG 1 (Jun-Aug 44).
Station Commands: Fl.Pl.Kdo. A 41/XI (Mar 44); Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v) 230/XI
(Apr-Sep 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): Luftgaustab z.b.V. 12 (Jun
40); 5./gem.Flak-Abt. 364(o) (Jun 40); Stab/Flak-Rgt. 657 (May 43).
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
Defenses: there were 2 heavy and 5 light Flak positions within 4.5 km of
the airfield in Jun 43, but not all of them were occupied. Additionally, there
were 6 antiaircraft machine gun positions at the NW corner and 2 more at
the NE corner.
Remarks:
21 Jun 40: the Germans captured 247 aircraft on the airfield.
23 Sep 43: the refueling loop previously under construction on the S
boundary has now been completed. Pits were being dug in front of the
hangars on the N boundary, these probably intended for large fuel tanks.
The airfield ammunition dump was at the SE corner.
1 Dec 43: yet another refueling loop has been built and camouflaged on the
N boundary.
10/11 Mar 44: bombed by 33 RAF Lancasters – 1 x C 445 and 2 Si 204s
from FFS B 7 destroyed on the ground, and factory buildings of the firm
Atelier Industriel de l’aéronautique (AIA) at the SE corner of the airfield were
damaged.
12 Mar 44: bombed – 1 x Ju 52, 1 x Ju 88 A-4 and 1 x Si 204 from FFS B 7
destroyed or damaged on the ground.
30 Apr 44: bombed by 117 8th AAF B-17 Fortresses and strafed by VIII
Fighter Command P-51s – 7 x Ar 96s, 1 x Bü 133D, 5 x Fw 58s, 14 x Fw
190s, 10 x Hs 129s and 1 x Junkers W 34 Heu from SG 101 destroyed or
damaged on the ground.
Operational Units: III./SG 4 (Jun-Jul 44).
School Units: FFS C 7 then FFS B 7 (May 43 – Mar 44); II./SG 101 (Mar –
May 44).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 42/IV ( ? – Jan/Feb 43); Fl.H.Kdtr. A
222/XII (Jan/Feb 43 – Mar 44); Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v) 220/XII (Apr-Aug 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 pp.060-62 (15 Jun 43 updated to 16 Mar 44) and
A5261 p.1272 (Nov 42?); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site
ww2.dk]
Coëtquidan (FR) (??)
General: former landing ground or field airstrip in Brittany (not located) in
1940 that was reactivated and operational during June and July 1944. No
further information.
[Sources: Mattiello; AFHRA]
Cognac (FR) (a.k.a. Cognac-Châteaubernard) (45 39 35 N – 00 19 00
W)
General: airfield in W France 98 km N of Bordeaux; airfield located 4 km S
of Cognac. 20 Apr 41: employed 1,127 non-German workers.
History: Cognac was under construction as a major French military airfield
when the Germans occupied it in summer 1940. The Luftwaffe finished it
off during the second half of 1941 for use as an alternate field for large
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
31 Dec 43: bombed by c. 192 B-17 Fortresses and B-24 Liberators – E/W
runway knocked out, landing area cratered at the northern end and
numerous bursts observed on the hangars at the NW corner that destroyed
8 of them and severely damaged the remaining one, on the admin buildings,
on the refueling loop on the N boundary and in the Southeast dispersal.
4 Jan 44: bombed – 1 x Ju 290 from 1.(F)/FAGr. 5 destroyed or badly
damaged on the ground.
5 Mar 44: bombed by 60 B-24 Liberators – E/W runway rendered
unserviceable and the W end; craters on the landing area from previous
attacks noted as having been filled in.
25 Aug 44: low-level attack by 9th AAF P-47 Thunderbolts – claimed 12
aircraft destroyed on the ground, 10 of which were Ju 52s.
26 Aug 44: air attack - 2 x Ju 52s from Luftverkehrsgruppe Rangsdorf
destroyed on the ground.
Operational Units: II./KG 40 (Jul-Sep 41); elements of III./ZG 2 (Sep-Nov
42); detachment of V./KG 40 (1942-43); elements of I., II., IV./KG 2 (Nov
42); II./KG 100 (Jul-Sep 43); III./KG 40 (Nov 43 – Jul 44); 1.
Minensuchstaffel (Jun-Aug 44); 3.(F)/Aufkl.Gr. 123 (Jul-Aug 44).
School Units: Ausb.Gr./Bombenschule Anklam (1941); Lehrgruppe für
Fernkampf über See (Aug-Sep 41);
Kampfschulgeschwader 3 (Nov 41 – Jan 43); III./KG 101 (Feb – Jun 43).
Reserve Training & Replacement Units: Kommodore der
Ergänzungsjagdgruppen (Dec 42 – 1943); Erg.St./JG 26 (Nov 40 – Jan 41);
Erg.Gr./JG 26 (Feb 41 – Jan 42); Erg.St./JG 52 (Feb-Mar 41)?; Erg.St./SKG
10 (Dec 42 – Sep 43); 11./KG 76 (Jan 43 – Feb 44)?; 4.(Erg.)/SKG 10 (Jun
– Nov 43).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 19/VII (Nov 40 – Feb/Mar 43); Fl.H.Kdtr.
A 232/XII (Feb/Mar 43 – Mar 44); Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v) 232/XII (Apr-Aug 44).
Station and City Units (on various dates – not complete): 1.
Flugh.Betr.Kp./KSG 3 (n.d.); 113. Flugh.Betr.Kp. (Qu) (1943 – Jan 44, Apr
44 – c.Jul 44); Flugh.Betr.Kp. (FK) 1 ( ? – Feb 44); elements of
Flugh.Betr.Kp. (FK) 3 (Jun 44); one Zug of Flugh.Betr.Kp. (FK) 5 (Mar-Aug
44); II./Flak-Rgt. 22 (Oct 42); gem.Flak-Abt. 124 (Apr 44, Jul 44); elements
of le.Res.Flak-Abt. 999 (Oct 42 – 1943/44); Flak-Trsp.Bttr. 139/XII (1 Aug
44); Lw.-Bauleitung Cognac (c.1940-44); Stab/Brigade General Göring (Jul-
Nov 42); Flak-Rgt. General Göring (Jul-Nov 42).
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1529-35 (27 Jul 43 updated to Jul 44) and
A5260 pp.1895-1902 (25 Jul 43 updated to 5 Mar 44); chronologies; BA-MA;
NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Colembert (FR) (50 45 03 N – 01 49 53 E)
General: landing ground in NE France 16-17 km ENE of Boulogne.
History: A fighter strip used only during the summer and early fall of 1940.
Surface and Dimensions: grass surface with unrecorded dimensions.
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
History: an old French airfield that the Luftwaffe showed little or no interest
in until the latter part of 1941 when development began. No units were
based there until two years later, in Nov 43.
Dimensions: approx. 1800 x 1550 meters (1970 x 1700 yards).
Surface and Runways: grass surface on clay sub-soil. There were 2
concrete runways - (1) 1830 meters (2000 yards) aligned NE/SW, and (2)
1600 meters (1750 yards) aligned NW/SE. Each runway had an assembly
hardstand at both ends. A perimeter road encircled the landing area. Both
runways were equipped with permanent illumination and visual Lorenz
systems, while the airfield had perimeter lighting and a beam approach
system.
Fuel and Ammunition: a refueling loop was located near each of the
dispersal areas. The base ammunition dump was in the Foret de Conches
(Conches Woods) off the W boundary.
Infrastructure: had 1 large hangar at the N end of the North dispersal area
that was probably used for repairs. Barrack huts were off the E corner and
the NW boundary and other personnel were billeted in Le Fresne village, 1.2
km off the N end of the airfield. The nearest rail connection was in
Conches.
Dispersal: there were 3 areas – North, West and Southeast – with a total of
34 covered aircraft shelters and 2 more under construction in Aug 43.
Defenses: 2 heavy and 8 light Flak positions within 2 to 3 km of the airfield
in Aug 43.
Satellites and Decoys:
Conches-Pincheloup (48 55 00 N – 00 58 30 E), dummy 2.5 km SSE of
Conches airfield.
Conches/I (48 55 00 N – 01 00 00 E), satellite strip 4 km SE of Conches
airfield that measured approx. 1100 x 165 meters (1200 x 180 yards).
Built in early 1944 and serviceable by early June.
Conches/II (48 54 00 N – 00 58 00 E), satellite strip 3.25 km S of
Conches airfield. There were 2 V-shaped strips measuring 1645 meters
(1800 yards) and 1465 meters (1600 yards) in length and these were
connected to the main airfield by taxiways. Built in late spring 1944 and
serviceable in June.
Remarks:
23 Sep 43: bombed by 70 8th AAF B-26 Marauders – bursts seen at the N
end of the NE/SW runway and on all of the dispersal areas.
27 Sep 43: bombed by 68 8th AAF B-26s – direct hits in the center of both
runways, on the W side of the landing area and in the West and Northwest
dispersal areas.
29 Nov 43: runways and landing area repaired and again serviceable.
29 Jan 44: airfield bombed several times during the second half of 1943 with
damage to barrack huts.
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aircraft shelters had been built yet. Defenses: there were 5 light Flak
positions around the perimeter of the landing ground in Jan 44.
Remarks:
19 Jun 44: bombed in mid-morning by 92 B-17 Fortresses – 520 hits on the
landing area, power and water lines cut, hangars damaged, 5 barracks
destroyed and 17 more damaged, some equipment and food supplies lost,
landing ground unserviceable for 3 days.
Operational Units: 3.(F)/Aufkl.Gr. 123 (Jun-Jul 44); I./ZG 1 (Jun-Jul 44).
Reserve Training & Replacement Units: 4./(Erg.) JGr. West (Sep 43 – Jan
44).
Station Commands: none identified.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 p.1546 (27 Aug 43 updated to 28 Jan 44) and
A5260 p.1912 (28 Aug 43); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site
ww2.dk]
Cormeilles-en-Vexin (FR) (c. 49 05 55 N – 02 02 00 E)
General: airfield in N France 35 km NW of Paris and 2.4 km SSE of the
village of Cormeilles-en-Vexin.
History: used by the French Air Force Sep 39 – Jun 40. Taken over and
expanded by the Luftwaffe for use as a bomber base from summer 1940 to
summer 1941, then relatively inactive until early 1943.
Dimensions: approx. 1145 x 1145 meters (1250 x 1250 yards).
Surface and Runways: turf surface. Had 2 concrete runways – (1) approx.
1690 meters (1850 yards) aligned NW/SE; (2) approx. 1690 meters (1850
yards) aligned NE/SW. A perimeter road paralleled one side of the landing
area. Both runways were equipped with permanent illumination and visual
Lorenz systems. The landing area had a permanent flare-path and a beam
approach system.
Fuel and Ammunition: there were 2 refueling loops at the main fuel storage
dump on the NE boundary and a smaller vrefueling point at the ladder-type
servicing hardstand in the East dispersal area. The station ammunition
dump consisted of open bays cut into the edge of a tree line approx. 2 km
SW of the airfield.
Infrastructure: had 1 small repair hangar each in the North and South
dispersal areas. Station HQ and admin offices were reportedly on the W
outskirts of the village of Génicourt, 2.25 km E of the airfield. Personnel
were billeted in the villages adjacent to the airfield and the officers may
have been quartered in a large house in Cormeilles-en-Vexin. A light
branch rail line running from Montgeroult served the SW side of the airfield
as well as the ammunition dump.
Dispersal: 3 areas with a total of 38 cleverly camouflaged aircraft shelters in
Jun 43, but by 25 Jun 44 there were 5 – North, East, Southeast (remote),
South and Southwest – with a total of 28 large covered aircraft shelters, 16
large open and 16 small open for a total of 60.
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
Defenses: protected by 4 heavy and 9 light Flak positions in Jun 43, all
within 2.5 km of the airfield and on all sides of it. Ground defenses were
anchored on 10-12 fortified strongpoints surrounding the landing area out to
a distance of about 1.6 km.
Remarks:
Sep 40: assigned airfield code number 515.
26 Jul 42: assigned new airfield code number 262.
6 Feb 44: bombed by 9th AAF B-26 Marauders.
26 Apr 44: airfield dive-bombed by 24 VIII Fighter Command P-51
Mustangs.
27 Apr 44: airfield dive-bombed by 23 VIII Fighter Command P-51
Mustangs.
8 May 44: a new Southwest dispersal area under construction and
development of the Southeast (remote) dispersal was continuing.
11 May 44: bombed by 9th AAF B-26s.
24 May 44: low-level attack by VIII Fighter Command P-51s – claimed 1 x
Fw 190 destroyed and another damaged.
26 May 44: low-level aqttack by 9th AAF P-47 Thunderbolts and P-51s.
7 Jun 44: low-level attack by VIII Fighter Command P-47s – claimed 1 x Bf
109, 1 x Fw 190 and 1 x Bf 110 destroyed, plus 2 x Fw 190s damaged.
11 Jun 44: bombed by 34 B-24 Liberators.
25 Jun 44: a prepared strip running parallel to the E side of the NE/SW
runway and measuring approx. 1145 x 110 meters (1250 x 120 yards)
observed by photo reconnaissance.
26 Jul 44: low-level attack by VIII Fighter Command P-47s – claimed 1 x He
111 destroyed.
Sep 44: USAAF use to the end of the war.
Operational Units: Stab/KG 76 (Jun 40 – Mar 41); III./KG 76 (Jun-Dec 40);
II./KG 6 (Jan-Jul 43); Stab, III./JG 2 (Nov 43 – May 44); 3./KG 66 (Feb-Apr
44); 6.(F)/Aufkl.Gr. 123 (Apr-Aug 44); part of Horch- und Störstaffel 2 (May
44); I./JG 2 (May-Jun 44); 4.(F)/Aufkl.Gr. 123 (Jul-Aug 44); 5.(F)/Aufkl.Gr.
123 (Jul-Aug 44).
Reserve Training & Replacement Units: 11./KG 53 (Nov-Dec 42)?
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 3/I (Nov 40 – summer 1941); Fl.H.Kdtr. E
62/XIII (1941 – Dec 42); Fl.H.Kdtr. A 211/XI (c.Jan 43 – Mar 44); Fl.H.Kdtr.
E(v) 225/XI (Apr-Aug 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): le.Flak-Abt. 880 (Apr-May
44); Flieger-Geräteausgabe- und Sammelstelle 4/WF ( ? – Jun 44).
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1547-51 (23 Jun 43 updated to 25 Jun 44) and
A5260 pp.1913-18 (23 Jun 43 and updated to 8 May 44); chronologies; BA-
MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Corné (FR) (47 27 00 N – 00 22 00 W)
General: satellite strip and dispersal field in W France 15.5 km ESE of
Angers and 2 km S of the town of Corné. History: prepared in late spring
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1944 for fighters and operational in June. Surface and Dimensions: grass
surface measuring approx. 1600 x 730 meters (1750 x 800 yards) with an
irregular shape. Infrastructure: none noted.
[Sources: A.I.2.(b)/Air Ministry Amendment dated 22 Jun 44 in
BNA(PRO)/AIR 40]
Cosne (FR) (a.k.a. Cosne-Cours-sur-Loire) (47 21 38 N – 02 55 02 E)
General: former landing ground in C France 50 km NE of Bourges and 5.75
km S of the town of Cosne-Cours-sur-Loire. No record found of use by the
Luftwaffe. Listed as operational in June 1944.
[Sources: Mattiello; AFHRA]
Cottenchy (FR) (c. 49 48 N – 02 22 E)
General: landing ground in NE France 12.7 km SSE of Amiens near the
village of Cottenchy. History: set up as a dispersal field for Amiens-Glisy in
June 1940, retained for a while and then inactivated in 1942 and obstructed.
Surface and Dimensions: grass surface. Infrastructure: none noted.
Remarks:
Jan 42: operational with airfield code number 583.
Operational Units: none identified.
Station Commands: Flugplatzkdo. of Fl.H.Kdtr. E 8/I Amiens-Glisy (c. Jun
40 – mid-1942).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Coulommiers (FR) (a.k.a. Coulommiers-Voisins, Voisins, Mouroux,
Saint-Biandin) (48 50 15 N – 03 00 15 E)
General: airfield in N France 55 km E of Paris; airfield located 6.5 km WNW
of the town of Coulommiers.
History: Sep 39 – Jun 40 it was a major French fighter field during the
Phony War and the German attack on France. The Luftwaffe took it over in
Jun 40 and constructed two concrete runways, 2,000 x 80 meters aligned
E/W and 1,825 x 80 meters aligned NE/SW, each with concrete assembly
hardstands at both ends, as well as workshops, perimeter roads, aircraft
dispersal areas, 22 aircraft shelters in a woods, Flak emplacements and
other infrastructure.
Dimensions: approx. 2380 x 915 meters (2600 x 1000 yards).
Surface and Runways: artificially drained grass surface. Had 2 concrete
runways as stated above. Equipped with boundary lighting, runway
illumination, a beam approach system and a visual Lorenz system for each
runway.
Fuel and Ammunition: refueling loops were located in the North and East
dispersals, and at the center of the S boundary. The ammunition dump was
located in woods 2.5 km NNE of the airfield.
Infrastructure: there was a large hangar with a servicing hardstand at the
SE corner. Clusters of accommodation huts were scattered around the
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airfield with the main group being on the outskirts of the village of Voisin.
The nearest rail connection was in Farmoutiers, 3.25 km S of the airfield.
Dispersal: in spring 1943 there were 2 dispersals – North and East – with a
total of 33+ large covered aircraft shelters and 3 small covered shelters.
Taxi tracks served both dispersals.
Defenses: had 5 light Flak positions (Nov 43).
Satellites and Decoys:
Coulommiers/I (48 52 50 N – 03 01 50 E), satellite strip 5 km NNE of
Coulommiers airfield and near its North dispersal area. Measured approx.
1830 x 185 meters (2000 x 200 yards). Still under construction in late May
44 and operational by July.
Coulommiers/II (48 51 35 N – 03 03 25 E), satellite strip 4 km NE of
Coulommiers airfield and near its East dispersal area. Measured approx.
1830 x 185 meters (2000 x 200 yards). Still under construction in late May
44.
Remarks:
25 Nov 43: construction work to extend the landing area to the NE was
continuing.
10 Apr 44: airfield dive-bombed by 16 P-38 Lightnings from VIII Fighter
Command.
14 Jun 44: bombed by 24 B-17 Fortresses.
23 Jun 44: bombed in the evening by 23 B-24 Liberators – many Bf 110 G-
4s from II./NJG 4 destroyed or damaged on the ground when the runways
and one of the dispersal areas were hit. Emergency repairs restored the
airfield to serviceability in a few hours.
27 Jun 44: dive-bombed and strafed by 32 P-51 Mustangs from VIII Fighter
Command.
18 Jul 44: satellite Coulommiers/I now serviceable. Aircraft parking bays
were being cut into a small wood on the N side of the strip and at least 5
had been completed.
11 Aug 44: bombed by 47 B-24s.
12 Aug 44: low-level attack by VIII Fighter Command P-47s – 4 x Ju 88 G-
1s from II./NJG 2 destroyed on the ground.
21 Aug 44: airfield ordered cleared and prepared for demolition.
Operational Units: Stab, I., II./KG 54 (Jul 40); III./KG 2 (Apr-Aug 43);
IV./SKG 10 (Sep-Oct 43); II./SG 10 (Oct 43); II./NJG 4 (May-Aug 44).
Reserve Training & Replacement Units: 13./KG 2 (Aug 43 – Jan 44).
Station Units: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 26/XII (Jul 40); Fl.H.Kdtr. E 69/XI (c.Apr 43 –
Mar 44); Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v) 211/XII (Apr-Aug 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): Werft-Abt. d.Lw. 123/XII
(Jun 44 - ?); part of gem.Flak-Abt. 346(v) (1942)?; le.Flak-Abt. 828 (Aug
44).
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1552-55 (c. Apr 43 updated to 18 Jul 44),
A5260 pp.1919-23 (30 Jun 43 updated to 25 Nov 43) and A.I.2.(b)/Air
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mission staging field for operations over the Channel and Great Britain.
Surface and Dimensions: grass surface measuring approx. 970 x 1370
meters (1060 x 1500 yards) and roughly triangular in shape. No paved
runway. Fuel and Ammunition: ammunition dumps were in the woods off
the landing area. Infrastructure: had 3 small hangars used for repairs, 2 of
these in the Southeast dispersal and 1 in the Southwest dispersal.
Accommodations were in a house and at least 6 barrack-type buildings
located in the woods off the SE corner, while officers were billeted in the
nearby Château Ligescourt. A branch rail spur served the SE corner of the
landing ground. Dispersal: there were 3 areas – North, Southeast and
Southwest – with a total of 30+ covered aircraft shelters and 24+ open
aircraft shelters. The shelters were all on the edge of woods and well
concealed by natural foliage. Defenses: there were 2 heavy and 12 light
Flak positions, all unoccupied in Jan 44.
Remarks:
26 Jul 42: Assigned new airfield code number 271.
4 Jan 44: landing area observed to be rough and disused but probably
serviceable.
23 Apr 44: landing area observed to be temporarily obstructed with portable
obstacles.
10 Jun 44: ordered destroyed but personnel and alarm Flak to remain to
defeat any attempted air landings.
20 Jun 44: landing area now permanently obstructed by plowing.
Operational Units: II./ZG 26 (Jun-Nov 40).
Station Commands: none identified.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): part of I./Flak-Rgt. 6
(gem. mot.) (Jul 40 - ?); 22.(Flum.Mess)/Ln.-Rgt. 52 (c.1943 – Aug 44)?;
elements of Lw.-Bau-Btl. 18/XVII (Oct 42).
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1558-60 (18 Jun 43 updated to 20 Jun 44) and
A5260 pp.1926-29 (18 Jun 43 updated to 23 Apr 44); chronologies; BA-MA;
NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Creil (FR) (c. 49 15 25 N – 02 30 50 E)
General: airfield in N France 48.5 km NNE of Paris and 2.8 km ESE of Creil.
History: French Air Force base since World War I. Evacuation by the
French began on 9 June 1940. In Aug 40, work began on the construction
of a 1.620 x 50 meter concrete runway and another concrete runway of
1,710 x 50 meters. Over the next several years, 47 aircraft blast bays were
constructed by the Luftwaffe and navigation radio beacons installed along
with a Freya radar in 1944. Three batteries of Flak were usually deployed
at Creil. Used mainly by bombers through 1943 and then by fighters.
Dimensions: approx. 2105 x 1830 meters (2300 x 2000 yards) and “L”
shaped.
Surface and Runways: grass surface with 2 concrete runways as described
above. A perimeter road encircled the airfield. Equipped with runway and
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Fuel and Ammunition: underground fuel storage tanks were possibly 275
meters E of the hangars. There was a small ammunition dump approx. 230
meters SE of the hangars.
Infrastructure: had 1 small hangar on the NW boundary and 2 large airship
sheds off the W corner with numerous small workshops around the sheds.
Station HQ, admin offices, quarters, etc., were in a group off the W
boundary. A special branch spur connected the airfield to the main Toulon-
Nice inland rail line.
Dispersal: none prior to fall 1943. After that had a North and East
dispersal with a few open aircraft shelters.
Defenses: not noted.
Remarks:
24 Aug 43: a dispersal area has been cut into a wood off the N boundary but
no aircraft shelters have been built yet.
20 Sep 43: a second dispersal area is being developed off the E boundary.
30 Oct 43: development of the two dispersal areas continues.
3 May 44: camouflage spots have been painted on the landing area to make
it look like its obstructed.
Jun 44: listed by the Luftwaffe as operational.
Operational Units (Regia Aeronautica): 64º Gruppo OA (Apr-Sep 43).
Operational Units (Luftwaffe): 2./NAGr. 13 (c. Apr-Aug 44).
School Units: Stab and I./St.G. 101 (Feb – c. Apr 43); I./Flieger-Rgt. 63
(1943-44).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 63/XIII (Apr 43); Fl.H.Kdtr. A 228/XII (Apr
43); Fl.Pl.Kdo. B 37/XII (c.Apr 43 – Mar 44?); Flugplatzkdo. Cuers of
Fl.H.Kdtr. E 123/XI (See) (Berre) (Mar 44); Flugplatzkdo. Cuers of Fl.H.Kdtr.
E(v) 227/XII Aix-en-Provence (Apr-Aug 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): Ln.-Zug z.b.V. 1 (Apr 44);
Nachschub-Kp. d.Lw. 6/IV (1943 – Oct 43)?; Nachschub-Kp. d.Lw. 7/XIII
(Apr, Aug 44); Lw.-Berge-Btl. IV (Sep 43 – 1944).
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 pp.063-64 (24 Nov 42 updated to 3 May 44) and
A5261 p.1273 (Nov 42?); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site
ww2.dk]
Cuisery (FR) (46 33 42 N – 04 58 33 E)
General: landing ground in E France 84-85 km S of Dijon and 2 km W of the
town of Cuisery. No evidence found of use by the Luftwaffe. Listed as
operational in June 1944.
[Sources: Mattiello]
Cysoing/Nord (FR) (50 35 20 N – 03 14 50 E)
General: field airstrip in NE France 10.5 km ENE of Lille-Vendeville airfield,
9.75 km WSW of Tournai and 3.25 km NE of Cysoing. History: under
construction on 28 May 44 as a satellite strip for Lille-Vendeville airfield.
Surface and Dimensions: grass surface measuring approx. 1280 x 455
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D
Daigny (FR): see Sedan-Daigny.
Damblain (FR) (c. 48 05 N – 05 39 E?)
General: a former landing ground in E France approx103 NW of Belfort, 61
W of Épinal and 1.5 km SE of the village of Damblain? No record found of
Luftwaffe use, but it was listed as operational in June 1944.
[Sources: Mattiello; AFHRA]
Dammartin-en-Goële (FR) (49 02 35 N – 02 43 50 E)
General: a dispersal or satellite field for fighters in N France approx. 32 km
NE of Paris city center and 4 km ESE of Dammartin-en-Goële in a clearing
between two woods. History: the Luftwaffe tried desperately to open and
stock the field with fuel, ammunition and other supplies 8-10 June 1944 but
were unable to because everything was lacking including the motor transport
to get it there. These difficulties were later resolved and the field was open
and serviceable on 21 Jun 44. Surface and Dimensions: leveled grass
measuring approx. 1235 x 1050 meters (1350 x 1150 yards) with an “L”
shape. Infrastructure: farm buildings at the SE corner were used for
accommodations. Dispersal: aircraft parking bays were cut into the woods
bordering the field with 10+ already in existence by 21 Jun 44 and more
under construction.
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Fuel and Ammunition: bulk fuel was stored in the North dispersal area and
possibly in the Southwest dispersal area and on the S boundary. The
ammunition dump was probably in a small grove of trees along the main
road to the N of the airfield.
Infrastructure: had 1 large hangar at the W corner of the landing area and
independent workshop buildings in each of the dispersal areas. Station HQ
and admin offices were reportedly in the village of Prouvy. Personnel were
billeted in huts in the dispersal areas where there were also some storage
huts. Other accommodations were in the hotels in Valenciennes. The
nearest rail connection was in Prouvy.
Dispersal: the 2 dispersals – North and Southwest – had a total of 20 large
covered aircraft shelters and 21 medium covered aircraft shelters.
Taxiways connected the dispersals to the perimeter road.
Defenses: surrounded by 1 heavy and 7 light Flak positions within 1.6 km of
the airfield. Ground defenses consisted of 4 reinforced strongpoints to the
W, N and SW.
Satellites and Decoys:
Denain-Rouvignies (c. 50 20 06 N – 03 26 12 E), either a
satellite/dispersal field for Denain or an a.k.a. for Denain-Prouvy. Located
approx. 2 km NW of Denain-Prouvy airfield.
Valenciennes – La Briquette (c. 50 20 03 N – 03 31 53 E), decoy on
an old abandoned French airdrome 4 km ENE of Denain airfield. Measuring
just 640 x 455 meters (700 x 500 yards), it was deemed too small for
operational use. Had a group of buildings in the NE corner and the
Luftwaffe outfitted it with replica aircraft scattered over the landing area.
Remarks:
2 Sep 43: bombed by 34 B-17 Fortresses – 1 aircraft shelter destroyed and
1 damaged in the North dispersal.
24 Sep 43: obstructions removed and airfield in use.
12 Apr 44: the North dispersal noted as being extended to the NW but no
additional aircraft shelters were yet under construction.
30 May 44: bombed by 9th AAF medium bombers.
14 Jun 44: bombed by 12 B-24 Liberators as a target of opportunity.
28 Jun 44: bombed by 28 B-17 Fortresses as a target of opportunity.
Operational Units: Erprobungsgruppe 210 (Jul 40 – Feb 41); 9./JG 51 (Oct
40); 3.(H)/Aufkl.Gr. 12 (Oct 40)?; 2.(F)/Aufkl.Gr. 33 (Dec 41); detachment
of I./JG 3 (Dec 43 – Jan 44).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 4/III (1944)?; Fl.Pl.Kdo. A 94/XI (1943 –
Mar 44); Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v) 217/XI (Jul-Aug 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): Ldssch.Zug d.Lw. 52/VI
(Apr 44).
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1572-75 (21 Jul 43 updated to 12 Apr 44) and
A5260 pp.1942-45 (21 Jul 43 updated to 12 Apr 44); chronologies; BA-MA;
NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
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small group of barracks and several private homes taken over by the
Luftwaffe were off the N boundary. Station HQ and additional quarters were
in the nearby Château de Beauregard. The nearest rail line passed 275
meters off the NE corner. Dispersal: there were 3 dispersals in summer
1943 – North, South and West – with a total of 6 large and 36 small aircraft
shelters. All of the shelters were connected to the landing area by a
network of taxi tracks. Defenses: had 4 light Flak positions on the N and W
sides of the landing area in Apr 43.
Satellites and Decoys:
Dinan-Coulebart (48 26 45 N – 02 05 20 E), a former French
emergency landing ground measuring 605 x 400 meters (660 x 440 yards)
that may have been used by the Germans as a decoy for Dinan-Trélivan
before being permanent,y obstructed with trenches.
Dinan-le-Quiou (c. 48 21 N – 02 00 W), dummy approx. 13 km SE of
Dinan-Trélivan airfield. No details except that it was still in use in June
1944.
Remarks:
16 Apr 42: landing area observed to be temporarily obstructed.
23 Feb 44: permanently obstructed by trenches. All but 1 of the small
aircraft shelters have been removed.
Operational Units: II./JG 53 (Jun-Aug 40); Stab/JG 77 (Dec 40 – Mar 41);
III./JG 77 (Dec 40 – Jan 41).
Station Commands: Fl.Pl.Kdo. B 28/XII (Jan 43 – Jun 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): Stab/Flak-Brig. V (Aug 40
- ? ); Flak-Rgts.Stab 15 (1943 - Jul 44); le.Flak-Abt. 752 (1943); elements
of le.Flak-Abt. 912 (Apr 43); elements of 5.(Fspr.u.Fschr.Betr.)/Feldluftgau-
Nachr.Rgt. Westfrankreich (c.1942-44); Lw.-Bauleitung III Dinan (c.1940-
44); Ldssch.Kp. d.Lw. 4/XII (Jan 43).
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1584-86 (1 Jul 43 and updated) and A5260
pp.1960-64 (1 Jul 43 updated to 23 Feb 44); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA;
PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Dinard-Pleurtuit (FR) (48 35 30 N – 02 05 00 W)
General: airfield in NW France 60 km NW of Rennes in Brittany; airfield
located 5 km SSW of Dinard and 1.75 km NW of the village of Pleurtuit.
History: used as found during 1940 and early 1941 by the Luftwaffe and
then developed into a major air base for bombers. Relatively active right
through to Jun 44.
Dimensions: approx. 1830 x 1000 meters (2000 x 1100 yards) with an
irregular shape.
Surface and Runways: artificially drained grass on clay subsoil. There were
2 concrete runways in the form of a cross – (1) 1740 meters (1900 yards)
aligned N/S with assembly hardstands at both ends, and (2) 1600 meters
(1750 yards) aligned NW/SE with assembly hardstands at both ends. A
perimeter road encircled the landing area. Equipped with boundary lighting,
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
25 Aug 44: low-level attack by 9th AAF P-38 Lightnings – claimed 21 aircraft
(20 of which were reportedly Ju 52s) and damaged 3 more on the ground.
Airfield being used to evacuate German personnel from France.
Operational Units: 1.(H)/Aufkl.Gr. 14 (Jun 40).
Station Commands: as Fl.H.Kdtr. Tavaux (Apr 41); Flugplatzkdo. Tavaux of
Fl.H.Kdtr. A 222/XII Clermont-Ferrand (1943 – Mar 44); Flugplatzkdo.
Tavaux of Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v) 222/XII (Apr-Sep 44); Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v) 233/VII (Sep
44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): Nachtjagdraumführer 120
(late 43 – early 44)?; Werft-Abt. d.Lw. 127/XII (May-Aug 44); elements of
le.Flak-Abt. 875 (May 44); Stab V.(Flum.Mess)/Ln.-Rgt. 203 (c.Jan-Sep 44);
7.(Funkmess-Ausb.)/Ln.-Ausb.Rgt. 302 (1942/43-44); 20.
(Flugmeldeleit-)/Ln.-Rgt. 53 (Jul-Aug 44); Lw.-Bauleitung Tavaux (c.1940-
44); 3.Kp. Lw.-Bau-Btl. 6/XII (Nov 42); Lw.-Bau-Gerätezug 10/VIII (Nov 42
- ? ).
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1590-93 (26 Oct 43 updated to 23 Apr 44) and
A5260 pp.1971-75 (26 Oct 43 updated to 23 Apr 44); chronologies; BA-MA;
NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Domèvre-Herbéviller (FR) (c. 48 33 N – 06 45 E)
General: landing ground or dispersal field in E France approx. 45 km ESE of
Nancy. No record found of use by the Luftwaffe. Possibly established in
fall 1943. Listed as operational in June 1944.
[Sources: Mattiello]
Domléger (FR) (a.k.a. Domléger-Longvillers) (c. 50 09 N – 02 05 E)
General: landing ground or dispersal field in NE France approx. 19 km ENE
of Abbeville. No record found of use by the Luftwaffe. Listed as
operational in June 1944.
[Sources: Mattiello]
Dommiers (FR) (49 20 N – 03 12 E)
General: airstrip in N France 10 km SW of Soissons.
Remarks:
17 Aug 44: low-level attack by VIII Fighter Command P-47s – claimed 1 x Bf
109 destroyed and 3 more damaged.
Operational Units: none identified.
Station Commands: none identified.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Domqueur (FR) (c. 50 06 N – 02 02 E)
General: landing ground in NE France approx. 15 km E of Abbeville. No
record found of use by the Luftwaffe. Possibly a satellite or dispersal field
for Abbeville.
Remarks:
26 May 42: believed to have become operational this date.
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
East and South – with a total of 29 aircraft shelters. Defenses: had 3 light
Flak positions in Jul 43.
Satellites and Decoys:
Douai/I (50 20 00 N – 03 06 00 E), satellite strip and dispersal field
immediately SW of Douai-Déchy landing ground. Measured 1370 x 185
meters (1500 x 200 yards) and connected to Douai-Déchy landing ground
and Douai/II satellite by a rolled taxiway. At an early state of construction
in Jun 44, it was completed and serviceable by July.
Douai/II (50 20 00 N – 03 05 00 E), satellite strip and dispersal field
immediately WSW of Douai-Déchy landing ground. Measured at least 915 x
185 meters (1000 x 200 yards) and connected to Douai-Déchy landing
ground and Douai/I satellite by a rolled taxiway. Under construction in Jun
44.
Remarks:
20 Jun 42: observed to be obstructed.
21 Dec 43: landing area remains temporarily obstructed with portable
tripods and posts.
11 Apr 44: obstructions have now been removed.
Jul 44: new Allied reconnaissance photos showed Douai-Déchy to have a
main airfield with 6 dispersal areas (Northwest, South, East, Goeulzin, Ferin
and Le Raquet) and 2 satellites (Douai I and Douai II).
Operational Units: none identified.
School Units: Fl.Ausbildungs-Rgt. 12 (1941-42); Fl.Rgt. 22 (1943-44).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 28/IV (May 40 – Apr 41); Fl.Pl.Kdo. C
80/XI (? – Mar 44); Flugplatzkdo. Douai-Dechy of Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v) 218/XI
Cambrai-Épinoy (Apr-Aug 44).
Station and Town Units (on various dates – not complete): part of Flieger-
Ausb.Rgt. 12 (Oct 41); 8.(Flum.Mess)/Ln.-Rgt. 52 (1943-44)?; elements of
Flieger-Rgt. 22 (1944).
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1594-96 (9 Jul 43 updated to 11 Apr 44) and
A5260 pp.1975-77 (9 Jul 43 updated to 21 Dec 43); chronologies; BA-MA;
NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Doue (FR) (48 52 00 N – 03 08 00 E)
General: satellite strip and dispersal field 10 km ENE of Coulommiers airfield
and 2.5 km W of the village of Doue. History: operational in Jun 44.
Surface and Dimensions: measured approx. 1190 meters (1300 yards) in
length. Infrastructure: none noted.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 amendments (21 Jun 44)]
Douigard (FR) (44 11 00 N – 04 48 00 E)
General: satellite strip and dispersal field in S France 6 km NW of Orange-
Caritat airfield and 3.25 km E of the town of Piolenc. History: believed to
have become serviceable at the end of Jul 44. Surface and Dimensions:
measured approx. 1145 x 185 meters (1250 x 200 yards). Taxi tracks
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
radiated out in all directions from the strip to facilitate the concealment of
aircraft in surrounding hedgerows. Infrastructure: none noted.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 Amendment (3 Aug 44]
Doulcon (FR) (c. 49 22 N – 05 09 E)
General: landing ground in E France approx. 83 km E of Reims and 40 km
SSE of Sedan. No information found of use by the Luftwaffe, but listed as
operational in June 1944.
[Sources: Mattiello]
Doullens-Quoeux (FR) (50 18 N – 02 05 E)
General: landing ground 19 km SW of St-Pol in NE France.
Operational Units: none identified.
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 3/III (1940).
Station Units (on various dates): Stab/20. Flak-Brig. (Doullens, Jun-Aug
44); Ln.-Betr.Kp. 180 (Doullens, Jun-Aug 44).
[Sources: chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Doullens – Haute-Visée (FR) (c. 5010 N – 02 20 E)
General: landing ground in NE France approx. 32.5 km N of Amiens and 2.5
km N of Doullens. No record found of use by the Luftwaffe.
Remarks:
26 Jul 42: assigned new airfield code number 266.
[Sources: Mattiello]
Doullens-Ransart (FR) (50 11 10 N – 02 18 30 E)
General: landing ground in NE France c. 30 km N of Amiens, 4 km NNW of
Doullens and immediately SW of the hamlet of Ransart. History: used in
1940 and possibly 1941, but its use (if any) after then is unknown. Surface
and Dimensions: grass surface measuring approx. 1050 x 915 meters (1150
x 1000 yards) and irregular in shape. No paved runway. Taxi tracks and a
perimeter road connected the landing area with the dispersal area. Fuel
and Ammunition: fuel drums were originally stored in the Ransart orchards
but buried fuel tanks were built later. Infrastructure: there was 1 large
hangar with a paved apron on the E boundary with a probable workshop
nearby. Personnel were probably billeted in Ransart and in Haute-Visée,
1.75 km to the ESE. Dispersal: had 2 dispersals – East and South – with a
total of 3 medium covered aqircraft shelters and 7 aircraft parking sites.
Defenses: protected by 8 light Flak positions, but these had all been
abandoned by Dec 42.
Satellites and Decoys:
Beauvoir (a.k.a. La Revetison) (50 14 10 N – 02 18 05 E), decoy 5.5
km N of Doullens-Ransart landing ground.
Remarks:
26 Jul 42: assigned new airfield code number 267.
12 Jul 43: observed to be permanently obstructed with trenches and mounds
of dirt across the landing area.
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nearby villages. The nearest rail connection was the Dreux-Chartres line
1.2 km SW of the airfield.
Dispersal: the West and South dispersals had a total of 30 covered aircraft
shelters, 6 open shelters and 23 unsheltered sites at the end of 1943.
Defenses: approx. 2 heavy and 11 light Flak positions within 3 km. of the
center of the airfield at the end of 1943. Wire fencing surrounded the entire
landing area.
Satellites and Decoys:
Dreux/I (48 41 00 N – 01 22 00 E), satellite strip adjacent to the Dreux
concrete runways. History: under construction in mid-Jun 44 and still
being worked on a month later. Surface and Dimensions: measured
approx. 1100 x 185 meters (1200 x 200 yards). Infrastructure: none
noted.
Remarks:
20 Apr 41: employed 1,000 non-German workers. After most of the Lw.
departed France in May-Jun 41, Dreux was used infrequently until Jun 44.
17 Mar 44: low-level attack – 1 x Ca 148 from Fallschirmschule 1 destroyed
on the ground.
28 Mar 44: low-level attack by VIII Fighter Command P-51s – claimed 1 x Bf
109, 1 x Ju 88 and 1 x unidentified aircraft damaged.
5 Apr 44: low-level attack – 1 x Ju 52 from Fallschirmschule 1 destroyed on
the ground.
Jun 44: new bays under construction in the SE dispersal area along with
additional taxiways.
10 Jun 44: bombed by 26 B-24s and strafed by VIII Fighter Command P-47s
– claimed 1 x Fw 190 destroyed and another damaged on the SE dispersal
field; airfield heavily damaged.
12 Jun 44: a prepared airstrip 275 meters wide has been built on the S side
of the NW/SE runway. The Southeast (remote) dispersal area is under
further development with 6 additional aircraft bays already cut into the
woods.
13 Jun 44: bombed by 52 B-17s.
21 Aug 44: taken by U.S. forces and restored to service as Allied Airfield A-
41 Dreux.
Operational Units: I./KG 55 (Aug 40 – Jun 41); 2./KG 51 (Dec 43 – Mar
44); I./KG 51 (Apr-May 44); I./SKG 10 (Jun 44); IV./JG 3 (Jun 44); Stab/JG
3 (Jul-Aug 44).
School Units: Fallschirmschule 4 (1942-43); Fallschirmschule 1 (1943-44).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 7/XVII (Sep 40 - Mar 44); Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v)
205/XII (Apr-Aug 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): Werft-Abt.(v) 109/XII
(May 44); Luftzeuggruppe 12 (Saint-Georges-Motel, Jun 40 - ?);
Feldluftzeuggruppe Westfrankreich (Saint-Georges-Motel, c. 1940 – Dec 43);
gem.Flak-Abt. 344 (May 44); gem.Flak-Abt. 555 (Jul 44); Flak-Abt. z.b.V.
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Infrastructure: there were 2 small hangars in the SE corner that were joined
together with camouflage netting, with another small hangar for repairs in
the Southwest dispersal area. Workshop buildings were on the N boundary
and off the SE and SW corners. Personnel were probably accommodated in
Dunkirk and in local villages and farms. The nearest rail connection was 4
km S of the airfield.
Dispersal: there were 3 in Jul 43 – Northeast, Southwest and Northwest –
with a total of 46 aircraft shelters.
Defenses: had 1 heavy and 3 light Flak positions in the vicinity of the
airfield in Jul 43. The entire area around the field was heavily fortified with
bunkers, pillboxes, infantry trenches, coastal batteries and barbed wire
entanglements.
Remarks:
Sep 40: assigned airfield code number 387.
1940-41: Dunkirk and the military installations around it were heavily
bombed and strafed by the RAF.
Jun 42: runway and landing area temporarily obstructed with portable
apparatuses.
Mar 43: landing area now permanently trenched.
7 Jun 43: strong appearance that the runway has been prepared for
demolition, according to a report (probably photo reconnaissance).
8 Oct 43: several unfilled craters observed on the landing area which was
still obstructed. The runway was also seen to be obstructed and several
aircraft shelters in the Southwest dispersal were destroyed.
Operational Units: Stab, I., II./JG 2 (Aug-Sep 40); II./JG 51 (Oct-Dec 40,
Feb-Jun 41); Stab/JG 51 (Nov-Dec 40, Feb-May 41).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 32/XI (c.Jul 40 – Dec 42).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): elements of Ldssch.Kp.
d.Lw. 3/XIII (Aug 40).
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1605-07 (11 Jul 43 updated to 8 Oct 43) and
A5260 pp.1987-90 (11 Jul 43 updated to 8 Oct 43); chronologies; BA-MA;
NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Dunkirk (FR): see Dünkirchen.
E
Éauze (FR) (c. 43 51 N – 00 06 E)
General: landing ground in SW France approx. 48 km E of Mont-de-Marsan.
No evidence found of use by the Luftwaffe. Listed as operational in June
1944.
[Sources: Mattiello]
Ecausseville (FR) (49 27 20 N – 01 22 45 W)
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(Jul 41 – Jan 42); Stab/KG 55 (Nov 41 – Apr 42); Stab/KG 2 (Dec 41);
Erprobungsstaffel Me 210 (Jul-Aug 42); JG 27 (Jan-Feb 43); V./KG 2 (Jun-
Aug 43); Stab/KG 51 (Dec 43); 3./KG 51 (Dec 43 – Apr 44); JG 3 (Jun-Jul
44); JG 5 (Jun 44).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 7/XVII (Jul-Aug 40); Fl.H.Kdtr. E 26/XII
(c.Sep 40 – Dec 42); as Fl.Pl.Kdo. Evreux (Apr 41)?; Fl.H.Kdtr. A 206/XII
(Jan 43 – Mar 44); Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v) 207/XII (Apr-Aug 44).
Station Units (on various dates): II./Flak-Rgt. 43 (gem. mot.) (Jun 40);
elements of I./Flak-Rgt. 51 (Jul 40); 5/gem.Flak-Abt. 442 (Jun 44);
gem.Flak-Abt. 496 (Jun-Aug 44); gem.Flak-Abt. 672 (1943); gem.Flak-Abt.
683 (Aug 43); le.Flak-Abt. 842 (Jun-Aug 44); 2./le.Res.Flak-Abt. 984 (Apr
42); Stab and two batteries/Flak-Abt. z.b.V. 13100 (Jun 44); Alarm-Flak-
Battr. 68/XII (Jul 44)?; 1.Kp./Luftschutz-Abt. d.Lw. 35 (1943 – Aug 44);
Stab/Luftgau-Nachr.Rgt. Westfrankreich (Jun-Jul 44); elements of 3.
(Fspr.u.Fschr.Betr.)/Feldluftgau-Nachr.Rgt. Westfrankreich (c.1942-44);
Flughafenbereichs-Ln.-Kp. z.b.V. (mot) 20 (Ln.-Kp. z.b.V. 20) (1944);
Stab/Lw.-Bau-Rgt. 6/XII (Aug 40, Jan 41)?; Lw.-Bauleitung V Evreux
(c.1940-44); Lw.-Bau-Btl. 13/VII (Jan, Jun 41); Lw.-Bau-Gerätezug 5/XVII
(1940 – mid-42).
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1616-30 (15 Jun 43 updated to 28 May 44) and
A5260 pp.2003-14 (15 Jun 43 updated to 8 May 44); chronologies; BA-MA;
NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Évreux – St.-Martin (FR) (c. 49 01 38 N – 01 08 32 E)
General: landing ground (Landeplatz) in NW France 45.5 km S of Rouen.
Air Units: none identified.
Station Commands: none identified.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
F
Falaise (FR) (a.k.a. Falaise-Villy) (c. 48 55 N – 00 09 W)
General: landing ground in Normandy 5 km NE of Falaise. No record
found of any Luftwaffe flying units being based there.
Remarks:
20 Apr 41: employed 150 non-German workers.
Operational Units: none identified.
Station Commands: none identified.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Favreuse (FR) (48 44 00 N – 02 12 00 E)
General: satellite strip and dispersal field in NW France 3.25 km S of
Villacoublay airfield and immediately NE of Favreuse Farm. History:
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prepared in June 1944 for Villacoublay and Paris-Buc airfields for the
dispersal of aircraft before impending air attack. Surface and Dimensions:
measured approx. 1145 x 365 meters (1250 x 400 yards). Infrastructure:
none noted.
[Sources: A.I.2.(b)/Air Ministry Amendment dated 6 Jul 44 in
BNA(PRO)/AIR 40]
Fayence (FR) (43 36 45 N – 06 41 55 E)
General: landing ground in SE France 27.5 km WNW of Cannes and 1.6 km
SE of Fayence. History: a small French military airfield to Nov 42 that was
used very little. No record of use by the Luftwaffe. Surface and
Dimensions: soft, poorly drained clay surface measuring approx. 870 x 825
meters (950 x 900 yards). Fuel and Ammunition: refueling points were
located at the NE and SE corners. Infrastructure: had 2 small hangars off
the NE corner. A small group of buildings off the NE corner were most likely
for offices and barracks. The nearest rail connection was in Fayence.
Dispersal: no organized dispersal facilities. Defenses: none noted.
Remarks:
20 Sep 43: landing area temporarily obstructed.
10 Nov 43: one of the hangars at the NE corner has been removed and the
roof of the second is being dismantled.
Jun 44: listed by the Luftwaffe as operational.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 pp.065-66 (27 Nov 42 updated to 10 Nov 43) and
A5261 p.1274 (27 Nov 42); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site
ww2.dk]
Fécamp-Bénouville, Fécamp-Életot, Fécamp-Mentheville,
Fécamp – St-Hélene (FR) (c. 49 45 N – 00 21 E)
General: landing grounds in NE France near Fécamp on the Channel coast
NNE of Le Havre. No record found of any Luftwaffe units being based at
any of these landing grounds.
Féniers-Clairvaux (FR) (45 45 35 N – 02 08 45 E)
General: landing ground in south-central France c. 74 km W of Clermont-
Ferrand and 1.6 km NE of Féniers. History: unknown. No record of use by
the Luftwaffe. Surface and Dimensions: grass surface measuring approx.
915 x 185 meters (1000 x 200 yards) with a narrow irregular shape.
Infrastructure: had 1 small rectangular building and 3 small huts off the NW
corner. The nearest rail connection was in the village of Clairvaux, 2.5 km
to the NE. Dispersal: no organized dispersal facilities. Defenses: none
noted.
Remarks:
13 May 43: landing area permanently obstructed by rough plowing.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 p.067 (17 Jun 43); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA;
PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Ferques (FR) (c. 50 49 N – 01 45 E)
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Sep 40: assigned airfield code number 574. Came under Koflug 19/XI
(Beauvais).
[Sources: Mattiello]
Fontaine (FR) (47 39 23 N – 07 00 38 E)
General: landing ground in E France 12 km E of Belfort and immediately E
of the village of Fontaine. History: a wartime French landing ground that
was inactivated and probably returned to cultivation during the German
occupation. Rehabilitated in May 1944. Surface and Dimensions: 2 strips
measuring approx. 1000 x 185 meters (1100 x 200 yards) and 1190 x 165
meters (1300 x 180 yards). Infrastructure: had 1 small hangar with an
adjacent hut at the NW corner.
[Sources: A.I.2.(b)/Air Ministry Amendment dated 27 May 44 in
BNA(PRO)/AIR 40]
Fontaine-les-Bassets (FR) (48 52 10 N – 00 00 40 W)
General: landing ground in Normandy 13.5 km ESE of Falaise, 11 km N of
Argentan and 1.6 km NW of the tiny village of Fontaine-les-Bassets.
History: used by the French prior to 22 Jun 40. Little if any use by the
Germans who obstructed it in 1942 with trenches plowed across the landing
area. Rehabilitated in spring 1944 and in use by fighters in Apr 44.
Surface and Dimensions: grass surface measuring approx. 1150 x 1050
meters (1250 x 1150 yards) and roughly “T” shaped. No paved runway.
Infrastructure: none. The nearest rail connection was 8.5 km WNW of the
landing ground in a small village on the outskirts of Falaise. Dispersal: no
organized dispersal. Defenses: none.
Remarks:
29 Jul 43 and 7 Nov 43: landing area seen to be permanently obstructed
with trenches and logs.
Operational Units: none identified.
Station Commands: none identified.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1633-34 (27 Aug 43 updated to 4 May 44) and
A5260 pp.2016-17 (27 Aug 43 updated to 7 Nov 43); chronologies; BA-MA;
NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Fontenay (FR) (a.k.a. Fontenay-le-Comte) (46 26 30 N – 00 47 45 W)
General: landing ground in W France 40.5 km NE of La Rochelle and 3.25
km SSE of Fontenay-le-Comte. History: a French Air Force landing ground
prior to the 22 Jun 40 armistice. Inactive and mostly obstructed until early
1943 when it was enlarged and the hangar erected, and then relatively
continuous use from Feb 44. Surface and Dimensions: uneven soft grass,
partially leveled and artificially drained. Measured approx. 1555 x 1415
meters (1700 x 1550 yards) with an irregular shape. No paved runway.
Possibly equipped with boundary lighting. Fuel and Ammunition: fuel
storage possibly on the NW boundary and at the SE corner near the hangar.
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at the end of July. Surface and Dimensions: measured approx. 1000 x 550
meters (1100 x 600 yards). Infrastructure: none noted.
[Sources: A.I.2.(b)/Air Ministry Amendment dated 27 Jul 44 in
BNA(PRO)/AIR 40]
Frevent (FR) see Nuncq.
G
Gaël (FR) (48 05 05 N – 02 11 45 W)
General: airfield in Brittany 39 km W of Rennes and 5.5 km SSE of Gaël.
History: a pre-war civil airfield. Although the Luftwaffe engaged in quite a
bit of construction work at Gaël from mid-1940 to mid-1943 that included
extensive leveling, installation of artificial drainage and camouflaging the
landing area, few units were ever based there.
Dimensions: approx. 1100 x 915 meters (1200 x 1000 yards) and roughly
rectangular in shape.
Surface and Runways: artificially drained grass surface. No paved runway.
Equipped with boundary lighting.
Fuel and Ammunition: 3 x 25,000 liter each bulk fuel storage tanks
reportedly near the hangars at the SW corner.
Infrastructure: there were 2 hangars, each capable of accommodating 8
aircraft, and 1 smaller hangar at the SW corner. Separate workshop
buildings were behind the hangars. Most personnel were billeted in
barracks and huts grouped behind the hangar area. The nearest rail
connection was in Gaël.
Dispersal: the 2 areas – Southwest and Noutheast – had a total of 12 large
covered aircraft shelters in Jul 43.
Defenses: had 7 light Flak positions in May 43.
Remarks:
20 Apr 41: employed 862 non-German workers.
26 Sep 43: leveling work seen to be underway on the E boundary.
21 Mar 44: bombed – 1 x Fi 156 and 1 x Kl 35 from Luftdienstkdo. 1/12
damaged on the ground.
11 Apr 44: airfield dive-bombed by a large force of 9th AAF P-47
Thunderbolts.
7 May 44: leveling work continuing on the N and E boundaries; a refueling
loop under construction on the W boundary; one of the hangars and a
workshop seen to have been severely damaged in previous raids; direct hits
in the Southeast dispersal destroyed and damaged several aircraft shelters
and cratered the taxiway.
10 Jun 44: airfield bombed by 36 B-17 Fortresses.
15 Jun 44: airfield bombed by 12 B-17s.
1 Aug 44: immediate demolition of airfield ordered.
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[Sources: Mattiello]
Goulet (FR) (48 44 30 N – 00 06 20 W)
General: field airstrip in Normandy 6.5 km W of Argentan and 1.2 km NW of
the village of Goulet. History: under construction with leveling work still
underway on 6 Jul 44. Not yet serviceable. Surface and Dimensions:
grass surface measuring approx. 1145 x 230 meters (1250 x 250 yards).
Infrastructure: none. Dispersal: no organized dispersal facilities evident.
Defenses: none noted.
Operational Units: none identified.
Station Commands: none identified.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 p.1639 (6 Jul 44); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA;
PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Grandchamp (FR): see Vannes.
Grandville (FR) (Grandvillé) (a.k.a. Bissay) (48 22 00 N – 01 57 00 E)
General: satellite strip and dispersal field in north-central France c. 16 km
SW of Etampes, 9.5 km W of Etampes-Mondesir airfield and 2 km NW of the
village of Grandvillé. History: a disused former landing ground that was
under cultivation until summer 1944. By early Aug 44, efforts were
underway to develop a strip along the S side of the former landing ground.
Surface and Dimensions: measured approx. 1000 x 1000 meters (1100 x
1100 yards). Infrastructure: none noted.
[Sources: A.I.2.(b)/Air Ministry Amendment dated 12 Aug 44 in
BNA(PRO)/AIR 40]
Grandvilliers (FR) (49 40 50 N – 01 57 00 E)
General: landing ground in NE France 35.5 km SW of Amiens, 14.5 km SSW
of Poix airfield and 1.6 km NNE of the town of Grandvilliers. History: built
by the Luftwaffe in 1940 and used by fighters during the opening phase of
the Battle of Britain. Inactivated and obstructed with trenches in 1941-42.
Rehabilitated in Jun-Jul 44 to serve as a satellite for Poix airfield. Surface
and Dimensions: grass surface measuring approx. 1510 x 455 meters (1650
x 500 yards). Infrastructure: none. Dispersal: no organized dispersal but
aircraft could be concealed in orchards off the S side of the airstrip.
Defenses: none noted.
Remarks:
Sep 40: assigned airfield code number 557.
26 Jul 42: assigned new airfield code number 268.
Operational Units: I./JG 3 (Jun-Jul 40).
Station Commands: none identified.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 p.1639 (8 Jul 44); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA;
PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Granville (FR) (c. 48 50 N – 01 35 W)
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completed on each runway before work was finally halted. Both were then
obstructed with portable barricades.
Fuel and Ammunition: no information.
Infrastructure: An administrative building was located on the W boundary.
The nearest rail connection was in Grenoble.
Dispersal: no organized dispersal facilities.
Defenses: a light Flak position was sited near the admin building on the W
boundary.
Remarks:
2 Jul 44: the portable obstacles have been removed from the 2 unfinished
runways.
Operational Units: none identified.
Station Commands: none identified.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 pp.073-75 (18 Mar 43 updated to 2 Jul 44);
chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Grévillers (FR) (a.k.a. Achiet, Bapaume, Grévillers-Bapaume) (50 06 15
N – 02 47 05 E)
General: airfield in NE France 20 km S of Arras, 5 km W of Bapaume and 2
km W of Grévillers.
History: built by the RAF in 1939-40. The Luftwaffe took it over in 1940
and widened one of the runways for use by bombers during the Battle of
Britain. Used very little if any at all during 1942 and 1943 during which
time it was obstructed and inactive.
Dimensions: approx. 1100 x 1000 meters (1200 x 1100 yards).
Surface and Runways: both runways (not clear whether prepared or paved)
were equipped with permanent illumination and visual Lorenz systems.
Fuel and Ammunition: had 3 refueling loops located off the NE corner, on
the SE boundary and at the center of the SW boundary. Ammunition was
probably stored in the woods to the SE of the landing area and along the taxi
tracks leading to the dispersal areas.
Infrastructure: there was 1 small hangar for repairs in the East dispersal
area. Probable barrack huts were on the outskirts of Grévillers and Irles,
and each dispersal area had a cluster of 3 huts that were probably used for
offices, crew rooms and stores. A special branch rail line connected the NE
corner of the airfield with the Bapaume-Achiet line.
Dispersal: had 3 dispersal areas – East, Southeast and West – with a total
of 39 large aircraft shelters.
Defenses: there were 2 heavy Flak positions and 7 light Flak positions in Oct
43, but these were partly unoccupied.
Satellites and Decoys:
Achiet-Martinpuich (50 02 45 N – 02 46 50 E), dummy located 7.5 km
S of Achiet airfield.
Remarks:
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Operational Units: III./JG 3 (Jul 40); Stab, III./JG 27 (Aug-Nov 40); I./JG
27 (Sep 40).
Reserve Training & Replacement Units: Erg.St./JG 27 (Oct – Nov 40).
Station Commands: none identified.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 p.2028 (12 Aug 43); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA;
PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Guînes-Hames (FR) (c. 50 52 N – 01 50 E)
General: landing ground in NE France approx. 8 km S of Calais and 2.5 km
NW of Guînes. No record found of Luftwaffe use. Possibly served as an
alternate landing ground for the other 2 landing ground around Guînes.
Remarks:
Sep 40: assigned airfield code number 321 or 333. Came under Koflug
8/III (Saint-Omer).
[Sources: Mattiello]
Guînes – La Place (FR): see Pihen.
Guise (FR) (a.k.a. Villers-lès-Guise) (49 56 00 N – 03 40 00 E)
General: landing ground in E France 25 km E of St-Quentin, 5 km NNE of
the small town of Guise and 2 km NNW of the village of Villers-lès-Guise.
There were two strips: Guise/Nord and GHuise/Süd. History: heavily used
during the May-June 1940 campaign by air units and as a major Luftwaffe
fuel, ammunition, etc., supply hub, then inactivated after the campaign. In
1943 it was obstructed by plowing but then rehabilitated in spring 1944.
Evidence of use in 1944 has not been found. Surface and Dimensions:
measured approx. 1100 x 915 meters (1200 x 1000 yards). Infrastructure:
had a small hangar at the S corner. Personnel were billeted at a farm off
the W corner.
Satellites and Decoys:
Guise-Crupilly (c. 49 55 00 N – 03 44 00 E), satellite strip c. 7 km ENE
of Guise landing ground that became operational on 1 Jun 40.
Remarks:
Sep 40: assigned airfield code number 337. Came under Koflug 11/VI
(Laon).
Operational Units: I./JG 51 (May 40); II.(Schlacht)/LG 2 (May 40); I., II.,
III./St.G. 2 (May 40); I./St.G. 76 (May-Jun 40); I./JG 1 (May-Jun 40); Stab,
I./JG 27 (Jun 40); I./Trägergruppe 186 (May-Jun 40); I./JG 21 (Crupilly, Jun
40); II./St.G. 2 (Jun 40); I./St.G. 77 (Jun 40).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 6/VII (Jun 40); Fl.Pl.Kdo. A 41/XI (1943-
44)?
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): Luftgaustab z.b.V. 112
(May-Jun 40); Koflug 1202 (Jun 40); I./Flak-Rgt. 22 (gem. mot.) (May 40);
schw.Flak-Abt. 702(v) (May 40); Fl.Betr.St.Kol. 1/XIII (May 40);
Fl.Betr.St.Kol. 2/XIII (May 40); Kw.-Werkstattzug 112 (May 40).
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H
Ham-les-Moines (FR): see Charleville.
Hangest (FR): see Moreuil-Hangest.
Haspres (FR) (50 17 00 N – 03 25 00 E)
General: satellite strip and dispersal field in NE France 6.5 km SW of
Denain-Prouvy airfield and 2 km N of the villages of Haspres. History:
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Defenses: 1 heavy and 9 light Flak positions surrounded the station on the
N, S and W sides in Oct 43. Ground defenses included an antitank ditch
and some belts of barbed wire.
Remarks:
5 Nov 43: previously obstructed, the airfield ordered abandoned, all installed
equipment removed, infrastructure destroyed and the land returned to
agricultural use (Qu./Feldluftgaukdo. W/F).
4 Apr 44: permanently obstructed – landing area trenched and runway
blown up by mines.
Operational Units (Regia Aeronautica): 136ª Squadriglia/64º Gruppo OA
(Apr-Sep 43); 171ª Squadriglia RM (Feb 43).
Operational Units (Luftwaffe): none identified.
Station Commands: none identified.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): 10.(Flum.Mess)/Ln.-Rgt.
51 (1943-44).
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 pp.076-80 (14 Nov 42 updated to 4 Apr 44);
chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
I
Idos (FR) (43 14 00 N – 00 01 00 E)
General: satellite strip and dispersal field in SW France 6 km NNE of Tarbes-
Ossun airfield, 1.6 km ENE of the village of Idos and 1.2 km S of Dorderes
airstrip. History: leveling work was still in progresson 25 May 44 and strip
not yet serviceable. Surface and Dimensions: measured 1245 x 275
meters (1360 x 300 yards) with a single strip aligned E/W. Infrastructure:
none noted.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 Amendment (25 May 44]
Illiers-l’Eveque (FR): see Marcilly-la-Campagne.
Ingrandes (FR) (47 23 00 N – 00 54 00 W)
General: satellite strip and dispersal field in W France 28 km WSW of
Angers airfield and 2 km SSE of the village of Ingrandes. On the south
bank of the Loire. History: built during Jul 44 as a satellite for Angers.
Surface and Dimensions: measured approx. 1325 x 275 meters (1450 x 300
yards). Infrastructure: none noted.
[Sources: A.I.2.(b)/Air Ministry Amendment dated 26 Jul 44 in
BNA(PRO)/AIR 40]
Intraville (FR): see Dieppe-Intraville.
Issoudun (FR) (46 53 25 N – 02 02 20 E)
General: landing ground in C France 7.5 km SSE of Issoudun, 3.25 km W of
Ségry and 4 km E of Condé. History: construction is said to have begun in
1939 by had not been completed before the Jun 40 armistice. No record
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[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1655-56 (18 Aug 43 updated to 16 Sep 43) and
A5260 pp.2044-46 (18 Aug 43 updated to 16 Sep 43); chronologies; BA-MA;
NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Istres-le-Tubé (FR) (43 31 00 N – 04 57 10 E)
General: airfield in S France 40 km WNW of Marseille, 3 km WNW of the
city of Istres and c. 500 meters W of the village of Le-Tubé.
History: Istres le-Tubé was the main airfield in a complex of airfields and
landing grounds on the La Crau plain between the Étang de Berre and the
Rhône River, and was an important French Air Force bomber base before
and after the armistice of Jun 40 with 3 or 4 groups of LeO 45s there most of
the time. It was the principal departure and arrival hub for Vichy Air Force
flights to and from Syria during 1941. Taken over by the Luftwaffe in Nov
42 and became the largest and most important base in S France until Aug
44.
Dimensions: almost unlimited – no specific dimensions given.
Surface and Runways: all-weather, hard gravel-soil surface (no grass).
Had 1 concrete runway measuring 1465 meters (1600 yards) and aligned
NW/SE. Equipped with boundary lighting, a visual beacon and a visual
Lorenz system by Nov 43.
Fuel and Ammunition: there was a large (500,000 liter) above ground fuel
storage site at the NE corner and a smaller underground site behind the
center of the 4 large hangars. Ammunition storage was off the E boundary
and off the SE corner of the landing ground.
Infrastructure: Istres-le-Tubé had a very large number of hangars – (1) off
the E boundary were 4 large hangars, 1 large triple span hangar, 1 large
double hangar and 2 large factory buildings occupied by the firm Société
nationale des constructions aéronautiques du sud-est (S.N.C.A. du S.E.),
these comprising workshops and stores; (2) off the SE corner were 7
medium hangars with a group of narrow workshop buildings and engine test
beds behind them. The station HQ, officers’ quarters, NCO quarters,
barracks, messes, base dispensary, etc., were in a group of some 42
buildings behind the hangars and factory buildings on the E boundary. The
control tower was at the N end of the row of hangars and the base motor
pool and garages were behind the control tower. A special branch rail line
with sidings, platform and sheds served the N side of the station buildings.
Dispersal: no organized dispersal facilities prior to mid-1943. These were
then built and there were 4 by Mar 44 – North, Northeast, Northwest and
Southwest – with a total of 31 open aircraft shelters and 54+ aircraft
parking hardstands.
Defenses: Istres-le-Tubé and its 2 satellites had a total of 7 heavy and 28
light Flak positions surrounding them in Jun 43. A later estimate in Nov 43
showed 7 heavy and 20 light Flak positions plus 6 antiaircraft machine gun
positions. Ground defenses consisted mainly of an antitank ditch.
Satellites and Decoys:
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15 Mar 44: a probable ammunition dump was under construction off the NE
corner of the airfield.
13 Aug 44: strafed by 12th AAF fighters.
Operational Units (Regia Aeronautica): Reparto Speciale Aerosilurante
(Special Aerial Torpedo Unit) (Jun 43).
Operational Units (Luftwaffe): 10.(Jabo)/JG 26 (Nov-Dec 42); detachment
of III./JG 2 (Nov 42); I./KG 2 (Nov 42); I./KG 6 (Nov-Dec 42, Jun-Jul 43);
Stab, III./KG 6 (Jun-Jul 43); part of 1.(F)/Aufkl.Gr. 33 (Jun-Aug/Sep 43);
GS-Kdo. 1 (Jun-Sep 43); GS-Kdo. 2 (Jun-Sep 43); Stab, III./KG 100 (Jul-
Nov 43); II./KG 100 (Jul 43, Sep-Nov 43); I./LLG 2 (Jul/Aug-Sep 43); 3.
(F)/Aufkl.Gr. 122 (Jul-Dec 43); 1./NAGr. 16 (Jul-Aug 43); I./LLG 1 (Aug-Oct
43); part of I./TG 5 (Aug 43); Stab, I., II./KG 30 (Jan 44); part of II./KG 76
(Mar-Jul 44); III./KG 77 (Mar-Apr 44); 6./KG 77 (Jun-Aug 44); II./KG 26
(Aug 44).
School Units: II./Flieger-Rgt. 63 (1943-44).
Reserve Training & Replacement Units: IV./KG 3 (Dec 42 – Jun 43); IV./KG
54 (May 43).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 73/III (Nov-Dec 42); Fl.H.Kdtr. A 220/XII
(Jan/Feb 43 - Mar 44); Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v) 240/XII (Apr-Aug 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): Arbeitsstab Hptm.
Pohl/XI. Fliegerkorps (c. May-Sep 43); 4. Flugh.Betr.Kp./KG 3 (Jan-Jun 43);
two Züge of 129. Flugh.Betr.Kp. (Qu) (1943 - Aug 44); Werftteilkdo. 2/WF
(Apr 44); Luftminen-Zug 16 (Feb 44); gem.Flak-Abt. 346 (Jul 44); 5.
(Flieger-Kp.)/Ln.-Abt. 41 (Jul-Aug 43); Wetterberatungszentrale (mot) d.Lw.
53/WF (Apr 44).
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 pp.082-93 (17 Jun 43 updated to 15 Mar 44);
chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
J
Jersey (FR/GB) (49 12 25 N – 02 12 05 W)
General: landing ground on the isle of Jersey in the British Channel Islands
off the coast of Normandy; landing ground located 7.25 km WNW of Saint
Helier town center. History: opened as a civil airport on 10 Mar 37, then
enlarged and further developed by the Luftwaffe with hangars and concrete
taxiways following the Jun 40 occupation, and mainly used during 1940-41
as a forward staging field for reconnaissance and fighter aircraft. Used only
occasionally after late 1941. Surface and Dimensions: grass surface
measuring approx. 915 x 550 meters (1000 x 600 yards) with an irregular
shape. No paved runway. Fuel and Ammunition: both available.
Infrastructure: had 2 small hangars on the E boundary. Personnel were
accommodated in St. Peter’s Barracks on the SW corner. The island railway
was just 1.2 km to the S. Dispersal: the only dispersal area – South
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Remarks: none.
Operational Units: none identified.
Station Commands: none identified.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 p.1658 (6 Jul 44); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA;
PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Jonzac (FR) (c. 45 29 N – 00 25 W)
General: landing ground in west-central France approx. 71 km NNE of
Bordeaux. No record found of use by the Luftwaffe, but it was listed as
operational in June 1944.
[Sources: Mattiello]
Juvincourt (FR) (a.k.a. Juvincourt-et-Damary) (49 25 35 N – 03 52 55
E)
General: airfield (Fliegerhorst) in NE France 25 km NW of Reims, 6 km W of
Guignicourt, 3 km NNW of Berry-au-Bac and 2.4 km SSW of Juvincourt
village.
History: a prewar French air force field that was used by RAF Battles during
the 1939-40 period. After the Luftwaffe captured in in June 1940, 3 long
concrete runways were built, dispersal areas added with improvements still
underway in mid-1943. Used by bombers during 1940-41 but converted
into a night fighter station in 1942.
Dimensions: approx. 1145 x 915 meters (1250 x 1000 yards). By Sep 43
this had been extended to approx. 1370 x 915 meters (1500 x 1000 yards)
and further work was underway to level and grade 185 meter wide strips on
either side of the NNW/SSE runway.
Surface and Runways: grass surface with 3 concrete runways, each of
approx. 1600 meters (1750 yards), aligned NE/SW, E/W and NNW/SSE. A
concrete perimeter track enclosed the entire airfield and linked the ends of
each runway. Equipped for night landings with full illumination, permanent
flarepath, beam approach and a visual Lorenz system for all 3 runways.
Visual beacons were located to the N and W of the airfield.
Fuel and Ammunition: had laddered servicing hardstands with probable
refueling points in the East dispersal area, and buried bulk storage tanks in
the S and W corners of the landing area. There were two storage areas for
munitions, one in a woods off the W corner of the landing area, and the
other an open dump just outside the W corner of the landing area.
Infrastructure: there was 1 small hangarfor repairs in the West dispersal
area and a compass swing some 1280 meters (1400 yards) NNW of the
hangar. Station HQ, fire station, power station, canteen and office huts
were along the S, W and NW boundaries of the airfield. Barracks were on
the SE side of Juvincourt village while officers and aircrew were billeted in
Cormicy, about 6 km S of the airfield. A branch rail line from Amifontaine
to the airfield was under construction in May 1943.
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Dispersal: there were two areas in early 1943 – West dispersal and East
dispersal with a total of 38 covered aircraft shelters plus 1 parking site. In
mid- Sep 43 a new Northeast dispersal was under development that brought
the totals to 38 large covered aircraft shelters, 14 large open shelters and 5
large parking sites.
Defenses: had 1 heavy Flak position with 6 guns, and 10 light Flak
positions, some of which had more than a single gun. Several road blocks
and bunker strongpoints were located along the roads leading to the airfield.
Satellites and Decoys:
Juvincourt-Damery (c. 49 27 12 N – 03 57 14 E), dummy 5.5 km NE of
the airfield and just SW of the village of Prouvais.
Remarks:
29 May 42: bombed – 3 x Bf 110Ds and Es from III./NJG 4 damaged.
27 Feb 43: leveling work reported to be in progress in the area SE of the
NE/SW runway.
16 Aug 43: bombed – 2 x Bf 110 G-4s from III./NJG 4 destroyed.
3 Mar 44: bombed by 9th AAF B-26 Marauders – 2 covered aircraft shelters in
the West dispersal area destroyed and the munitions dump in the woods off
the W corner of the landing area damaged; runways and landing area were
not seriously affected.
11 Apr 44: low-level attack by RAF Spitfires – claimed 6 aircraft shot up and
destroyed.
9 May 44: bombed by 71 B-17 Fortresses.
16 Jun 44: bombed by 38 B-17s.
23 Jun 44: bombed by 113 B-24 Liberators.
28 Jun 44: bombed by 64 B-17s.
23 Jul 44: bombed by 48 B-24s.
29 Jul 44: bombed by 38 B-24s.
12 Aug 44: bombed by 52 B-24s.
Operational Units: II./KG 77 (Dec 40 – Jan 41); III./KG 77 (Nov 40 – Jun
41); Stab, I./KG 77 (Mar-Jun 41); III./NJG 4 (c.Sep 42 – Aug 44);
Luftbeobachtungsstaffel 4 (May-Jun 44); I./KG 54 (Jun-Aug 44);
detachment of 1./Versuchsverband des OKL (Jul-Aug 44); Einsatzkdo.
Schenck (Aug 44); Sonderkdo. Götz (Aug 44); 1.(F)/Aufkl.Gr. 121 (Aug 44).
Reserve Training & Replacement Units: IV./KG 2 (Jun 41 – Jan 42).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 17/XI (Jul 40? – Mar 44); Fl.H.Kdtr. E
231/XI (Apr-Aug 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): Nachtjagdraumführer 8
(Jul 42 – Feb 44); elements of le.Res.Flak-Abt. 773 (Sep 42); elements of
le.Flak-Abt. 680 (Apr 43); Stab III.(Flum.Mess)/Ln.-Rgt. 203 (1943).
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 p.1659-62 and A5260 pp.2050-53 (27 May 43
updated to 3 Mar 44); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site
ww2.dk]
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
L
L’Aberwrac’h (FR) (48 35 55 N – 04 33 40 W)
General: seaplane anchorage in Brittany 24 km NNW of Brest. History:
used occasionally by Luftwaffe seaplanes but no evidence has been found of
any units being stationed there.
[Sources: chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
La Bohalle (FR) (c. 47 25 N – 00 23 W)
General: landing ground in west-central France approx. 14.5 km SE of
Angers. No record found of use by the Luftwaffe. Listed as operational in
June 1944.
[Sources: Mattiello]
La Charité-sur-Loire (FR) (c. 47 10 N – 03 01 E)
General: landing ground in C France approx. 23 km NNW of Nevers. No
record found of use by the Luftwaffe. Listed as operational in June 1944.
[Sources: Mattiello]
La Chauśsee (FR) (46 58 10 N – 02 37 40 E)
General: landing ground in C France 23 km SE of Bourges, 7.25 km SSW of
Avord and 3.5 km E of the village of Vornay. History: laid out in 1939-40
but no evidence of use by either the French Air Force or the Luftwaffe.
Surface and Dimensions: grass surface measuring approx. 715 x 595
meters (780 x 650 yards). No paved runway. Infrastructure: none. The
nearest rail connection was in Avord. Dispersal: no organized dispersal
facilities. Defenses: none.
Remarks:
12 May 43: landing area appears to be obstructed with portable barricades.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 p.094 (17 Jun 43); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA;
PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
La Courtine-les-Fagettes (FR) (c. 45 43 N – 02 16 E)
General: landing ground in south-central France approx. 65 km W of
Clermont-Ferrand and 2.5 km NE of La Courtine. No record found of use by
the Luftwaffe. Listed as operational in June 1944.
[Sources: Mattiello]
La Fère-Courbes (FR) (a.k.a. Courbes) (49 40 40 N – 03 28 00 E)
General: landing ground in NE France 18.25 km NW of Laon, 7.25 km ENE
of La Fère and 1.2 km SE of Courbes. History: a 1939-40 French Air Force
landing ground that was briefly used by the Luftwaffe in May-Jun 40. After
being downgraded to an emergency landing ground, the landing area was
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obstructed with metal stakes and bars in autumn 1941. Reactivated in mid-
summer 1944. Surface and Dimensions: grass surface measuring approx.
1050 x 870 meters (1150 x 950 yards) and irregular in shape. No paved
runway. Part of landing area obstructed and the remainder returned to
cultivation. Fuel and Ammunition: refueling points were on the S
boundary. Infrastructure: none noted. The nearest rail connection was at
Courbes. Dispersal: at one time had a dispersal area off the SW corner
and another off the SE corner.
Operational Units: III./JG 1 (Jul-Aug 44); Stab, II./JG 53 (Aug 44).
Station Commands: none identified.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1556-57 (9 Aug 43) and A5260 p.1924 (9 Aug
43); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
La Ferté–Bernard (FR) (c. 48 11 N – 00 39 E)
General: landing ground in western France 40 km ENE of Le Mans.
History: briefly used by the Luftwaffe during the last week of June and the
first week of July 1940, but no record has been found of any use after than.
Surface and Dimensions: grass surface. Infrastructure: no information
found.
Remarks:
Jun 44: listed by the Luftwaffe as operational for use as a dispersal field.
Operational Units: I./St.G. 77 (Jun-Jul 40).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 5/VIII (Jun-Jul 40).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Lagny-le-Sec (FR) (c. 49 05 N – 02 44 E)
General: landing ground in north-central France approx. 38-39 km NE of
Paris city center. No record found of any Luftwaffe flying units being based
here.
Remarks:
Jan 42: operational using airfield code number 566. Came under Fl.H.Kdtr.
E 4/I (Creil).
26 Jul 42: assigned new airfield code number 270.
Jun 44: listed as operational.
[Sources: Mattiello]
La Jasse (FR) (c. 43 39 30 N – 04 59 10 E)
General: landing ground in S France 16.5 km N of Istres-le-Tube aqirfield,
9 km WNW of Salon-de-Provence, 5.5 km SW of Eyguières and 1 km S of
the hamlet of La Jasse. History: unknown, but La Jasse was one of the 10
or so auxiliary landing grounds or satellites that surrounded the main airfield
at Istres-le-Tube. Surface and Dimensions: hard-packed dirt surface
measuring approx. 1370 x 685 meters (1500 x 750 yards) after an
extension was built in 1943. No paved runway. Fuel and Ammunition:
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
Remarks:
1942: operational using airfield code number 330.
[Sources: Mattiello]
Lannion (FR) (a.k.a. Servel, Lannion-Servel) (48 45 20 N – 03 28 40 W)
General: airfield on the N coast of Brittany 2.5 km NNW of Lannion.
History: prior to its occupation by the Germans in Jun 40, Lannion was a
small and relatively unimportant airfield measuring just 695 x 640 meters
(760 x 700 yards). Operational units were stationed at Lannion from Jun 40
to Aug 42, but full-scale use did not begin until major construction to
enlarge and improve it was completed in Apr 41. After Aug 42, it was
occasionally used for staging missions but units were no longer based there.
Dimensions: approx. 1370 x 550 meters (1500 x 600 yards) with a pear
shape.
Surface and Runways: level turf surface camouflaged with dummy roads
and hedges to conform with the surrounding countryside. Had 1 concrete
runway measuring approx. 1370 meters (1500 yards) and aligned ESE/WNW
and with paved assembly platforms at each end. Equipped with permanent
runway illumination, a flare-path, a beam approach system and a visual
Lorenz system.
Fuel and Ammunition: bulk fuel was brought up the Léguer River by barge
and store near the SE corner of the airfield, near the South dispersal and on
the N boundary. The ammunition dump was concealed in hedges
immediately N of the Northeast dispersal while bombs were stored in the
open off the W end of the landing area.
Infrastructure: there was 1 medium hangar in the South dispersal area and
workshops in all of the dispersal areas. The base motor pool and garages
were 1.6 km S of the landing area and a branch 3.25 km NW in the village of
Pleumeur. Numerous huts for personnel and stores were scattered around
the airfield on the N, S and E sides, with the largest concentration on the S
side where the station HQ, officers’ quarters and mess were also located.
Nearby farms had been requisitioned for use by the Luftwaffe and many
additional personnel were billeted in Lannion and the surrounding villages of
Trebeirden, Perros-Guirec and several hamlets 2 to 3 km off the NW end of
the runway. The nearest rail connection was in Lannion.
Dispersal: the 3 dispersal areas – Northeast, South and Northwest – had a
total of 5 large covered aircraft shelters, 25 medium covered and 6 medium
open on 3 Dec 43.
Defenses: 1 heavy and 15 light Flak positions surrounded the airfield within
a radius of 3.5 km. Some of the light Flak was mounted in Flak towers
while other positions were on platforms about 1.5-meters (5-ft.) high so as
to elevate the guns about the numerous hedges in the vicinity of the airfield.
Ground defenses included a belt of barbed wire around the entire landing
area, fortified roadblocks on all the roads approaching the airfield, and
extensive hedge clearance to open up fields of defense fire.
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
Infrastructure: there was 1 large repair hangar with a paved apron in the
South dispersal area and another being built next to it (May 43 and
completed by Sep 43). Separate workshops were off the E boundary and
near the NW corner. Station HQ and offices were in scattered buildings
along the center of the E boundary. Personnel were accommodated in
barrack huts erected in nearby villages and farms as well as in an old sugar
mill near the NW corner. A branch rail line from Laon servied the S and W
boundaries of the airfield.
Dispersal: there were 2 dispersal areas in Apr 44 – Southeast and
Southwest – with a total of 37 covered aircraft shelters and 20 open aircraft
shelters.
Defenses: airfield surrounded by 4 heavy and 9 light Flak positions out to a
radius of 3.6 km in May 43. The heavy Flak positions were for 4 to 6 guns
each and some of the light Flak was mounted in Flak towers. Ground
defenses were anchored on 4 strongpoints equipped with machine guns and
fortified with barbed wire.
Satellites and Decoys:
Sissonne – Coucy-lés-Eppes (49 33 35 N – 03 47 09 E), decoy 8 km
SE of Laon-Athies airfield. Under construction by the RAF when it was
seized by the Germans in Jun 40. The Luftwaffe turned it into a decoy with
a painted runway, fake dispersal areas with mock shelters and replica
aircraft. The landing area was obstructed with portable objects. However,
in June 1944 it was listed by the Luftwaffe as operational.
Laon-Chambry (see below).
Remarks:
30 Aug 43: airfield bombed – 1 x Ju 52 from Flieger-Kp./Ln.-Rgt. 3, plus 2 x
Bf 110 F-4s from I./NJG 4 destroyed or damaged on the ground.
7 Sep 43: an “L” shaped building reported to have been erected in the
Samoussy Forest just S of the airfield.
16 Mar 44: low-level attack by VIII Fighter Command P-47s – claimed 2 x Bf
110s, 1 x He 111 and 3 unidentified aircraft shot up and damaged.
9 May 44: airfield bombed by 113 B-17 Fortresses.
14 Jun 44: airfield bombed by 39 B-24 Liberators.
16 Jun 44: airfield bombed by 38 B-17s.
23 Jun 44: airfield bombed by 46 B-24s.
28 Jun 44: airfield bombed by 60 B-17s - station reported that the heavy
Allied attack early in the morning did extensive damage and Athies rendered
completely unserviceable.
23 Jul 44: airfield bombed by 57 B-24s.
31 Jul 44: airfield bombed by 47 B-24s.
8 Aug 44: airfield bombed by 12 B-24s.
12 Aug 44: airfield bombed by 63 B-24s.
Operational Units: I./JG 26 (Jun 40); II., III./KG 77 (Jun-Nov 40); Stab/KG
77 (Jun 40 – Feb 41); III./KG 76 (Jul-Nov 43); V./KG 2 (Dec 43 – Jan 44);
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
Aumencourt and Vivaise. A light rail branch line served the runway area
and the North and South dispersal areas.
Dispersal: the 3 dispersal areas – North, East and South – had a total of 39
covered aircraft shelters in May 43.
Defenses: protected by 1 heavy and 6 light Flak positions within 3 km of the
airfield. Several strongpoints, an anti-tank ditch and fortified road blocks
secured Couvron on the ground.
Remarks:
14 May 43: landing area seen to be obstructed, but not the runways.
27 May 43: clearing and leveling work seen to be underway to extend the
landing area to the S and possibly to the NE.
4 Sep 43: work was underway to extend the landing area to the S.
3 Mar 44: bombed by 9th AAF B-26 Marauders – 1 x Ar 96 B-1, 1 x Bü 133, 1
x Fi 156, 1 x Fw 56 and 1 x Junkers W 34 from SG 101 damaged on the
ground, most of them in direct hits in the North dispersal area where 3 to 5
aircraft shelters were damaged.
9 May 44: airfield bombed by 111 B-17 Fortresses and B-24 Liberators.
16 Jun 44: airfield bombed by 17 B-17s.
28 Jun 44: airfield bombed by 72 B-17s.
23 Jul 44: airfield bombed by 61 B-24s.
29 Jul 44: airfield bombed by 36 B-24s.
1 Aug 44: low-level attack by VIII Fighter Command P-47s – claimed 3 x Me
410s destroyed.
12 Aug 44: airfield bombed by 61 B-24s.
Operational Units: I., II./JG 53 (May 40); 2.(F)/Aufkl.Gr. 123 (Jun 40);
Stab, I., III./St.G. 2 (Jun-Jul 40); Stab, II., III./KG 2 (Jun 44); I./KG 2 (Jun,
Aug 44); II./KG 30 (Jul 44).
School Units: 3./SG 101 (Aug 43 – Apr 44); Einsatzstaffel/KG 101 (Mar –
Jun 44).
Reserve Training & Replacement Units: Erg.St./KG 77 (Apr 40 – Mar 41);
IV./KG 77 (Apr 41 – Nov 42); IV./KG 100 (Oct/Nov – Dec 42).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 4/XVII (Jun 40); Fl.H.Kdtr. A 213/XI
(c.Aug 43 – Mar 44); Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v) 229/XI (Apr-Aug 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): 10. Flugh.Betr.Kp./KG 77
(Mar 41 – Nov 42); 10. Flugh.Betr.Kp./KG 100 (Dec 42); gem.Flak-Abt.
z.b.V. 11400 (Jul 44).
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1680-83 (27 May 43 updated to 3 Mar 44) and
A5260 pp.2079-82 (27 May 43 updated to 3 Mar 44); chronologies; BA-MA;
NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Lapalisse (FR) (a.k.a. Lapalisse-Perigny) (46 15 10 N – 03 35 15 E)
General: landing ground in C France c. 18 km NE of Vichy and 3.5 km W of
Lapalisse. History: dates from approx. the second half of 1939 but no
record has been found of use by either the French Air Force of the Luftwaffe.
Surface and Dimensions: probable grass surface measuring approx. 825 x
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
825 meters (900 x 900 yards). No paved runway. Fuel and Ammunition:
there were triple refueling points at the NW corner and near the SW corner.
Infrastructure: none. Dispersal: no organized dispersal facilities.
Defenses: none.
Remarks:
11 Mar 43: landing area permanently obstructed by trenches.
Jun 44: listed by the Luftwaffe as operational.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 p.097 (29 Mar 43); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA;
PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
La Perthe (FR) (a.k.a. Sézanne?, Champfleury, Champfleury – La
Perthe?) (48 36 45 N – 03 57 55 E)
General: landing ground in NE France 36 km NNW of Troyes, 22 km SE of
Sézanne, 21 km NE of Romilly and 3 km WSW of the village of Champfleury.
History: a former French military field that was taken over by the Luftwaffe
in Jun 40. Inactivated and obstructed in 1941-42, but reactivated in Sep 43
as a dispersal field for Romilly airfield. Surface and Dimensions: hard, dry,
matted surface good throughout the year and measuring approx. 2010 x 915
meters (2200 x 1000 yards). No paved runway. Possibly equipped with
perimeter lighting. Fuel and Ammunition: refueling points existed on the
N, S and W boundaries. Infrastructure: there were 3 medium double
hangars off the NW corner. Accommodations were in La Perthe farm
buildings and a few huts on the N boundary. The nearest rail connection
was in the village of Allibaudières, 11.5 km ESE of the landing area.
Dispersal: 27 aircraft parking bays were cut into the woods at the NE
corner, on the S boundary and off the SW corner by Jun 44. Defenses:
none noted.
Remarks:
18 Jun 40: airfield plowed up by the departing French and found unusable by
the Germans.
May 43: landing area observed to be partially obstructed with logs.
Oct 43: airfield listed as operational.
13 Mar 44: airfield again temporarily blocked and made unusable for aircraft
(Qu./Feldluftgaukdo. W/F).
Jun-Jul 44: reopened and used as the forwarding airfield for replacement
aircraft for JG 27.
23 Jun 44: reconnaissance reported obstructions removed and landinging
area fully serviceable.
28 Jun 44: bombed and strafed at dawn by P-38 Ligntenings and P-47
Thunderbolts – dispersal area hit but no major damage done.
22 Aug 44: airfield ordered cleared and prepared for demolition.
Operational Units: IV./JG 27 (Jun-Aug 44); Stab, I./JG 27 (Jul-Aug 44);
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 14/VII (Jul-Sep 40).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
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[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1684-85 (20 May 44 updated to 5 Jul 44) and
A5260 p.2062 and 2083-85 (May 43 updated to 20 May 44); chronologies;
BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Lappion (FR) (a.k.a. Lappion-Boncourt) (c. 49 36 N – 03 57 E)
General: landing ground in NE France 41 km N of Reims and approx. 6 km
NE of Sissonne. History: brief use by the Luftwaffe during the advance into
France in Jun 40 and again during the retreat in Aug 44. Inactive and
obstructed between those dates. Surface and Dimensions: grass or farm
land surface. Infrastructure: no information found.
Operational Units: 3.(F)/Aufkl.Gr. 22 (Jun 40); III./JG 27 (Aug 44).
Station Commands: none identified.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
La Quillane (FR): see Mont-Louis.
La Réole-Floudès (FR) (44 33 58 N – 00 03 12 W)
General: landing ground in SW France 51.25 km SE of Bordeaux city center.
No record found of use by the Luftwaffe. Listed as operational in June
1944.
[Sources: Mattiello]
La Revêtizon (FR) (46 11 35 N – 00 27 40 W)
General: landing ground in W France 55 km E of La Rochelle, 16 km S of
Niort, 1.6 km NNE of Beauvoir-sur-Niort and less that 1 km from the village
of La Revêtizon. History: under construction with grass leveling underway
on 1 Jul 44. Not yet serviceable. Possibly intended as a dispersal field or
satellite for Saint-Jean-d’Angély airfield 32 km to the S. Surface and
Dimensions: grass surface measuring approx. 1000 x 185 meters (1100 x
200 yards).
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 p.1691 (1 Jul 44); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA;
PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
La Rochelle – Lagord (FR) (46 11 00 N – 01 09 10 W)
General: emergency landing ground on the coast of W France 3.25 km ENE
of La Rochelle – Laleu airfield and 2.5 km NW of La Rochelle city center.
History: obstructed by plowing by the French during the retreat of Jun 40
with no record of activity after that. Surface and Dimensions: grass
surface measuring approx. 640 x 410 meters (700 x 450 yards).
Infrastructure: none noted.
Remarks:
Jun 44: listed as operational by the Luftwaffe.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 p.2473 (27 Aug 43); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA;
PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
La Rochelle – Laleu (FR) (46 10 40 N – 01 11 30 W)
General: airfield on the coast of W France 154 km NNW of Bordeaux, 4 km
NW of La Rochelle city center and 1.2 km NE of Laleu.
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History: the main buildings of the airfield were owned by the Hanriot
aircraft firm before the Armistice on 22 Jun 40. It was seldom used after
mid-1940 when it was inactivated and temporarily obstructed. Reactivated
in Jun 41 for use by reserve training and replacement fighter units.
Dimensions: approx. 1310 x 1310 meters (1430 x 1430 yards).
Surface and Runways: grass surface that was liable to be soft in wet
weather. No paved runway.
Fuel and Ammunition: both available with a large ammunition dump
reportedly in a wood 1.6 km N of the airfield.
Infrastructure: there were 3 small hangars and 1 large workshop hangar on
the W boundary with 1 large triple-bay hangar and 1 medium double-bay
hangar directly behind them. A number of small workshop and storage
sheds were near the hangars. Numerous barracks and billeting huts were in
a group immediately SW of the hangars, and another group of barracks
constructed in 1942-43 was 1.2 km SSW of the landing area along each side
of the La Rochelle – Laleu road. Officers’ quarters were possibly in the
village of Nieul-sur-Mer, 4 km to the NE. The nearest rail connection was
just S of Laleu village.
Dispersal: the 3 dispersals – West boundary, South boundary and Northeast
corner – had a total of 12 small aircraft shelters in Jul 43.
Defenses: protected by very heavy Flak defenses because of its proximity to
the La Rochelle port and German naval base and coast defense installations.
At least 11 heavy and 25 light Flak positions were within 5 km of the airfield.
Ground defenses were minimal because of the coast defense batteries and
bunkers just 300-500 meters off the W end of the landing area.
Remarks:
16 Sep 43: airfield bombed by 33 B-17 Fortresses.
5 Dec 43: airfield bombed by 10 B-17 Fortresses.
27 Mar 44: airfield bombed by 59 B-17s – western half of the landing area
cratered and unserviceable, all of the hangars on the W boundary were
damaged, at least 12 accommodation huts damaged or destroyed and 2
aircraft shelters on the S boundary were destroyed.
Operational Units: Seekommando He 115 (La Rochelle port, Oct 44 – Feb
45).
Reserve Training & Replacement Units: Erg.Gr./JG 53 (c. Jun – Oct 41);
2./Erg.Gr. JG 51 (Oct 41 – Jan 42); elements of (Erg.) JGr. Ost (Feb 43 –
Feb 44).
Station Commands: Fl.Pl.Kdo. A 8/XII (Jan 43 – Mar 44); Flugplatzkdo. La
Rochelle – Laleu of Fl.H.Kdtr. E 233/XII St-Jean d’Angely (Apr-Aug 44).
Station and Nearby Units (on various dates – not complete): elements of
I./Flak-Rgt. 24 (Apr 41); schw.Flak-Abt. 687(v) (1942-43); Feld-
Flakinstandsetzungswerkstatt 12/WF (1942-44); Flak-Geräteausgabestelle
12/WF (mot) (1942-44); elements of Luftschutz-Abt. d.Lw. 31 (1943-44);
27.(Flum.Mess)/Ln.-Rgt. 54 (Luçon, spring 43 – Aug 44); 35.
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almost the exact same location that was called Le Subdray was inactivated
and returned to cultivation during the German occupation. Surface and
Dimensions: grass surface measuring approx. 1690 x 410 meters (1850 x
450 yards).
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 p.1696 (6 Jul 44); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA;
PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Le Coudray (FR): see Évreux.
Le Creusot (FR) (c. 46 48 N – 04 25 E)
General: landing ground in C France approx. 73 km SW of Dijon. No record
found of use by the Luftwaffe. Listed as operational in June 1944.
[Sources: Mattiello]
Le Grand Aubilly (FR) (47 01 10 N – 02 40 15 E)
General: landing ground in C France 24 km ESE of Bourges, 4.5 km SE of
Avord airfield and 1.6 km SE of the town of Avord. History: a French
military airfield to Jun 40. Not believed to have been used by the Luftwaffe.
Surface and Dimensions: grass surface measuring approx. 1050 x 550
meters (1150 x 600 yards) and triangular in shape. No paved runways.
Infrastructure: had 1 small hut in the NW corner. The nearest rail
connection was in Avord. Dispersal: no organized dispersals.
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 p.1397 (4 Jun 43) and A5260 p.1688 (4 Jun 43);
chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Le Havre (FR) (49 29 39 N – 00 06 28 E)
Lw. Garrison and Station Units (in the city or nearby on various dates – not
complete): Stab/Flak-Rgt. 39 (Sep-Oct 41); Stab/Flak-Rgt. 100 (1943 –
May 44); le.Flak-Abt. 98 (Sep 41); elements of gem.Flak-Abt. 193 (1941 –
Aug 44); elements of Res.Flak-Abt. 222 (Sep 41); Res.Flak-Abt. 441 (Oct
41); gem.Flak-Abt. 672 (1943)?; le.Flak-Abt. 673 (Mar 44); le.Res.Flak-Abt.
741 (Sep-Oct 41); elements of le.Res.Flak-Abt. 744 (Mar-Apr 42); le.Flak-
Abt. 842 (1942 – May 44); le.Flak-Abt. 873 (1943-43); elements of
gem.Flak-Abt. 901 (Feb 42); le.Res.Flak-Abt. 984 (1942-43); Alarm-Flak-
Battr. 38/XII (Jul 44); Feld-Flakinstandsetzungswerkstatt 9/WF (1942-44);
Flak-Geräteausgabestelle 9/WF (mot) (1942-44); 2.(Feldfernkabel-Bau)/Ln.-
Rgt. 10 (Nov 40 – Jan 41); elements of 3.(Fspr.u.Fschr.Betr.)/Feldluftgau-
Nachr.Rgt. Westfrankreich (c.1942-44); 23.(schw.Flum.)/Feldluftgau-
Nachr.Rgt. Westfrankreich (c.fall 41 – Dec 42); Telegrafenbau-Abt. (mot)
z.b.V. 1 d.Lw. (c.Jan-Mar 41)?; Flak-Munitionsausgabestelle d.Lw. 12/XII
(1943-44); Lw.-Sanitätsstaffel Le Havre; Seenotbezirksstelle Le Havre (Aug
40 – May 42); Seenotkdo. 4 (May 42 – Aug 44).
Le Havre – Octeville (FR) (a.k.a. Bléville) (c. 49 32 10 N – 00 05 15
E)
General: airfield in N France 5 km NNW of Le Havre and 3.25 km SW of
Octeville.
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History: the original and small landing ground of Bléville (485 x 485 meters
or 530 x 530 yards) was just S of Le Havre – Octeville airfield and they were
connected by a taxiway so Bléville could continue to be used as a dispersal
field. Octeville served as an important fighter station, but mainly during the
Jun 40 to May 1942 period. By then, the RAF’s umbrella of air superiority
over the airfield was such that the Luftwaffe could no longer station units
there.
Dimensions: approx. 1235 x 1190 meters (1350 x 1300 yards).
Surface and Runways: grass surface. No paved runway. Equipped with a
flare-path.
Fuel and Ammunition: fuel and ammunition were reportedly stored in
nearby farms.
Infrastructure: there were 5 small hangars scattered about the landing area
and the dispersal areas. Workshops were on the S boundary. Station HQ,
admin offices and a large number of barrack huts and storage sheds were at
the S end of the airfield, while some flying personnel were accommodated in
Le Havre and in several nearby villages. Most of the farms near the field
had been requisitioned by the Luftwaffe. The nearest rail connection was in
Le Havre.
Dispersal: the 3 areas – North, East and South – had a total of 34 aircraft
shelters. Another 30 aircraft could be parked and concealed under trees
and in gaps made in the hedges.
Defenses: protected by the heavy Flak belt around Le Havre with 7 heavy
and 10 light Flak positions in the immediate neighborhood of the airfield.
Remarks:
20 Apr 41: employed 743 non-German workers.
14 Feb 44: landing area permanently obstructed by trenches.
Operational Units: III./JG 2 (Aug-Oct 40); I./JG 2 (Mar-May 42).
School Units: 4./JFS 5 (Jul 41 – Apr 42); Fl.Anwärter-Btl. IV (1942-43).
Reserve Training & Replacement Units: Erg.St./JG 2 (Oct 40 – May 41).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 5/XI (Jun-Jul 40); Fl.H.Kdtr. E 16/VII (c.
Oct 40 – Nov 42); Fl.Pl.Kdo. A 35/XII (c.Feb 43 – Jun 44).
Station Units (on and near the airfield on various dates – not complete):
Bauleitung Le Havre - Octeville (1940-44); Ldssch.Kp. d.Lw. 14/XIII (Oct
43)?
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1697-98 (20 Aug 43) and A5260 pp.2105-07
(20 Aug 43 updated to 14 Feb 44); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA;
web site ww2.dk]
Le Luc (FR) (a.k.a. Le Cannet, Grande Bastide) (43 23 05 N – 06 22 50
E)
General: landing ground in S France 46 km NE of Toulon and 5.5 km ESE of
the town of Le Luc. History: built in the late 1930’s and was home to a
group of Vichy French fighters from at least mid-1941 to Nov 42. The
Italian Regia Aeronautica took it over at the beginning of 1943. Surface
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and Dimensions: artificially drained grass surface on red clay soil measuring
approx. 1145 x 825 meters (1250 x 900 yards) with a “V” shape. No paved
runway. Fuel and Ammunition: there were 3 refueling points on the NE
corner and may also use fuel trucks (bowsers). Ammunition was reportedly
stored in wooden huts about 400 meters off the NW corner. Infrastructure:
had 1 medium hangar and 1 long shed with paved aprons at the NE corner
and 1 small shed with a paved apron off the E boundary. The station HQ,
barracks, mess and infirmary were off the NW corner. Several huts in the
hangar area were probably offices for individual squadrons. There was also
a private house off the SW corner that served as the officers’ mess. The
nearest rail connection was in the town of Le Cannet, 3.25 km WNW of the
landing ground. Dispersal: in Jun 43, aircraft were parked off the
perimeter and among stands of nearby trees. Defenses: there were 5 light
Flak positions in May 43.
Remarks:
24 Mar 44: considerable construction activity underway to develop a
Northeast and Southeast dispersal area, both c. 1.6 km off the E boundary.
The Southeast dispersal has sites for 12 aircraft shelters being built.
Operational Units (Regia Aeronautica): 76º Gruppo OA (Feb-Sep 43?).
Operational Units (Luftwaffe): 7./SG 4 (May-Jun 44).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 16/VII (Jan-May 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 pp.103-05 (17 Jun 43 updated to 24 Mar 44);
chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Le Mans (FR) (a.k.a. Arnage) (47 57 15 N – 00 12 14 E)
General: airfield in NW France 5 km S of Le Mans ans 3.25 km NNE of the
village of Arnage.
History: mainly a factory airfield for the Gnome et Rhône aero engine firm,
the Luftwaffe used it operationally during the spring of 1941 but not again
until Jun 44.
Dimensions: approx. 1370 x 825 meters (1500 x 900 yards).
Surface and Runways: grass surface on sandy subsoil. No paved runway.
Landing area often obstructed with portable objects.
Fuel and Ammunition: both brought up as needed.
Infrastructure: had 4 small hangars with paved aprons, 2 on the N
boundary and 2 on the W boundary. An immense machine shop and a large
factory building belonging to Gnome et Rhône aero engine firm were along
the W and NW sides of the airfield. Factory workers were housed in
residential estates off the N end of the airfield. The nearest rail connection
was the Le Mans – Aubigne line which passed close to the W boundary.
Dispersal: the 3 areas – East, South and West – had a total of 39 large
open aircraft shelters in Jan 44. Some of the shelters were covered with
netting.
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
Defenses: there were 2 heavy and 6 light Flak positions around the airfield
in Jun 43. Some of the light Flak was mounted in Flak towers and on roofs.
Satellites and Decoys:
Le Mans/I (47 55 30 N – 00 13 10 E), satellite strip 1.6 km SE of of Le
Mans airfield with a leveled grass surface and measuring approx. 775 x
137 meters (850 x 150 yards). When observed on 24 Jun 44, 2 craters
had been filled in and the strip was once again serviceable.
Le Mans-Ardenay (48 00 00 N – 00 23 30 E), dummy 16 km ENE of Le
Mans airfield.
Le Mans-Pontlieue (c. 47 58 N – 00 12 E), a satellite, dispersal area or
dummy 3.75 km N of Le Mans-Arnage. Listed as operational in Jun 44.
Remarks:
1943-44: from Mar 43 to Aug 44, the RAF and USAAF bombed industrial
targets, the marshaling yard, bridges, supply and ammunition dumps and
other targets in and around Le Mans numerous times. The airfield was
rarely an intentional target until fighters began arriving on 6/7 Jun 44.
20 Apr 41: employed 481 non-German workers.
15 Jul 42: landing area obstructed.
29 Jun 43: airfield observed to be obstructed by portable objects.
4 Jul 43: airfield and factory bombed by 105 B-17 Fortresses – landing area
heavily cratered and factory badly damaged.
23 Sep 43: most of the craters from the 4 July attack now filled in and the
airfield again serviceable.
29 Jan 44: all craters filled in and landing area again serviceable. Work
seen to be underway to repair the roof of the Gnome et Rhône aero engine
factory on the W boundary that was damaged in the attack of 4 Jul 43.
16 Mar 44: photo reconnaissance showed the landing area to be
unserviceable again after the RAF night raids on Le Mans railway and
industrial targets, but that the craters were being filled in.
7 Jun 44: bombed and strafed – 2 x Fw 190As from I. and II./JG 1 destroyed
(1) or damaged (1) (German sources).
8 Jun 44: low-level attack by VIII Fighter Command P-47s and P-51s – 6 x
Fw 190As from I./JG 1 destroyed (3) or damaged (3) (German sources).
9 Jun 44: bombed – 12 x Fw 190As from II./JG 1 destroyed (7) or damaged
(5); landing area unserviceable. (German sources).
10 Jun 44: bombed and low-level attack – 1 x Fw 190A from I./JG 1 shot up;
considerable damage to buildings, quarters and hangars; one ammunition
dump destroyed; 3 men KIA and 9 WIA. (German sources).
11 Jun 44: low-level attack – 1 x Fw 190A from I./JG 1 shot up (German
sources).
12 Jun 44: bombed – 9 x Fw 190As from I./JG 1 destroyed (8) or damaged
(1) (German sources).
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
24 Jun 44: overflights reported that a number of aircraft shelters had been
damaged in recent attacks leaving a revised total of 19 large open aircraft
shelters available in the East and South dispersals.
6 Aug 44: demolition of airfield ordered as soon as the last flying unit
departs.
Operational Units: Stab/JG 54 (Jan-Mar 41); II., III./JG 54 (Feb-Mar 41);
I., II./JG 1 (Jun 44).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 9/XII (Jun 40 - 1941); Fl.Pl.Kdo. C 22/XII
(Jan 43 – Jun 44); Fl.H.Kdtr. A 304/XI (See) (Jul 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): Stab/Fliegerführer West
(Parigné-le-Pôlin then Savigné l’Évêque, c.Dec 43 – Jun 44); Aussenstelle
Nord d.Feldluftgaukdo. Westfrankreich (Jul 44); Frontreparaturbetrieb GL
3261 (Jumo) (Jun 43); Frontreparaturbetrieb GL 3762 (Mar 42); I./Flak-Rgt.
61 (gem. mot.) (Jun 40); II./Flak-Rgt. 22 (gem. mot.) (Aug 42); gem.Flak-
Abt. 442 (Jun-Jul 44); gem.Flak-Abt. 596(v) (Mar-May 44); Stab I./Luftgau-
Nachr.Rgt. 12 (Aug 40 - ? ); 20.(Flugmeldeleit-)/Ln.-Rgt. 53 (1943)?; Stab
II./Luftgau-Nachr.Rgt. Westfrankreich ( ? – Aug 44); 8.(Flum.Res.)/Luftgau-
Nachr.Rgt. Westfrankreich (1941-44); Ln.-Betr.Abt. (mot) z.b.V. 14 (May 43
– refitting)?; Lw.-Bauleitung V Le Mans (c.1940-44); Kfz.Instandsetzungszug
d.Lw. 8/VII (1944)?; Ldssch.Zug d.Lw. 414/VI (Mar 43)?; Verbindungsstelle
d.Lw. beim HKP 526 Le Mans (Oct 43).
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1699-1700 (19 Jul 43 updated to 24 Jun 44)
and A5260 pp.2108-12 (19 Jul 43 updated to 16 Mar 44); chronologies; BA-
MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Le Mesnil-Amelot (FR): see Paris-le-Bourget.
Le Perray (FR) (48 43 00 N – 01 49 00 E)
General: satellite strip and dispersal field in W France 19.5 km WSW of
Guyancourt airfield and 3.25 km NW of the village of Le Perray-en-Yvelines.
History: prepared in late spring/early summer 1944 as a satellite for both
Guyancourt and Bretigny airfields. Serviceable in Aug 44. Surface and
Dimensions: measured approx. 1000 x 165 meters (1100 x 180 yards).
Infrastructure: none noted. Aircraft could be parked among trees at the
NW corner and to the E of the landing area.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 amendments (1 Aug 44)]
Le Ployron – Amy (FR) (49 35 N – 02 34 E)
General: satellite or dispersal field for Roye-Amy and/or Montdidier airfields
in NE France and said to be located 7 km S of Roye and 3 km SW of Roye-
Amy airfield, but this location seems incorrect because the village of Le
Ployron is 19.5 km SW of Roye, 19 km WSW of Amy and 7.25 km S of
Montdidier. The coordinates match the location of the village of Le Ployron.
History: no record found of Luftwaffe units being stationed here and it was
never located by Allied intelligence. The existence of this field remains in
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
underground storage for 4000 gallons. Ammunition was stored off the SE
corner. Infrastructure: none. The nearest rail connection was in the
village of Cremieu, 6.5 km S of the landing area. Dispersal: no organized
dispersal facilities. Defenses: none noted.
Remarks:
25 Dec 43: airfield ordered temporarily blocked for use by aircraft
(Qu./Feldluftgaukdo. W/F).
27 Apr 44: entire landing area temporarily obstructed with barricades –
probably posts, and the area off the SE corner trenched.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 pp.108-10 (2 Dec 42 updated to 27 Apr 44);
chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Les Mesnuls (FR) (c. 48 45 N – 01 50 E)
General: landing ground in N France 39 km WSW of Paris and 17-18 km
WSW of the Saint-Cyr – Guyancourt area. History: not found – apparently
a satellite or dispersal field hastily set up in mid-summer 1944. Surface
and Dimensions: probably a grass surface. Infrastructure: none noted.
Operational Units: I./JG 26 (Aug 44).
Station Commands: none identified.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Les Sables-d’Olonne (FR) (46 28 35 N – 01 43 25 W)
General: emergency landing ground in W France 65 km NW of La Rochelle
and 5.25 km SE of the village and port of Les Sables-d’Olonne. History: a
former French civil airfield. Possibly used occasionally by Luftwaffe aircraft.
Surface and Dimensions: poorly drained grass surface meansuring approx.
640 x 640 meters (700 x 700 yards). Infrastructure: had a small hangar
at the NE corner.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 p.2472 (27 Aug 43); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA;
PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Lessay (FR) (49 12 10 N – 01 30 10 W)
General: landing ground in NW France along the W coast of the Contentin
Peninsula 48 km S of Cherbourg and 3.25 km SE of Lessay. History:
briefly used by Luftwaffe tactical reconnaissance units in 1940 and then
relegated to inactive standby status. Work to improve it continued
periodically but no further units were based there. Surface and
Dimensions: grass surface that was somewhat marshy at the S end;
measured approx. 915 x 915 meters (1000 x 1000 yards). No paved
runway. A perimeter track encircled the landing area on 3 sides.
Infrastructure: there was a single hangar on the N boundary and some
accommodation huts on the E boundary. A rail line passed along the N
boundary. Dispersal: the 2 dispersal areas – East and West – had a total
of 13 covered aircraft shelters. Defenses: 5 light Flak positions surrounded
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
the landing ground on the NW, N, NE and SE sides. Some of the positions
were in Flak towers.
Remarks:
20 Apr 41: employed 125 non-German workers.
1941-42: improvements made to the landing area.
1943: landing area obstructed by stakes and logs.
22 Oct 43: extension work underway at the NW end and a second strip
measuring 1645 x 320 meters (1800 x 350 yards) built with an NE/SW
alignment. The original strip was still obstructed, a few additional small
huts had been added along the E boundary. The Flak positions were empty
and abandoned.
27 Apr 44: the second strip has been permanently obstructed with trenches
while the original strip was still blocked with stakes and logs.
16 Jul 44: Lessay captured by U.S. Forces.
Operational Units: 5.(H)/Aufkl.Gr. 13 (summer 40)?; 1.(H)/Aufkl.Gr. 12
(fall 40)?
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 31/XII (Aug 40 – c.Apr 41); Fl.Pl.Kdo. C
21/XII (1943 – Jun 44); Fl.Pl.Kdo. C 29/XII (Jan 43 – Jun 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): Lw.-Bauleitung III Lessay
(c.1940-44).
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1701-02 (19 Aug 43 updated to 27 Apr 44) and
A5260 pp.2113-16 (19 Aug 43 updated to 22 Oct 43); chronologies; BA-MA;
NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Les Thilliers (FR) (a.k.a. Les Thilliers-en-Vexin) (49 14 N – 01 35 E)
General: landing ground in N France 44-45 km SE of Rouen. History:
earlier history unknown. Briefly used by Luftwaffe fighters in June 1940.
No record found of subsequent Luftwaffe use. Surface and Dimensions:
grass surface – dimensions not found. Infrastructure: no information
found, but probably none.
Operational Units: III./JG 26 (Jun 40).
Station Commands: none identified.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Le Subdray (FR): see Le Chaumoy.
Le Touquet (FR) (a.k.a. Étaples, Le Touquet – Étaples, Le Touquet
Paris-Plage) (50 31 00 N – 01 37 30 E)
General: airfield in NE France 23 km S of Boulogne, 2.5 km SE of Le
Touquet and immediately opposite Étaples.
History: a former French civil airport that was used by the RAF during April
and May 1940. Taken over by the Luftwaffe and used as a forward fighter
field throughout the Battle of Britain and until late 1942 when it was reduced
to caretaker status with a complement of an NCO and 18 men. In early
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1944 the runway was demolished and mines planted to prevent Allied
aircraft and glider landings.
Dimensions: approx. 1100 x 640 meters (1200 x 700 yards).
Surface and Runways: grass surface that could get marshy in wet winter
weather. Had a single concrete runway measuring 565 meters (620 yards)
and aligned NNW/SSE.
Fuel and Ammunition: bulk fuel was brought in by tank truck and was
stored near the hangars. The ammunition dump was in woods off the SW
corner.
Infrastructure: there were 2 hangars with adjacent workshops on the W
boundary, and the station motor pool was on a nearly polo ground. Station
HQ, offices and some billeting were in the former civil airport buildings on
the W boundary, and there were a number of huts and houses in the woods
behind these. The nearest rail connection was in Étaples.
Dispersal: the 2 dispersals – South and West – had a total of 55 small
aircraft shelters and all but 4 of these were covered.
Defenses: until late 1942 when it was inactivated, the airfield was protected
by 10 light Flak positions, 4 of which were in Flak towers or on rooftops.
Ground defenses included at least 10 machine gun bunkers or strongpoints.
Remarks:
Sep 40: assigned airfield code number 388. Came under Koflug 8/III
(Saint-Omer).
25 Feb 42: bombed – 1 x Fw 58 from Jagdfliegerführer 2 badly damaged on
the ground.
17 Jul 43: obstructed with trenches and unserviceable.
1 Jun 44: listed as operational by the Luftwaffe, but not after that.
Operational Units: Stab/JG 52 (Jun-Aug 40); 5.(H)/Aufkl.Gr. 32 (Jul 40 – c.
Oct 40); Stab, III./JG 53 (Aug-Dec 40); I./JG 53 (Sep-Dec 40).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 29/XI (Jul 40? – Mar 41); Fl.H.Kdtr. E 5/XI
(c.1942-43).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): elements of
Stab/Jagdfliegerführer 1 (fall 40); Stab/Jagdfliegerführer 2 (Jun 40 – spring
42); 2./le.Flak-Abt. 761 (Apr 41); elements of I.(Betr.)/Ln.-Rgt. 32 (Oct
40); Stab V./Luftgau-Nachr.Rgt. Belgien/Nordfrankreich (Jun 40 – spring
41)?; Stab VI./Luftgau-Nachr.Rgt. Belgien/Nordfrankreich (spring 41 –
spring 43)?; Luftgau-Nachr.Abt. z.b.V. 1 (c.Oct 40 – Jun 41); kl.Flieger-
Betriebsstoff-Kolonne 4/VI (Oct 40).
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 p.1703 (19 Aug 43) and A5260 pp.2117-18 (19
Aug 43); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Leubringhen (FR) (c. 50 51 N – 01 43 E)
General: landing ground in NE France approx. 14-15 km SW of Calais and 2
km E of Audembert. No record found of Luftwaffe units being based there.
Remarks:
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Sep 40: assigned airfield code number 408. Came under Koflug 8/III
(Saint-Omer).
[Sources: Mattiello]
Leulinghen-Bernes (FR) (50 50 N – 01 42 E)
General: landing ground in NE France 15 km NE of Boulogne and 16 SW of
Calais. History: earlier history unknown. Briefly used by Luftwaffe
fighters in August 1940. No record found of subsequent Luftwaffe use.
Surface and Dimensions: grass surface – dimensions not found.
Infrastructure: no information found, but probably none.
Remarks:
Sep 40: assigned airfield code number 386. Came under Koflug 8/III
(Saint-Omer).
Operational Units: I./JG 27 (Aug 40).
Station Commands: none identified.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Le Valdahon (FR) (a.k.a. Besançon-Valdahon) (47 09 45 N – 06 20 35
E)
General: emergency landing ground in E France 26.5 km ESE of Besançon
and 1.6 km N of the village of Le Valdahom-du-Bas. History: a former
French military airfield. No record of German use, but some clearing work
may have been underway at the NE end during summer 1943. Surface and
Dimensions: grass surface measuring approx. 870 x 595 meters (950 x 650
yards). Infrastructure: had 1 medium double hangar and 1 small double
hangar at the S corner.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 p.2472 (27 Aug 43); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA;
PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Le Vallon (FR) (c. 43 37 35 N – 04 55 50 E)
General: airfield in S France 13.5 km W of Salon-de-Provence and 9.5 km E
of Saint-Martin-de-Crau. History: one of the numerous satellite and
dispersal strips set up around the main airfield as Istres-le-Tube. Surface
and Dimensions: rough scrub land in poor condition measuring approx. 960
x 960 meters (1050 x 1050 yards) with a square shape. No paved runway.
Fuel and Ammunition: Infrastructure: had 1 small hangar in the NE
corner. The nearest rail connection was in Miramas, 7 km SE of the landing
ground. Dispersal: an East andWest dispersal were developed in early
1944 and by 4 May 44 had 11 aircraft bays and 6 parking hardstands.
Defenses: no Flak, but there were 4 antiaircraft machine gun positions off
the E boundary and 4 more off the SW corner in Feb 43.
Remarks:
4 Oct 43: landing area temporarily obstructed with probable posts and a
strip along the W boundary plowed.
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were billeted on the local economy. A branch rail spur encircled the landing
area. Dispersal: the 4 dispersal areas – North, East, South and West – had
a total of 47 aircraft shelters. Defenses: protected by the heavy Flak belt
around Lille. There were 3 heavy and about 16 light Flak positions within
4.5 km of the landing ground. Ground defenses consisted of barbed wire
and road blocks.
Satellites and Decoys:
Lille – Le Corbeau (50 40 20 N – 03 01 45 E), dummy 4 km WSW of
Lille/Nord landing ground.
Lille-Ronchin (c. 50 37 N – 03 05 E), decoy field 8.5 km SSE of
Lille/Nord landing ground. A former French civil airport that was used by
the RAF in 1939-40 and referred to as Lille-Flers (Roubaix-Flers). In Sep
40, after being taken over by the Luftwaffe, it was assigned airfield code
number 367. Later, it was inactivated and became a Luftwaffe decoy,
outfitted with replica aircraft parked around the landing area and painted
buildings and a painted runway. The landing area was trenched and
cratered in summer 1943.
Remarks:
1943: landing area noted as being periodically obstructed.
31 Aug 43: low-level attack – 1 x He 111 H-6 belonging to I./SKG 10 strafed
and destroyed on the ground.
8 Sep 43: Lille/Nord bombed by 68 B-26 Marauders from 8th AAF – landing
area cratered.
9 Sep 43: landing ground bombed by 37 B-17 Fortresses.
19 Sep 43: Lille/Nord bombed by 18 B-26 Marauders.
26 Nov 43: craters at the S end of the landing area have been filled in.
30 Dec 43: landing area seen to have been repaired and now mostly
serviceable.
25 May 44: landing ground bombed by a strong force of 9th AAF B-26s.
Operational Units: Stab/KG 53 (May-Jun 40); Stab, II., III./KG 27 (Jun
40); Stab/JG 26 (Jun-Oct 40); I./LG 1 (Jul 40); II./KG 53 (Jul 40 – Jun 41);
III./KG 53 (Jul 40 – Feb 41); Stab/Aufkl.Gr. 122 (c. Aug 40 – May 41); 1.
(F)/Aufkl.Gr. 22 (c. Aug-Dec 40); III./JG 26 (May-Jun 43); 12./JG 26 (May-
Jun 43); Stab/JG 26 (Sep 43 – Jun 44).
Reserve Training & Replacement Units: IV./KG 53 (Apr – Nov 41).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 62/XI (1940 – Sep 42?); Fl.Pl.Kdo. B
66/XI (Nov 42 – Mar 44); Flugplatzkdo. Lille/Nord of Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v) 220/XI
Lille-Vendeville (Apr-Aug 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): Koflug 8/III (Oct 43 – Aug
44); 10. Flugh.Betr.Kp./KG 53 (Mar-Nov 41).
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1704-08 (19 Aug 43 updated to 30 Dec 43) and
A5260 pp.2119-25 (19 Aug 43 updated to 30 Dec 43); chronologies; BA-MA;
NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
History: a pre-war civil airport that was little used by the Luftwaffe during
the occupation.
Dimensions: approx. 775 x 685 meters (850 x 750 yards) with a take-
off/landing run of 1,235 meters (1350 yards) possible in Sep 41.
Surface and Runways: grass surface. Had a concrete runway of 275
meters (300 yards) possibly extending to 550 meters (600 yards) aligned
NNE/SSW that was under construction in Sep 41. Equipped with a visual
beacon.
Infrastructure: had 1 medium double hangar, 2 small hangars and 1 large
building that was possibly used as a workshop, all at the NW corner of the
field. A small airport building and several huts on the N boundary near the
hangars probably served as accommodations. Nearest rail connection in
Limoges.
Dispersal: no organized dispersal facilities.
Defenses: 15 light Flak positions along the S boundary and W corner of the
airfield Jul 43, but all were empty and in disuse.
Remarks:
29 Dec 43: more trenches dug in the landing area and the unfinished
runway remains temporarily blocked with portable obstacles.
9 Apr 44: airfield ordered completely blocked and made unusable
(Qu./Feldluftgaukdo. W/F).
13 Jul 44: runway mined in preparation for demolition.
Operational Units: none identified.
Station Commands: none identified.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): 20.(Flugm.Res.)/Luftgau-
Nachr.Rgt. Westfrankreich (Nov 42 - ? ); Lw.-Berge-Kp. z.b.V. 30 (Nov 43).
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 pp.116-18 (18 Nov 42 updated to 13 Jul 44);
chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Limoges-Mas-de-l’Age (FR) (a.k.a. Limoges-Bellegarde?) (c. 45 51
N – 01 14 E)
General: landing ground in west-central France approx. 3.5 – 7 km NW of
Limoges city center. Possibly a satellite or alternate landing ground for
Limoges-Feytiat. Listed by the Luftwaffe as operational in Jun 44.
[Sources: Mattiello]
Lisieux (FR) (49 09 N – 00 13 E)
General: landing ground in N France 43 km E of Caen. Exact location of
the landing ground not determined. History: the landing ground is
something of a mystery as no record of Luftwaffe aircraft being based there
has been found. However, there were many Luftwaffe headquarters and
ground units in Lisieux. One possibility is that it was a transit field and only
used by light communications and courier aircraft. Surface and
Dimensions: no information found. Infrastructure: no information found.
Satellites and Decoys:
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[Sources: Mattiello]
Lognes-Croissy (FR) (a.k.a. Lognes-Emerainville, Beaubourg, Croissy-
Beaubourg) (c. 48 49 N – 02 37 E)
General: former landing ground in north-central France approx. 20-21 km E
of Paris city center. No record found of use by the Luftwaffe. Listed as
operational in June 1944 by the Luftwaffe.
[Sources: Mattiello]
Loinville (FR) (48 28 35 N – 01 38 10 E)
General: airstrip in north-central France 67.5 km SW of Paris, 11.5 km ENE
of Chartres, 9.25 km ENE of Chartres airfield, and 1.2 km SSE of the village
of Loinville. History: satellite strip for Chartres airfield. The surface was
still being leveled on 4 Jul 44 and the strip was not yet serviceable. Surface
and Dimensions: grass surface measuring approx. 1000 x 185 meters (1100
x 200 yards). Infrastructure: none. Dispersal: none.
Operational Units: none identified.
Station Commands: none identified.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 p.1712 (4 Jul 44); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA;
PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Lonrai (FR) (a.k.a. Lonray) (48 28 06 N – 00 01 59 E)
General: a small fighter strip in NW France 4.4 km NW of Alençon and
immediately N of the village of Lonrai. History: prepared spring 1944.
Surface and Dimensions: measured approx. 1370 x 185 meters (1500 x 200
yards). Aircraft were dispersed under trees off the N and S ends of the
strip. Infrastructure: none noted.
Remarks:
12 Jun 44: began operations with the arrival of I./JG 1 from Le Mans.
16 Jun 44: bombed – 1 x Fw 190A from I./JG 1 damaged on the ground.
6 Jul 44: gaps have been cut in hedges to create a second 825 x 90 meter
(900 x 100 yards) strip just E of the original, probably to be used if the
original becomes unserviceable.
Operational Units: I./JG 1 (Jun-Jul 44); II./JG 1 (Jun 44).
Station Commands: none identified.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 p.1712 (6 Jul 44) and A5260 amendments (25 Jul
44); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Lons-le-Saunier (FR) (a.k.a. Courlaoux) (46 40 30 N – 05 28 10 E)
General: landing ground in E France 68 km NW of Geneva/Switzerland and
6.5 km W of Lons-le-Saunier. History: a pre-war private airfield. No
record found of use by either the French Air Force or the Luftwaffe. Surface
and Dimensions: soft grass surface measuring approx. 1000 meters (1100
yards) in length. No paved runway. Infrastructure: had 1 small hangar
and a few small huts on the W boundary. No paved runway. The nearest
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Remarks:
Aug 43: operational using airfield code number 751. Came under Koflug
6/VII (Strassburg).
14 Aug 43: obstructed with iron stakes and boulders since at least the
second half of 1942.
23 Apr 44: all obstructions removed and work underway to reactivate the
landing ground as a practice field for training units based at Luxeuil airfield.
Operational Units: none identified.
School Units: Arbeitsplatz for FFS A/B 2 (Luxeuil) (1941-44).
Station Commands: none identified. Directly under Koflug 8/VII (Toul) in
Jul-Aug 44.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1335 and 1713 (14 Aug 43 updated to 26 Aug
44) and A5260 pp.2138-39 (14 Aug 43 updated to 23 Apr 44); chronologies;
BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Luxeuil (FR) (a.k.a. Luxeuil-les-Bains, St-Sauveur) (47 47 20 N – 06 22
10 E)
General: airfield in E France 39 km WNW of Belfort and 3.25 km SSW of
Luxeuil.
History: a former French military airfield that dated from at least 1929.
Captured by the Germans in May/Jun 40, the landing area was extended and
the hangar area improved. Used as an elementary flight training center.
Dimensions: approx. 1645 x 730 meters (1800 x 800 yards) and roughly
rectangular in shape.
Surface and Runways: firm, sandy surface with rough spots. No paved
runway. Believed to be equipped for night landings, but no details found.
Fuel and Ammunition: refueling points were located in front of the hangars
on the NW boundary and immediately S of the small hangar on the S
boundary. Ammunition storage was at the NE corner and connected to the
main railway line by a branch.
Infrastructure: there were 3 large hangars, 1 large repair hangar and 2
medium double hangars with adjacent workshops on the NW boundary, and
1 small hangar on the SE boundary. A large group of admin buildings and
barracks were behind the hangars on the NW boundary. A few additional
barrack huts were at the NE corner. The Lure-Luxeuil rail line passed near
the NE corner.
Dispersal: there were no organized dispersal facilities in Aug 43. Aircraft
generally parked in front of the hangars.
Defenses: no Flak positions identified in Aug 43, but there were a few
antiaircraft machine gun emplacements on the roof of buildings on the NW
boundary. The airfield was surrounded by barbed wire.
Remarks:
Aug 43: operational using airfield code number 750.
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 pp.121-27 (14 Nov 42 updated to 16 Mar 44) and
A.I.2.(b)/Air Ministry Amendment dated 16 Jul 44 in BNA(PRO)/AIR 40;
chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Lyon-Satolas (FR) (45 42 20 N – 05 05 15 E)
General: landing ground in E France 20 km ESE of Lyon city center, 12 km
ESE of Lyon-Bron airfield and 4 km WNW of the village of Satolas-et-Ponce.
History: built by the French in 1939-40 but not thought to have been used
operationally. It was returned to cultivation until late spring 1944 when it
wasreactivated and enlarged. Surface and Dimensions: grass surface
measuring approx. 1000 x 730 meters (1100 x 800 yards), but extended to
1550 meters (1700 yards) in May-Jun 44. No paved runway. Fuel and
Ammunition: had 3 bulk fuel tanks installed in 1940 with a total capacity of
54,553 liters (12,000 gallons). Infrastructure: had 1 small repair-type
hangar near the SW corner. The nearest rail connection was 5.5 km SSW of
the landing ground. Dispersal: no organized dispersal facilities. Defenses:
none noted.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 pp.128-29 (Nov 42 updated to 9 Jun 44);
chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
M
Mâcon-Charnay (FR) (46 17 41 N – 04 47 53 E)
General: landing ground in east-central France approx. 104 km W of
Geneva/Switzerland and 2.75 km SW of Mâcon city center. No record found
of use by the Luftwaffe. Listed as operational in June 1944 by the
Luftwaffe.
[Sources: Mattiello]
Macquigny (FR) (49 34 00 N – 03 58 00 E)
General: satellite strip and dispersal field in NE France c. 25 km E of Laon,
5.5 km NNE of Sissonne – La Malmaison landing ground and 1.5 km W of the
village of La Selve. History: prepared summer 1944 as a satellite for the
Juvincourt – Reims area and operational in August. Surface and
Dimensions: measured approx. 1050 x 230 meters (1150 x 250 yards).
Infrastructure: none noted.
[Sources: A.I.2.(b)/Air Ministry Amendment dated 14 Aug 44 in
BNA(PRO)/AIR 40]
Magny-les-Hameaux-Mérantais (FR): see Paris-Buc.
Malbouhans (FR): see Lure.
Maltot (FR) (49 07 35 N – 00 26 05 W)
General: landing ground in Normandy 7.5 km SW of Caen and 5 km SSE of
Caen-Carpiquet airfield. History: used by the Luftwaffe in 1940-41 and
then abandoned and turned into a decoy. By 1942, part of it had been
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returned to cultivation and the other part trenched. Replica aircraft were
parked around the former landing area and a fake shed erected on the E
corner. Surface and Dimensions: grass surface originally measuring
approx. 1000 x 640 meters (1100 x 700 yards) with an irregular shape. No
paved runway. Infrastructure: unknown, but very little if any.
Operational Units: I./St.G. 77 (Jun-Dec 40).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 20/XII (Jul 40 – Feb 41).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 p.2466 (30 Aug 43); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA;
PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Manancourt (FR) (50 02 00 N – 02 51 00 E)
General: landing ground in NE France 29 km NW of St-Quentin, 18 km
NNW of Peronne airfield and 3 km W of the village of Manancourt. History:
built summer 1944 and serviceable by July. Surface and Dimensions:
measured approx. 915 x 185 meters (1000 x 200 yards). Infrastructure:
none noted.
Operational Units: II./JG 11 (Jul 44).
Station Units: none identified.
[Sources: A.I.2.(b)/Air Ministry Amendment dated 13 Aug 44 in
BNA(PRO)/AIR 40]
Manneville-la-Goupil (FR) (49 36 35 N – 00 20 10 E)
General: landing ground in N France 19.5 km NE of Le Havre, 5 km SW of
Goderville and 1.2 km W of the village of Manneville-la-Goupil. History:
laid out by the Luftwaffe as a forward airstrip in 1940 but evidently not used
operationally. A Ju 88 A-1 crash landed at Manneville in Oct 40 so it may
have been used as an emergency landing ground. Seen to be permanently
obstructed with trenches in Nov 43. Surface and Dimensions: grass
surface measuring approx. 1280 x 640 meters (1400 x 700 yards) and
roughly “L” shaped. Infrastructure: none noted.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 p.2142 (17 Nov 43); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA;
PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Mantes-Goussonville (FR) (48 56 00 N – 01 48 00 E)
General: landing ground in N France c. 41 km WNW of Paris, 27.5 km NW of
Guyancourt airfield and 2.5 km ENE of the village of Goussonville. History:
laid out at the beginning of the war, inactivated and still inactive in Jun 44
according to Allied sources. However, the Luftwaffe listed it as operational
in Jun 44. Surface and Dimensions: measured approx. 730 x 365 meters
(800 x 400 yards). Infrastructure: none noted.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 amendments (25 Jun 44)]
Marcilly-la-Campagne (FR) (a.k.a. Illiers-l’Évêque) (48 50 30 N – 01
13 40 E)
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
Infrastructure:
Airfield - on the SW side of the airfield, which was the civil side, there were
3 medium hangars and a smaller workshop-type building. The station HQ
was located there and the hangars contained Air France parts and stores
salvaged from Paris. On the NE side were 1 very large double hangar, 2
large double hangars, 1 large triple hangar, 1 small double hangar, 2 small
single hangars, workshop buildings, numerous barrack blocks believed to
house Luftwaffe ground personnel and French troops, admin offices, stores
and the Société nationale des constructions aéronautiques du sud-est
(S.N.C.A. du S.E.) factory garage. The extensive S.N.C.A. du S.E. factory
complex was immediately E of the airport buildings. Additionally, a large
block of huts were erected in 1943 approx. 2 km SE of the airfield. The
nearest rail connection was in Marignane.
Seaplane Station - had 2 large rectangular hangars, 1 large curved-roof
hangar and 2 medium hangars. These and adjacent workshop buildings
were used to assemble seaplane prototypes such as the huge Latécoère 631
flying boat and the S.N.C.A. du S.E. 200 flying boat. The seaplane station
also had its own motor pool and repair garages. Station offices, a
mechanics’ school, limited barrack accommodations, mess and stores where
in other buildings near the hangars.
Dispersal: by Aug 43 there were 5 – Northeast, Southeast, South,
Southwest and West – with a total of 50+ open aircraft shelters and 15
parking hardstands. Construction was continuing.
Defenses: had 3 heavy and 9 light Flak positions in Aug 43. There were
also 3 rail turntables for positioning railway Flak. Ground defenses
consisted of machine gun positions and personnel trenches. The factory
complex was surrounded by 2.75 meter (9-foot) wire fence.
Remarks:
14 Aug 43: the landing area has been camouflaged with a network of
dummy roads. A perimeter road around the landing area was under
construction.
11 Nov 43: a suspected refueling point was under construction on the E
boundary in front of the workshops. A new building was under construction
in the factory area off the E boundary.
9/10 Mar 44: airfield and factory bombed by 44 RAF Lancasters – hangars,
assembly building and other buildings of the Société nationale des
constructions aéronautiques du sud-est (S.N.C.A. du S.E.) factory were
damaged but runway and landing area serviceability were not affected.
2 May 44: rubble from the factory buildings bombed on 9/10 March was just
now being cleared away.
Operational Units: Stab/JG 2 (Nov 42); I./JG 2 (Nov 42 – Jan 43); I./JG 27
(Jun-Jul 43); 1.(Einsatz)/Erg.Jagdgruppe Süd (Feb 44).
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Reserve Training & Replacement Units: 4./(Erg.) JGr. Ost (Feb-Mar 43);
elements of (Erg.) JGr. Süd (Mar 43 – May 44); 1./(Erg.) JGr. West (May
44).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 32/XI (Dec 42 - Jun 44).
Station Units (in and around Marseille on various dates – not complete):
Stab/Jagdfliegerführer Südfrankreich (La Nerthe, Jun-Aug 44);
Frontreparaturbetrieb GL 2575 (D.L.H.) (1943 – Aug 44); Flakscheinw.Abt.
468 (1943-44); elements of gem.Flak-Abt. 481 (Jun 43 – Mar 44); elements
of schw.Flak-Abt. 473 (Eisb.) (Feb-Apr 44); elements of schw.Flak-Abt. 556
(May-Aug 44); elements of gem.Flak-Abt. 597 (early 43 – Aug 44);
elements of le.Flak-Abt. 846 (Jun 43 – 1944); le.Flak-Abt. 998 (Dec 42 –
1943); Kdr. der Flakinstandsetzung 102/XII (1943 – Aug 44); Stab/Ln.-Rgt.
51 (La Nerthe, Jun-Jul 44); 18.(Flum.Res.)/Luftgau-Nachr.Rgt.
Westfrankreich (c.1942-44); 21.(Flum.)/Luftgau-Nachr.Rgt. Westfrankreich
(c.Dec 43 – Aug 44); Flugmelde-Funk-Kp. z.b.V. 23 (Nov 42 – Aug 44); Ln.-
Betr.Zug (mot) z.b.V. 22 (La Nerthe, ? – Aug 44); Munitionsausgabestelle
d.Lw. 3/XII (Rognac – 1943-44); Munitionsausgabestelle d.Lw. 30/XII (Apr
44 - ? ); 7./Flieger-Rgt. 63.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 pp.130-37 (18 Jun 43 updated to 2 May 44);
chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Mars-la-Tour (FR) (49 06 10 N – 05 52 00 E)
General: emergency landing ground in E France 20 km W of Metz and c. 1
km NW of the village of Mars-la-Tour. History: a former French wartime
landing ground. Obstructed with stakes by mid-1943, yet listed as
operational by the Luftwaffe in Jun 44. Surface and Dimensions: grass
surface measuring approx. 825 x 825 meters (900 x 900 yards) and roughly
square in shape. Infrastructure: none noted.
Operational Units: none identified.
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v) 218/VII (Jun-Sep 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 p.2472 (27 Aug 43); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA;
PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Martragny (FR) (a.k.a. Bavouy-Martragny?) (c. 49 23 N – 01 39 E)
General: an alternate landing ground or emergency landing ground in N
France 41 km E of Rouen, 31 W of Beauvais and just outside the hamlet of
Martragny. History: no record found of operational use by the Luftwaffe,
but a Ju 88 A-5 from III./KG 51 is known to have made a forced landing
there on 14 Mar 41. Surface and Dimensions: grass surface.
Infrastructure: none noted.
Remarks:
20 Apr 41: employed 24 non-German workers.
Operational Units: none identified.
Station Commands: none identified.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
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Luftwaffe units being based here, but listed by the Luftwaffe as operational
in Jun 44.
[Sources: Mattiello; AFHRA]
Melun-Villaroche (FR) (a.k.a. Villaroche, Reau) (48 36 30 N – 02 39
50 E)
General: airfield in N France 37 km SE of Paris, 14 km E of Corbeil and 8
km N of Melun.
History: taken over by the Germans in Jun 40, the Luftwaffe began 3 years
of construction to turn it into a major bomber base. By Aug 42, most of the
operational bomber units in the West had been transferred East or to the
Mediterranean and Villaroche became home to a bomber reserve training
and replacement Gruppe.
Dimensions: approx 1415 x 2470 meters (1550 x 2700 yards) with an
irregular shape.
Surface and Runways: dry and well drained grass surface. Had 2 concrete
runways – (1) 1600 meters (1750 yards) aligned N/S with assembly
hardstands at both ends; (2) 1645 meters (1800 yards) aligned WNW/ESE
with an aqssembly hardstand at the E end. A concrete perimeter road
encircled all or a large part of the landing area. Equipped with boundary
lighting, permanent runway illumination, permanent flare-path, a beam
approach system and visual Lorenz systems for both runways.
Fuel and Ammunition: refueling points and loops were in or adjacent to all
of the dispersal areas with bulk fuel storage probably at the NW corner near
the hangars. Ammunitions dumps and storage were on the edge of the
Northeast dispersal area, in a wood 2.5 km to the WNW, in another wood 3
km NNW of the airfield. There was also open storage in the dispersal areas.
Infrastructure: had 1 medium hangar and 6 small hangars fronted by a
servicing hardstand at the NW corner, plus 1 small repair hangar on the S
boundary. Small separate workshop buildings were adjacent to the hangars
at the NW corner. The villages surrounding the airfield were requisitioned
by the Luftwaffe for use as accommodations, and additional billeting was
provided in huts erected around these villages and in nearby farms. Two
châteaux in Voisenon, 4 km S of the airfield, were taken over, one for the
base staff and quarters for flying personnel, and the other for the Luftwaffe
hospital. The station HQ was reportedly at the SE corner of the airfield and
base admin offices and stores near the hangars in the NW corner. The
nearest rail connection was at Saint-Germaine-Laxis, 4 km to the SE.
Dispersal: the 4 dispersal areas – North, Northeast, Southeast and
Southwest – had a total of 43 large covered aircraft shelters and 1 open
shelter.
Defenses: there were 13 light Flak positions in Jun 43, several of which
were mounted in Flak towers.
Satellites and Decoys:
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Infrastructure: there was 1 medium hangar and 1 small repair hangar in the
North dispersal, and 1 small hangar in the South dispersal. The station
motor pool was in the SW corner of the North dispersal. The station HQ,
admin offices and flight control were together near the NW corner.
Personnel were accommodated in commandeered local farms, in nearby
private homes, in a few barrack-type buildings at the S end of the airfield, in
the village of Lestrem and in several schools in Merville. A special branch
rail line from Merville served the N boundary and the North dispersal area.
Dispersal: the 2 dispersal areas – North and South – had a total of 41
aircraft shelters in Aug 43, and all of these were camouflaged to look like
farm houses or small hillocks.
Defenses: Flak protection greatly reduced after summer 1941.
Satellites and Decoys:
Merville – Saint-Venant (c. 50 37 00 N – 02 33 30 E), dummy located
c. 6.5 km W of Merville airfield.
Remarks:
31 Jul 43: airfield bombed by 20 8th AAF B-26 Marauders.
15 Aug 43: airfield bombed by c. 40 B-17 Fortresses – NE and SW corners of
the landing area, runways cratered and 7 aircraft shelters damaged.
15 Sep 43: airfield bombed by 68 8th AAF B-26 Marauders.
21 Oct 43: nearly all of the craters seen to be filled in and the runways
restored to serviceability; taxiways not yet repaired.
25 Nov 43: the medium hangar in the North dispersal seen to be damaged.
3 Feb 44: bombed – the N half of the landing area heavily cratered while the
rest of the landing area seen to be unserviceable due to wet weather.
Operational Units: II./KG 4 (Jun 40); I./KG 27 (Jun 40); II./KG 2 (Nov 40 –
Mar 41); I./KG 2 (Mar 41); Stab, I./SKG 210 (Apr-May 41); II./JG 2 (Oct-
Nov 42); V./KG 2 (Jun-Aug 43).
Reserve Training & Replacement Units: Erg.St./SKG 210 (Apr 41 – Jan 42);
Erg.St./ZG 1 (Jan 42).
Station Commands: Fl.Pl.Kdo. A 40/XI (1944 – Mar 44); Flugplatzkdo. of
Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v) 219/XI Monchy Breton (Apr-Aug 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1724-26 (22 Aug 43 updated to 8 Mar 44) and
A5260 pp.2156-60 (22 Aug 43 updated to 8 Mar 44); chronologies; BA-MA;
NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Metz-Frescaty (FR) (49 04 35 N – 06 08 00 E)
General: airfield in eastern France 5 km SSW of Metz and between 2 rail
lines immediately SE of Château Frescaty.
History: Frescaty was a large, well-appointed former French military air
base. Used mainly by the Luftwaffe for elementary and advanced flight
training.
Dimensions: approx. 1280 x 1000 meters (1400 x 1100 yards).
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surface measuring approx. 1190 x 1465 meters (1300 x 1600 yards) with a
“V” shape. Infrastructure: no hangars, workshops or accommodations.
The nearest rail connection was at Moreuil, c. 7 km to the W. Dispersal:
the 2 dispersal areas – Northeast and South – had a total of 13 open aircraft
shelters. Defenses: there was 1 light Flak position.
Remarks:
Sep 40: assigned airfield code number 511. Came under Koflug 19/XI
(Beauvais).
26 Jul 42: assigned new airfield code number 274.
1942: landing area obstructed, dispersal empty and deteriorating, Flak
position abandoned.
23 Sep 43: landing area now permanently obstructed with trenches.
Operational Units: none identified.
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 10/I (Oct 40 – Jun 41); Flugplatzkdo. of
Fl.H.Kdtr. E 2/VI Rosières-en-Santerre (c. 1942 – Mar 43).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 p.1732 (14 Aug 43) and A5260 pp.2170-71 (14
Aug 43); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Millau-Larzac (FR) (c. 49 59 20 N – 03 10 52 E)
General: landing ground in S France approx. 70 km NW of Montpellier and
15 km SE of Millau. No record found of use by the Luftwaffe. Listed as
operational in June 1944.
[Sources: Mattiello]
Millegrand-Mini (FR) (43 11 55 N – 02 29 45 E)
General: landing ground in S France 11.25 km E of Carcassonne, 4.25 km
ESE of Trèbes and on the N side of a tiny hamlet named Millegrand.
History: probable satellite or dispersal field for Carcassonne airfield that was
under construction in Jun 44. Surface and Dimensions: farm land
measuring approx. 1050 x 185 meters (1150 x 200 yards). Infrastructure:
none.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 p.139 (20 Jun 44); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA;
PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Mittelbronn (FR) (a.k.a. Phalsbourg, Phalsbourg-Bourscheid) (48 46 00
N – 07 12 07 E)
General: former landing ground in the northern Alsace region of E France
approx. 75 km E of Nancy and 4 km W of Phalsbourg. No record found of
use by the Luftwaffe. Listed as operational in June 1944.
[Sources: Mattiello]
Modane (FR) (a.k.a. Sollières-Sardières?) (c. 45 15 N – 06 48 E)
General: landing ground in the Alps of SE France approx. 85 km E of
Grenoble. No record found of use by the Luftwaffe. Listed as operational
in June 1944.
[Sources: Mattiello]
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Operational Units: I./JG 1 (May 40); I./JG 21 (May 40); II./JG 3 (May-Jun
41); 11./JG 26 (Dec 42); 5.(F)/Aufkl.Gr. 123 (Jul 43 – Aug 44).
Station Commands: Fl.Pl.Kdo. A 41/XI (Jan 43)?; Fl.H.Kdtr. E 63/XI (Apr
43? – Mar 44); Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v) 219/XI (Apr-Aug 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete):
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1733-35 (17 Aug 43 updated to 11 Apr 44) and
A5260 pp.2172-76 (17 Aug 43 updated to 11 Apr 44); chronologies; BA-MA;
NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Moncy (FR) (48 49 05 N – 00 41 25 E)
General: satellite airstrip for Flers landing ground in Normandy 48 km SSW
of Caen, 12 km NW of Flers and 800 meters SSW of the village of Moncy.
History: leveling work to build the strip was underway in Jun 44 but by 25
Jul 44 had been abandoned. Never completed, never serviceable. Surface
and Dimensions: grass surface measuring approx. 1000 x 275 meters (1100
x 300 yards). Infrastructure: none.
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 p.1736 (25 Jul 44); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA;
PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Mondésir (FR) (see Étampes-Mondésir).
Mons-en-Chaussée (FR) (a.k.a. Péronne) (49 52 20 N – 03 01 30 E)
General: airfield in NE France 52 km E of Amiens, 18-19 km WNW of St-
Quentin and 9 km SE of Péronne between the villages of Mons-en-Chaussée
and Estrées-en-Chaussée.
History: used by the RAF during 1939-40. Improved and developed by the
Luftwaffe during 1940-41 with plans to use it as a bomber base, but this
need no longer existed by the time it was completed and it was temporarily
inactivated.
Dimensions: approx. 1465 x 1050 meters (1600 x 1150 yards) and roughly
rectangular in shape.
Surface and Runways: grass on loam soil. Had 3 concrete runways – (1)
approx. 1645 meters (1800 yards) aligned E/W and with prepared strips on
both sides; (2) approx. 1600 meters (1750 yards) aligned NE/SW with
assembly hardstands at each end and prepared strips on both sides; (3)
approx. 1600 meters (1750 yards) aligned NW/SE. Construction work on
the NW/SE runway began in 1941 but the surfacing work was still unfinished
in mid-1943 and it was probably unserviceable. Equipped with perimeter
lighting, permanent flare-path, permanent runway illumination, beam
approach system and visual Lorenz systems for the airfield flare-path and for
the two serviceable runways.
Fuel and Ammunition: fuel storage was at the NE corner of the airfield and
in the South dispersal area. Ammunition and bomb storage was just N of
the North dispersal area.
Infrastructure: very little – there was 1 small hangar in the Northeast
dispersal area and workshop huts in the adjacent villages. Barrack and
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storage hut clusters had been erected in 3 of the adjacent villages and other
personnel were accommodated in the villages of Monchy-Lagache, 3 km
SSE, and Athies, 4 km SW. The nearest rail connection was in Mons-en-
Chaussée.
Dispersal: the 3 dispersals – North, Northeast and South – had a total of 41
covered aircraft shelters.
Defenses: had 7 light Flak positions in Jul 43.
Remarks:
Nov 42: runways and landing area obstructed.
Mar 43: temporary obstructions cleared and in use by Ju 52 transports
during April.
22 Jun 44: attacked by 9th AAF fighter-bombers – concentrated hits on
hangars.
25 Jun 44: bombed by 12 B-24 Liberators.
14 Jul 44: bombed by 39 B-24s.
25 Aug 44: bombed and strafed by 9th AAF P-38 Lightnings – runways,
hangars, buildings and fuel dumps hit.
28 Aug 44: bombed by 9th AAF bombers.
Operational Units: KGr. z.b.V. 400 (Apr 43); I./JG 5 (Jun-Jul 44); II./JG 26
(Aug 44).
Station Commands: Fl.Pl.Kdo. A 37/XI (1943 – Mar 44); Flugplatzkdo.
Mons-en-Chaussée of Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v) 230/XI Clastres (Apr-Aug 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): gem.Flak-Abt. 654(v)
(Péronne – 1944); 18.(Flum.Mess)/Ln.-Rgt. 52 (Péronne - c.1943 – Aug 44).
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 pp.2246-48 (18 Aug 43); chronologies; BA-MA;
NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Montardon (FR) (a.k.a. Balat) (43 21 30 N – 00 20 10 W)
General: landing strip in SW France 5.5 km E of Pau-Pont Long airfield, 1.25
km SE of Montardon and immediately SW of the Hamlet of Romas. History:
built Jun-Jul 44 as a satellite or dispersal strip for Pau airfield. Gaps had
been cut in hedges around the field for parking and concealing aircraft.
Surface and Dimensions: farm land measuring approx. 1190 x 230 meters
(1300 x 250 yards). Infrastructure: none.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 p.139 (16 Jul 44); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA;
PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Montargis (FR) (a.k.a. Vimory) (47 57 40 N – 02 41 11 E)
General: landing ground in N France 63 km E of Orléans, 5.5 km SW of
Montargis and 2 km NNE of the village of Vimory. History: no record found
of operational use by Luftwaffe air units. Believed to have been returned to
cultivation or blocked with obstacles in 1941-42.
Station and Town Units (on various dates – not complete): Stab III.
(Flum.Mess)/Ln.-Rgt. 57 (Montargis, c.Mar-Aug 44).
[Sources: chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
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new runway was completed. There was also a concrete perimeter track
around the landing area and wide taxi tracks that connected the SW hangar
group to the landing area. Equipped with permanent lighting for the
runway, perimeter lighting, a beam approach system and a visual Lorenz
system.
Fuel and Ammunition: refueling loops were located at the NE and SE
corners, and on the S and W boundaries. Bulk fuel storage dumps were
about 1 km SSW of the landing area and near the hangars at the NE corner.
At least 4 ammunitions stores and dumps were situated off the perimeter
adjacent to rail lines and roads.
Infrastructure: had a total of 5 hangars – 2 medium and 1 small at the NW
corner, and 1 large and 1 medium off the S boundary near the SW corner.
Additional workshops were at the NW corner. Station admin buildings and
stores were on the W boundary and the nearest barracks were 2.5 km S of
the airfield with other personnel being billeted in Mont-de-Marsan. The
nearest rail connection was the Brogas – Mont-de-Marsan line which passed
within 460 meters (500 yards) of the W end of the runway.
Dispersal: there were 3 dispersal areas – Northeast, South and Northwest
with a total of 11 very large aircraft shelters, 28 large, 5 small plus 12
aircraft parking sites. Taxi tracks were cut through the woods in early 1944
to extend them out to a distance of some 3.25 km from the airfield
boundary.
Defenses: in Jan 44 the airfield was protected by 8 light Flak positions with
4 to 6 guns each, of which at least one was emplaced in a Flak tower, and at
least 3 machine gun strongpoints or bunkers along the base perimeter.
Remarks:
20 Oct 40: operational.
20 Apr 41: employed 113 non-German workers, a very small number
compared to other Luftwaffe air bases in France.
24 May 43: advisory issued – extensive construction work underway on the
E and W sections of the landing area. The paved runways were only to be
used for taxying at this time.
6 Jan 44: foundations for what may be a new medium hangar had been laid
in woods off the SW corner. The hangar was completed by April.
27 Mar 44: airfield bombed by 47 B-24 Liberators.
5 Apr 44: a new medium hangar has been completed in the woods off the
SW corner and is connected to the landing area by a wide taxi track to the W
end of the runway.
25 May 44: preliminary ground work indicated possible plans to extend the
runway to the W across the Mont-de-Marsan – Brocas road. If completed, it
would provide a runway length of approx. 2285 meters (2500 yards).
Operational Units: I./JG 2 (Oct 40); II./JG 2 (Oct 40, Oct 42); III./JG 2
(Oct 40); Stab, 1., 2./Fernaufklärungsgruppe 5 (Jun 43 – Aug 44); II./JG 26
(May-Jun 44); Wekusta 2 OKL (Jul 44).
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Reserve Training & Replacement Units: 1./Erg.JGr. West (Feb 42 – Apr 43).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 40/XIII (c.Nov 40 – Mar 44); Fl.H.Kdtr.
E(v) 235/XII (Apr-Aug 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): gem.Flak-Abt. 497 (1944
– May 44); gem.Flak-Abt. 175 (Mar-Aug 44); Lw.-Bauleitung Mont-de-
Marsan (c.1940-44); Munitionsausgabestelle d.Lw. 19/XII (Feb 44 - ? );
elements of Division Gen. Göring (c.Jul-Nov 42).
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1737-38 (25 May 44); A5260 pp.2177-78,
2189-91 (9 May 44); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site
ww2.dk]
Montdidier (FR) (c. 49 40 25 N – 02 34 00 E)
General: airfield in NE France 90 km NNE of Paris and 2.8 km N of
Montdidier.
History: an existing landing ground, it was continuously enlarged and
improved after the Germans took it over in Jun 40. Most of the heavy
construction, such as the concrete runways, took place between Jan 41 and
May 43 during which no units were stationed there.
Dimensions: not found.
Surface and Runways: grass surface. There were 3 concrete runways on
the E side of the landing area – (1) approx. 1690 meters (1850 yards)
aligned NE/SW; (2) approx. 1645 meters (1800 yards) aligned NNW/SSE;
(3) approx. 1370 meters (1500 yards) aligned E/W. All 3 runways were
equipped with permanent illumination and visual Lorenz systems. The
airfield had obstruction lighting, a permanent flare-path and a beam
approach system.
Fuel and Ammunition: refueling loops were located in all 4 dispersal areas
and underground fuel tanks were on the W boundary. There was a large
ammunition dump 2.8 km NE of the airfield on the E side of the Fignières
Woods and a bomb dump on the SW outskirts of Fignières. A small
ammunition storage site was located 1.1 km N of the landing area.
Infrastructure: sparse - had just 1 hangar in the Northeast dispersal area
that was used for repairs. The station HQ was reportedly located in Forestel
Farm off the SW side of the airfield. Personnel were believed to have been
accommodated in the village of Fignières.
Dispersal: aircraft shelters were erected around the edge of several small
woods off the airfield boundaries to the Northeast, Southeast, Southwest
and Northwest and were particularly well camouflaged. A total of 37
shelters were available in Aug 43.
Defenses: surrounded by 4 heavy and approx. 12 light Flak positions out to
a radius of 2.5 km plus numerous antiaircraft machine gun pits. Ground
defenses consisted of 7 reinforced strongpoint bunkers, slit trenches, barbed
wire and road blocks on all roads approaching the airfield.
Remarks:
Sep 40: assigned airfield code number 512.
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(2000 x 1000 yards) for the northern strip and 1600 x 1050 meters (1750 x
1150 yards) for the southern one. Infrastructure: none noted.
Remarks:
Jan 42: operational using airfield code number 571.
26 Jul 42: assigned new airfield code number 281 S.
Operational Units: I./KG 66 (Aug 44).
Station Commands: Flugplatzkdo. of Fl.H.Kdtr. E 2/VI Rosières-en-Santerre
(1942 – Mar 43).
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 amendments (6 Jul 44); chronologies; BA-MA;
NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Morez-Morbier (FR) (c. 46 31 N – 06 01 E)
General: former landing ground in east-central France approx. 38 km NNW
of Geneva/Switzerland. No record found of any Luftwaffe flying units being
based here. Listed as operational in June 1944.
[Sources: Mattiello; AFHRA]
Morgny (FR) (a.k.a. Bezu-la-Foret) (49 23 N – 01 34 E)
General: landing ground in N France 38 km E of Rouen. History: used
only for a few days by the Luftwaffe during the sweep across northern
France in June 1940. Subsequently returned to cultivation or obstructed.
Surface and Dimensions: grass surface. Infrastructure: none noted.
Operational Units: Stab, II./JG 26 (Jun 40).
Station Commands: none identified.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Morhange (FR) (c. 48 55 N – 06 38 E)
General: former landing ground in E France approx. 40 km SE of Metz. No
record found of any Luftwaffe flying units being based here. Listed as
operational in June 1944.
[Sources: Mattiello; AFHRA]
Morlaix (FR) (a.k.a. Ploujean, Marechal Foch) (48 36 15 N – 03 50 00
W)
General: airfield in NW Brittany 3.25 km NNE of Morlaix and 1.25 km E of
the village of Ploujean.
History: extended and improved by the Luftwaffe from occupation in Jun 40
to spring 1941. Used moderately by fighters and bombers until Feb 42 and
then very little after that.
Dimensions: approx. 1235 x 870 meters (1350 x 950 yards) and roughly
rectangular in shape.
Surface and Runways: artificially drained turf surface. Had 1 concrete
runway measuring approx. 1235 meters (1350 yards) and aligned NE/SW.
Assembly hardstands were at each end and a perimeter road encircled the
landing area. Equipped with boundary lighting, permanent runway
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N
Nancy (FR) (48 41 N – 06 10 E)
Lw. City Garrison and Station Units (on various dates – specific airfield not
identified): Stab/XI. Fliegerkorps (Feb 44); Transportfliegerführer 2 (Aug
44); gem.Flak-Abt. 593(v) (Aug-Sep 44); Stab/Ln.-Ausbildungs-Div. (Oct 42
– Aug 44); Stab/Ln.-Ausb.Rgt. 5 (fall 42 – Aug 44); Stab III./Ln.-Ausb.Rgt.
5 (fall 42 – Aug 44); Kfz.Bestände-Bezirk d.Lw. 5/XII A (May 44);
2./Flughafenschutz-Rgt. Westfrankreich (c.fall 43 – Aug 44); II./Flieger-Rgt.
32.
Nancy-Azelot (FR) (a.k.a. Lupcourt) (48 35 40 N – 06 14 35 E)
General: landing ground in E France 13 km SSE of Nancy; 2 km S of
Lupcourt and 1 km NE of Azelot.
History: used by the French Air Force to Jun 40 then plowed up and made
unserviceable. Ditches later filled in but landing area temporarily blocked
with obstructions. Rehabilitated in spring 1944 for use as a dispersal field
for Nancy-Essey.
Dimensions: approx. 1190 x 915 meters (1300 x 1000 yards) and roughly
rectangular in shape.
Surface and Runways: grass surface. No paved runway.
Fuel and Ammunition: refueling points were on the SW boundary.
Infrastructure: no hangars or workshops, but there was an accommodations
hut at the N corner of the landing area. HQ and staff was in a château on
the S outskirts of Lupcourt village.
Dispersal: aircraft were parked on the edge of a tree line S of a railway
track 1 km from the NW boundary of the field.
Remarks:
4 Mar 43: landing area obstructed with stakes and posts.
Mar 44: airfield reopened after being obstructed with barricades to prevent
use (Qu./Feldluftgaukdo. W/F).
27 Mar 44: low-level attack by VIII Fighter Command P-47s – claimed 4 x Ju
52s destroyed and 1 damaged.
9 May 44: landing ground serviceable and in use.
Operational Units: none identified.
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History: a pre-war civil and military airfield that was extensively developed
by the Luftwaffe after Jun 40, including extension of the landing area and
the building of a second runway (NNE/SSW). Nantes was a very busy
Luftwaffe airfield for anti-shipping units, long-range reconnaissance, weather
reconnaissance and as a rest and refit stop for bomber units. The
S.N.C.A.S.O. (Société nationale des constructions aéronautiques du sud-
ouest) aircraft plant located here did major repair work on German aircraft
until it was heavily bombed and badly damaged on 4 Jul 43.
Dimensions: approx. 1370 x 775 meters (1500 x 850 yards) with a kidney
shape.
Surface and Runways: level, artificially drained grass surface in good
condition. Had 2 intersecting concrete runways – (1) approx. 1280 x 42
meters (1400 x 46 yards) aligned NW/SE with an assembly hardstand at the
S end; (2) approx. 1550 x 82 meters (1700 x 90 yards) aligned NNE/SSW
with assembly hardstands at both ends. A perimeter road enclosed the
landing area. Equipped with a beam approach system, permanent runway
illumination and a visual Lorenz system for each runway.
Fuel and Ammunition: a refueling loop was in the North dispersal area,
another refueling point near the hangars at the center of the W boundary
and underground tanks for bulk storage were off the E boundary.
Ammunition was stored off the Southwest dispersal area, 2.5 km off the W
boundary (this was a large bomb dump) and off the WNW side of the field.
Infrastructure: had 2 large hangars with adjoining workshops on the E
boundary, 1 large double hangar on the W boundary and 1 small repair
hangar in the Northeast dispersal area. The station motor pool and garages
were near the barracks off the E boundary. A wide taxiway connected the
NE corner of the airfield with the S.N.C.A.S.O. (Société nationale des
constructions aéronautiques du sud-ouest) aircraft assembly plant located 1
km to the E. Station HQ and officers’ accommodations were in several
châteaux near the airfield while the men were billeted in barracks off the E
boundary and in huts erected in the village of La Ranjonnière, 1 km off the N
boundary. Rail sidings were on the S boundary.
Dispersal: the 4 dispersal areas – North, Northeast, Northwest and
Southwest – had a total of 36 large covered aircraft shelters plus 3 or 4
aircraft parking stands.
Defenses: in Jul 43, protected by 3 heavy and 12 light Flak positions with
4.5 km of the airfield plus the larger Flak defenses of Nantes. Ground
defenses included at least 10 reinforced strongpoints and barbed wire
around the entire airfield.
Remarks:
20 Apr 41: employed 800 non-German workers.
4 Jul 43: factory and airfield bombed by 61 B-17 Fortresses – factory heavily
damaged.
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found of any operational use by the French Air Force or the Luftwaffe.
Surface and Dimensions: farm land measuring approx. 1100 x 730 meters
(1200 x 800 yards) and rectangular in shape. No paved runway. Fuel and
Ammunition: had triple refueling points at the NE, NW and SW corners.
Infrastructure: none. Dispersal: no organized dispersal facilities.
Defenses: none noted.
Remarks:
Jun 44: listed in Luftwaffe documents as operational.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 p.150 (17 Jun 43); Mattiello; chronologies; BA-MA;
NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Nauroy (FR) (a.k.a. Beine-Nauroy, Beine) (49 14 00 N – 04 15 00 E)
General: landing ground in NE France c. 17 km E of Reims, 3.25 km N of
Prosnes landing ground and 1.6 km SW of the village of Nauroy. History:
built summer 1944 and serviceable by early August. Surface and
Dimensions: measured 1415 x 185 meters (1550 x 200 yards).
Infrastructure: none noted.
[Sources: A.I.2.(b)/Air Ministry Amendment dated 8 Aug 44 in
BNA(PRO)/AIR 40]
Néac (FR) (c. 44 55 N – 01 11 W)
General: landing ground in SW France approx. 33 km ENE of Bordeaux city
center. No evidence found of use by the Luftwaffe. Possibly used as a
dispersal field for Bordeaux-Merignac. Listed in Luftwaffe documents as
operational in June 1944.
[Sources: Mattiello]
Neufchâteau (FR) (48 21 40 N – 05 43 15 E)
General: emergency landing ground in E France 53 km SW of Nancy and 2
km ENE of Neufchâteau. History: a former French military airfield. Used
by the Luftwaffe 1940 to early 1941. Dimensions: 600 x 600 meters.
Remarks: had possibly reverted to agricultural use by 26 March 1942, the
date it was last photographed by Allied reconnaissance aircraft.
Operational Units: I./JG 21 (May 40); I./JG 51 (May 40); I./ZG 2 (May-Jul
40); V.(Z)/LG 1 (May 40).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 21/XII (Jun 40); Fl.H.Kdtr. E 7/VII (Jul 40
– Feb 41?).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): Koflug 8/XII (May/Jun
40); 2./Festungs-Flak-Rgt. 32(v) (May 40); Stab II./Ln.-Ausb.Rgt. 305 (fall
42 – c.Aug 44); Stab/Lw.-Bau-Rgt. 3/XII (Jun 40).
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 p. 2472 (27 Aug 43); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA;
PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Neuville-sous-Montreuil (FR) (c. 50 28 N – 01 46 E)
General: landing ground in NE France 14.5 km ESE of Le Touquet and 1.5
km NE of Montreuil. History: used by the Luftwaffe as a forward fighter
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Lw. City Garrison and Station Commands (on various dates – specific airfield
not identified): Stab/XI. Fliegerkorps (Nov 42 – Sep 43); Stab/2.
Fliegerdivision (Montfrin, Nov 42 – Aug 44); Stab/11. Flak-Div. (Remoulins,
Jan 43 - ? ); Stab/5. Flak-Brig. (c.Feb-Aug 44); Stab/Flak-Brig. z.b.V.
(c.Feb-Jun 43); Stab/18. Flak-Brig. (c.Jul-Oct 43); le.Flak-Abt. 731 (c.May-
Aug 44); Sprengkommando d.Lw. 4/XII (Uzès, 1943-44); 22.(Flugm.-
Leit)/Ln.-Rgt. 213 (1943); 15.(Flum.Mess)/Ln.-Rgt. 51 (1943-44); Stab III.
(Flum.Mess)/Ln.-Rgt. 203 (early 43 – Aug 44); Ln.-Abt. 72 (Montfrin, Nov
42 – Aug 44); Ln.-Abt. 131 (Remoulins, Jan 43 - ? ); Ln.-Betr.Kp. 165 (Feb-
Aug 44)?
Nîmes-Courbessac (FR) (43 51 10 N – 04 24 50 E)
General: airfield in S France 102 km NW of Marseille; airfield 4 km ENE of
Nîmes.
History: dates from approx. June 1919 when it opened as a civil
airfield/airport. At the beginning of the war in 1939-40, in was home to a
French Air Force signals training school, and from mid-1941 to a Vichy
fighter squadron. Used by Luftwaffe training units during 1943-44 and for
the assembly of parachute units bound for Italy in summer 1943.
Dimensions: approx. 1145 x 1100 meter (1250 x 1200 yards).
Surface and Runways: all-weather grass surface. No paved runways.
Fuel and Ammunition: refueling loops were on the S boundary, NE corner,
W boundary and NW corner, and underground fuel storage reportedly in the
NW and NE corners. Ammunition was stored near the N boundary and at a
powder factory off the E boundary.
Infrastructure: had 6 small hangars on the N boundary with probable
workshops nearby. Station admin offices, mess and other support activities
were behind the hangars while the barracks were on the S side of the road
from Nîmes to Courbessac. The nearest rail connection was in Grezan, 1.2
km SSE of the airfield.
Dispersal: 2 large dispersal areas – Northeast and Southeast – were in the
initial stages of construction in late summer 1943 and by mid-Mar 44 had a
total of 35 medium open aircraft shelters and 23+ additional parking
hardstands.
Defenses: no details.
Remarks:
21 Aug 44: airfield ordered evacuated and destroyed.
Operational Units: Verbindungsstaffel 61 (Nov 42 - ?); Flugbereitschaft 2.
Fliegerdivision (Nov 42, Jul 43); Transportstaffel XI. Fliegerkorps (Jul-Aug
43); Transportstaffel 2. Fallschirmjäger-Div. (Jul-Aug 43).
School Units: Flieger-Rgt. 63 (1943-44).
Reserve Training & Replacement Units: 3./Erg.JGr. Süd (Nov 42 – Jun 44).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 11/I (c. Feb 43 - Apr 44); Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v)
241/XII (Apr-Jun 44); Flugplatzkdo. of Fl.H.Kdtr. E 243/XII Montpellier (Jul-
Aug 44).
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Infrastructure: had 1 small hangar and several huts at the NW corner, one
of which may have been used as a workshop and the other as billets. The
nearest rail connections were in Niort. Dispersal: aircraft were parked on
the edge of woods to the NW and S of the strip. There were no aircraft
shelters in Jun 44. Defenses: none noted.
Remarks:
1942: landing area obstructed with logs.
1 Mar 44: landing area being extended off the S and E boundaries giving it
revised dimension of 1370 x 1370 meters (1500 x 1500 yards). A dispersal
area off the W boundary was under construction. Landing area remains
temporarily obstructed.
20 Jun 44: dimensions revised to include an unpaved prepared strip 1415 x
185 meters (1550 x 200 yards) aligned E/W with leveling underway to
possibly build a second prepared strip.
Operational Units: none identified.
Station Commands: none identified.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1766-67 (15 Aug 43 updated to 20 Jun 44) and
A5260 pp.2221-25 (15 Aug 43); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web
site ww2.dk]
Nogaro (FR) (43 46 09 N – 00 02 00 W)
General: landing ground in SW France 40 km ESE of Mont-de-Marsan. No
evidence found of use by thye Luftwaffe. Listed as operational in June
1944.
[Sources: Mattiello]
Nogent-le-Roi (FR) (48 37 35 N – 01 30 40 E)
General: landing ground in N France 65.5 km WSW of Paris, 14 km SE of
Dreux airfield and 2.5 km SW of Nogent-le-Roi. History: the original 1940-
41 construction of an airfield was abandoned in 1941 and an elaborate decoy
field built in its place. In spring 1944 it was renovated and turned into a
satellite for Dreux airfield. Surface and Dimensions: grass surface
measuring approx. 1370 x 1100 meters (1500 x 1200 yards) with an
irregular shape. No paved runway. Infrastructure: there were 3 huts off
the SE boundary, probably for accommodations. Dispersal: a taxi track led
from the E end of the strip to a wooded park on the SW outskirts of Nogent-
le-Roi where aircraft could be parked in concealment.
Remarks:
15 Aug 43: all infrastructure removed except for 1 of the aircraft shelters,
the landing area and sections of the taxi tracks were covered with weeds
and growth. Landing area still obstructed.
Operational Units: II./JG 3 (Jul-Aug 44).
Station Commands: none identified.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
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[Sources: AFHRA A5259 p.1341 (18 Jul 44) and A5260 p.2226 (15 Aug 43);
chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Nonancourt (FR) (48 48 00 N – 01 14 00 E)
General: satellite strip and dispersal field in NW France c. 9 km NW of
Dreux and 4.5 km S of Illiers-l’Évêque. History: under construction at the
beginning of June 1944 and was serviceable and in use by the end of the
same month. Surface and Dimensions: measured approx. 915 x 230
meters (1000 x 250 yards). Infrastructure: none noted.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 amendments (18 Jul 44)]
Nordausques (FR) (c. 50 49 N – 02 04 E)
General: landing ground in NE France approx. 21.75 km SE of Calais. No
record found of any Luftwaffe units being based here.
Remarks:
Sep 40: assigned airfield code number 416. Came under Koflug 8/III
(Saint-Omer).
[Sources: Mattiello]
Norrent-Fontès (FR) (50 33 50 N – 02 22 15 E)
General: landing ground in NE France 21 km SSE of St-Omer, 3.5 km SW
of Norrent-Fontè and 1 km SE of the village of Rely. History: a French
landing ground used by both the French military and the RAF during 1939-
40. Limited Luftwaffe activity there to the end of 1942. Surface and
Dimensions: grass surface measuring approx. 1415 x 1050 meters (1550 x
1150 yards) with an “L” shape. No paved runway, but the main road
passing 500 meters to the SW could be used as one. Fuel and Ammunition:
refueling points were located on the SE and SW sides of the landing area
with fuel tanks probably in the same places. Ammunition was stored on the
S edge of the South dispersal and the W edge of the North dispersal.
Infrastructure: had 1 small repair hangar each in the North and South
dispersal areas. The station HQ and billeting were in the village of Auchy-
au-Bois, just S of the landing area, and additional accommodations were in
the village of Rely. The nearest rail connection was in Auchy. Dispersal:
the North and South dispersal areas had a total of at least 63 small covered
aircraft shelters concealed among village houses and cut into the line of
nearby woods. The majority of the shelters were camouflaged to look like
houses. Defenses: strongly defended by 2 heavy and 11 light Flak
positions within 3 km of the landing area. Ground defenses included several
machine gun positions and a defensive trench system in the South dispersal.
Satellites and Decoys:
Norrent-Fontès – Blessy (c. 50 36 N – 02 19 E), dummy located 5.25
km NW of Norrent-Fontès landing ground.
Remarks:
2 Jun 40: first occupied by the Germans this date.
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Sep 40: assigned airfield code number 397. Came under Koflug 8/III
(Saint-Omer).
1 Dec 43: landing area open and unobstructed.
11 Feb 44: landing area was in the process of being obstructed with
trenches.
6 Mar 44: now seen to be permanently obstructed with landing area
completely trenched.
Operational Units: I./ZG 1 (May-Jun 40); 11.(Höhenstaffel)/JG 26 (Aug-
Nov 42).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 18/VI (c. Jul 40 – Apr 41); Teilkdtr.
Norrent-Fontès of Fl.H.Kdtr. E 5/VI St-Omer (1941-42); Fl.Pl.Kdo. A 40/XI
(1943-44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1768-71 (21 Aug 43 updated to 6 Mar 44) and
A5260 pp.2227-30 (21 Aug 43 updated to 6 Mar 44); Mattiello;
chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Noyon (FR) (49 36 05 N – 03 00 05 E)
General: emergency landing ground in NE France 45 km W of Laon and 2
km N of Noyon. History: a former French civil landing ground. The
landing area had been obstructed by trenches by mid-1943. Surface and
Dimensions: grass on clay sub-soil measuring approx. 455 x 670 meters
(500 x 730 yards) and roughly rectangular in shape. Infrastructure: there
was 1 small hangar at the NE corner.
Remarks:
Jan 42: operational using airfield code number 559. Came under Fl.H.Kdtr.
E 23/VI Amy.
Jun 44: listed by the Luftwaffe as still operational.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 p.2471 (27 Aug 43); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA;
PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Nuncq (FR) (a.k.a. Nuncq-Frevent, Nuncq-Framecourt, Nuncq-Hautecôte)
(50 18 45 N – 02 18 35 E)
General: airfield in NE France 9 km SSW of St-Pol and 1.5 km ENE of the
village of Nuncq-Hautecôte.
History: construction included two paved runways that were laid by the
British Expeditionary Force during the winter of 1939-40 and additional
taxiways and aircraft revetments later built by the Luftwaffe in 1941. No
evidence has been found of any Luftwaffe units being based there. A British
Air Ministry intelligence appreciation dated 30 July 1943 stated that the
Luftwaffe avoided making any use of Nuncq during the air campaign against
England in 1940-41, but made some improvements to it during 1941. In
1942 temporary obstructions blocked both runways and by March 1943 the
landing area had been permanently obstructed with trenches. By early
September 1943 the runways had also had trenches dug across them
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O
Offekerque (FR) (c. 50 56 N – 02 01 E)
General: former landing ground in NE France approx. 11.5 km E of Calais
town center. No record found of any Luftwaffe units being based here.
Remarks:
Sep 40: assigned airfield code number 419. Came under Koflug 8/III
(Saint-Omer).
[Sources: Mattiello; AFHRA]
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
boundary. The motor pool and garages were at the SW corner. The
nearest rail connection was in Cameret-sur-Aigues, 1.6 km N of the airfield.
Dispersal: there were 3 dispersal areas – North, Southeast and South – in
Aug 43, but these were without aircraft shelters or parking hardstands.
Defenses: protected by 5 light Flak positions in Dec 42.
Satellites and Decoys:
Orange-Caritat/I (44 06 50 N – 04 51 15 E), satellite and dispersal
strip 3 km SSW of Orange-Caritat airfield. Prepared Mar-May 44 with a
length of approx. 915 meters (1000 yards).
Remarks:
11 Aug 43: no further development of the hangar foundations, but the
previously unfinished barrack huts have now been completed.
4 Apr 44: a runway (paved?) aligned NW/SE was under construction with
approx. 825 meters (900 yards) completed. The North dispersal now has at
least 2 aircraft shelters and the Southeast dispersal has been extended 2.5
km from the SE corner.
3 May 44: work has started in the NW corner to meet the new runway in the
center of the airfield. When completed, the runway will be approx. 1830
meters (2000 yards) in length.
15 Jun 44: low-level attack by 15th AAF P-38s and P-51s – claimed 2 x Bf
109s destroyed and 6 more damaged – all from JGr. 200, a Macchi 202 from
Jagdlehrer-Überprüfungsgruppe shot up and destroyed on the ground, and 1
x Ju 52 destroyed, 2 x Ju 52s damaged, these from unspecified unit(s).
Operational Units: TGr. 30 (Jun-Jul 43); Stab, I./KG 77 (Mar-Jun 44);
III./KG 77 (Mar-Jul 44); JGr. 200 (Jun – Aug 44); II./JG 77 (Aug 44).
School Units: Jagdlehrerüberprüfungsgruppe (Dec 43 – May 44).
Reserve Training & Replacement Units: (Erg.) JGr. Süd (Aug 43 – Jun 44);
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 16/VII (Sep – c. Dec 43); Fl.H.Kdtr. A
228/XII (Nov 43 - Mar 44); Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v) 242/XII (Apr-Aug 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): Nachtjagdraumführer 110
(Dec 42 – Feb 44); Lufttorpedo-Betr.Kp. 8 (Jul 44); Luftminen-Zug 16 ( ? –
Jun 44); Ldssch.Zug 47/III (Jul 44)?; Ldssch.Zug d.Lw. 207/IV (Jul 44).
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 pp.156-59 (18 Feb 43 updated to 8 May 44) and
A5261 pp.181-82 (9 Jul 44); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site
ww2.dk]
Orange – Plan-de-Dieu (FR) (44 10 55 N – 04 55 25 E)
General: airfield in S France 10.5 km ENE of Orange.
History: dates from approx. 1930 as a joint civil-military airfield. Relatively
inactive during the Vichy period. The Luftwaffe began large-scale
development in Sep 43 and the runway was completed in May 44.
Taxiways linked Caritat and Plan-de-Dieu and this gave the two airfields joint
use of dispersals and satellites.
Surface and Dimensions: dry, all-weather grass surface measuring approx.
1000 x 640 meters (1100 x 700 yards) with an irregular shape. No paved
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runways in Dec 42. In 1944 the dimensions were extended to 1000 x 1100
meters (1100 x 1200 yards). See below for runway details.
Fuel and Ammunition: there were 2 refueling points near the SE corner, 1
near the NE corner, 3 refueling loops along the taxiwaqys in the East
dispersal area and 4 bulk fuel storage tanks on the E boundary. An
ammunition dump was built 2.5 km off the E boundary in spring 1944.
Infrastructure: had 1 small hangar and a few station buildings on the S
boundary. The station HQ was at Orange-Caritat. Personnel were billeted
in the surrounding towns and villages. The nearest rail connection was in
Violès, 2.25 km SE of the landing ground.
Dispersal: no organized dispersal facilities in Aug 43 – aircraft were parked
on the edge of a small wood off the SW corner. In Apr 44 2 dispersals were
under construction (see below).
Defenses: there were 6 light Flak positions in Dec 42.
Remarks:
11 Aug 43: landing area has been extended off the S boundary and at the
SW corner.
4 Apr 44: a runway is under construction (paved?) aligned NW/SE with 1465
meters (1600 yards) completed and another 365 meters (400 yards) to go.
It will have a paved assembly hardstand at the SE end. A North and East
dispersal were under construction but no aircraft shelters had yet been built.
3 May 44: the small hangar on the S boundary has been demolished and a
new medium hangar was being built some 1830 meters (2000 yards) SW of
the landing ground. A visual Lorenz system was being installed for night
operations. A third dispersal area – Southwest – was under construction
with taxiways to link it to the SE end of the new runway and eventually to
the Southeast dispersal area of Orange-Caritat airfield.
8 May 44: the new runway has been completed with assembly hardstands at
both ends and a revised length of 1920 meters (2100 yards). In the East
dispersal, 3 refueling loops have been built along its taxiways. The North
and East dispersals have been linked by taxiways and not have a total of 6
aircraft shelters under construction and 17 parking hardstands completed.
15 Jun 44: low-level attack by 15th AAF P-38s and P-51s – 3 x Ju 88s
destroyed, 1 x Ju 88 and 1 x He 111 damaged – all from III./KG 77.
6 Aug 44: dive-bombed by part of 89 15th AAF P-38 Lightnings – claimed 7
aircraft destroyed on the ground.
15 Aug 44: bombed by 12th AAF A-20 light bombers.
Operational Units: I./LLG 2 (May-Aug 43); 2.(Go)/Verbindungskdo. (S) 2
(Jun-Jul 43); 17./LLG 1 (Jun 43); DFS-Staffel 23 (Jun-Oct 43); part of
III./KG 77 (May-Aug 44); I./KG 26 (Aug 44).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v) 241/XII (Jul-Aug 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): 3. FBK/KG 77 (Aug 44);
118. Flugh.Betr.Kp. (Qu) (Apr, Aug 44); Flugh.Betr.Kp. (FK) 7 (Jun-Aug 44);
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
Remarks:
20 Jun 40: Luftgaustab z.b.V. 12 reported that the landing area was
destroyed and requested a Lw.-Bau-Btl. be sent to restore it.
20 Apr 41: employed 3,983 non-German workers.
6 Feb 44: low-level attack by VIII Fighter Command P-47 Thunderbolts –
claimed 1 x Hs 129 destroyed and 5 x He 111s, 1 x Ju 88 and 1 x Ju 52
damaged.
10 Apr 44: bombed – 2 x Caproni transports from Fallschirmschule 1
destroyed or damaged on the ground.
30 Apr 44: low-level attack by VIII Fighter Command P-38s and P-47s –
claimed 2 x Me 410s destroyed, another damaged and shot up 14 Flak
positions.
23 May 44: bombed by 167 B-24 Liberators and 17 B-17 Fortresses.
7 Jun 44: low-level attack by VIII Fighter Command P-51s – claimed 2 x Ju
52s destroyed.
14 Jun 44: bombed early morning by 97 B-24 Liberators – 1 parked bomber
destroyed and another damaged, runways, taxiways, dispersal areas and
perimeter road all cratered, 1 hangar destroyed and 5 more damaged,
landlines severed, airfield temporarily unserviceable. (German report).
24 Jun 44: bombed by 45 B-24s.
30 Jul 44: low-level attack by VIII Fighter Command P-47s – claimed 9 x
unidentified aircraft destroyed.
11 Aug 44: station command reported it was preparing to transfer to Troyes.
Operational Units: II./LG 1 (Jun 40 – Jan 41); Stab/LG 1 (Jul-Dec 40);
I./LG 1 (Jul 40 – Jan 41); III./KG 27 (Mar-Jun 41); I./KG 40 (May-Jun 44);
Stab, I./KG 54 (Aug 44).
School Units: 5./JFS 5 (Aug 42); Jagdlehrerüberprüfungsstelle (Oct 42);
Jagdlehrerüberprüfungsgruppe (Nov 42 – Aug 43); III./Flieger-Rgt. 91
(1944).
Reserve Training & Replacement Units: IV./KG 40 (Jan – Aug 42); IV./KG
76 (Oct – Nov 42); 13./KG 53 (Sep 42 – Jan 43); IV./KG 53 (Jan 43 – Feb
44).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E(A) 22/XII (Jul 40 – Dec 42); Fl.H.Kdtr. A
204/XII (Jan 43 – Mar 44); Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v) 215/XII (Apr-Aug 44).
Station Units (on various dates on and near the airfield and in the city – not
complete): Koflug Orléans (Koflug 160) (Jun 40 – Mar 41); Koflug 2/XIII
(Apr 41 – Aug 44); 10. Flugh.Betr.Kp./KG 40 (c. Jul 41 – Aug 42); elements
of 115. Flugh.Betr.Kp. (Qu) (Apr 44 - ? ); one Zug of Flugh.Betr.Kp. (FK) 5
(Mar-Aug 44); Stab/Flak-Rgt. 653 (Dec 42); gem.Flak-Abt. 196 (Jul 44);
le.Flak-Abt. 673 (Mar 43); elements of le.Flak-Abt 877 (Aug 44); Flak-
Geräteausgabestelle 4/XII (mot) (1941-43); Sprengkommando d.Lw. 3/XII
(1943); 3.(Tel.Bau)/Ln.-Rgt. 13 (Jun 44); Stab III.(Flum.Mess)/Ln.-Rgt. 57
(c.Mar-Aug 44); 11.(Flum.Mess)/Ln.-Rgt. 57 (c.Mar-Aug 44); I.
(Ln.Betr.)/Luftgau-Nachr.Rgt. 112 (Mar 43 – Aug 44); 4./Feldluftgau-
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P
Paluel (FR) (a.k.a. Saint-Valery-en-Caux) (49 49 45 N – 00 39 00 E)
General: airfield (Fliegerhorst) in NE France 37 km WSW of Dieppe, 6.5 km
SW of Saint-Valery-en-Caux, 1.2 km ESE of Paluel.
History: existed as a French military airfield in 1939. The French Air Force
ploughed it up and rendered it unserviceable in June 1940, but the Germans
restored it several weeks later. It had little activity during the air offensive
against England. In July 1941, the Luftwaffe began construction of the
concrete runway and over the next 6 to 8 months completed that and began
work on a second concrete runway. These development plans were
canceled in spring 1942 and the airfield was virtually abandoned except for a
small caretaker and guard contingent (Flugplatzkommando). No aircraft
were ever noted at Paluel between Jul 41 and Aug 43, and the runway was
blocked with obstructions.
Dimensions: 1190 x 1190 meters (1300 x 1300 yards) with a rectangular
shape.
Surface and Runways: grass surface with a single concrete runway approx.
1650 meters (1800 yards) in length running ENE/WSW. A perimeter track
surrounded the landing area. The runway was equipped with permanent
illumination and a visual Lorenz system for night landings.
Fuel and Ammunition: had 3 small ladder-type servicing and refueling
hardstands at the SE corner and on the edge of each dispersal area. There
was a small ammunition dump in the NW dispersal area and a larger storage
area between Cany-Barville and Saint-Valery-en-Caux.
Infrastructure: had 3 small hangars for repairs, one in each dispersal area.
Barrack huts were located in the village of Janville off the NW corner, and
personnel were probably also accommodated in other nearby villages. A
branch rail spur connected the airfield to the Saint-Valery-en-Caux – Rouen
line passing 3.25 km to the east.
Dispersal: 3 areas – Northeast, Southeast and Northwest with a total of 21
open aircraft shelters that were well concealed in trees.
Defenses: few if any – airfield abandoned.
Remarks:
Sep 40: assigned airfield code number 570.
26 Jul 42: assigned new airfield code number 276.
8 Feb 44: runway prepared for demolition and landing area camouflaged
with a cultivation pattern.
15 Mar 44: dive-bombed by 7 x 9th AAF P-47 Thunderbolts – 3 hits scored on
the runway. The attack was to deny use of the runway to the enemy should
the Luftwaffe decide to reopen Paluel and put it back in service.
12 Jun 44: mines detonated on runway and taxiways and landing area
permanently obstructed. Airfield completely unserviceable.
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
billeted in the Château Haut Buc and a nearby villa just N of the field with
others in Buc village.
Dispersal: there were 24 small covered aircraft shelters in June 1943.
Defenses: there were at least 5 light Flak positions in Jun 43, mostly
emplaced in towers and on rooftops. Much of the airfield perimeter was
surrounded by barbed wire.
Satellites and Decoys:
Magny-les-Hameaux-Mérantais (c. 48 44 N – 02 03 E), suspected
satellite or dispersal field just off the W end of the Paris-Buc landing area.
Listed by the Luftwaffe as operational in Jun 44.
Remarks:
20 Apr 41: airfield employed 1,537 non-German workers.
27 Oct 43: photo reconnaissance showed that the large rectangular hangar
on the E boundary had been removed as well as 2 small covered shelters
from the West dispersal area.
15 Jun 44: bombed by 21 B-24 Liberators.
22 Jun 44: bombed by 36 B-24s.
25 Jun 44: bombed by 11 B-24s.
12 Aug 44: bombed by 67 B-17 Fortresses.
16 Aug 44: evacuation and demolition of airfield ordered by Luftflotte 3.
Operational Units: Wekusta 51 (Jul 40 – Sep 42); JG 51 (Jun 40);
Stab/Aufkl.Gr. 123 (Jul 40 – Aug 44); 1.(F)/Aufkl.Gr. 123 (Jul 40 – Jun 43);
3.(F)/Aufkl.Gr. 123 (Jul 40 – 1940/41); 1.(F)/Aufkl.Gr. 33 (Jun-Sep 42); 1.
(F)/Aufkl.Gr. 121 (Jun 43 – Aug 44).
Station Commands: Flugplatzkdo. Paris-Buc of Fl.H.Kdtr. E 30/XII Toussus-
le-Noble (Apr 41); Flugplatzkdo. Paris-Buc of Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v) 203/XII Paris-
Villacoublay/Süd (Apr-Aug 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): Res.Festungs-Flak-Abt.
323 (Mar 41).
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1482-84 (20 Jun 43 updated to 27 Oct 43) and
A5260 pp.1812-15 (20 Jun 43 updated to 27 Oct 43); chronologies; BA-MA;
NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Paris – Le Bourget (FR) (a.k.a. Dugny, Le Mesnil-Amelot) (48 57 00
N – 02 25 50 E)
General: airfield 12 km NE of Paris city center and immediately N of the
village of Le Bourget.
History: the main airport for Paris from 1919 until the Germans occupied it
in Jun 40. It immediately became the main hub for transports and transit
aircraft in France. A few bomber and reconnaissance units were based at Le
Bourget during 1940 and 1941. In late 1942 or early 1943 it became the
Flugzeugschleuse (aircraft depot center for the routing and delivery of
aircraft to units).
Dimensions: approx. 1415 x 915 meters (1550 x 1000 yards).
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Surface and Runways: firm grass surface. Had a single concrete runway
1370 meters (1500 yards) long that was aligned ENE/WSW and included
assembly hardstands. Prepared strips had been built on both sides of the
runway. Equipped with airfield flare-path and a beam approach system
while the runway had permanent illumination and a visual Lorenz system.
Fuel and Ammunition: fuel was brought to the airfield by rail tank wagon
from the field aviation fuel dump at nearby Dugny and distributed to storage
tanks in the dispersal areas. The main ammunition dump was just off the
W boundary with a smaller dump in the Northwest dispersal area. Further
ammunition stores for immediate use were along the W boundary and near
the individual aircraft shelters.
Infrastructure: there were a total of 18 hangars – on the East side of the
field were 5 large, 4 small and 1 double plus the airport terminal building
and a number of workshops; on the West side were 4 double, 3 triple and 1
single plus workshops and other buildings. The station HQ was in the Le
Bourget townhall and many of the various admin offices were in the airport
terminal building. Personnel were billeted in barracks on the outskirts of
Dugny off the NW corner of the airfield and in private homes at the S end of
the landing area. A special branch rail line served the W side of the airfield.
Dispersal: there were 4 dispersal areas in May 43 – Bonneuil, Northeast,
Northwest and Perimeter - with a total of 28 large covered aircraft shelters
and 15 large open shelters.
Defenses: at least 1 heavy and 7 light Flak positions protected the airfield
out to a radius of 4 km in May 43.
Remarks:
14 Jun 40: just occupied by the Luftwaffe and reported to be sufficiently
serviceable for single aircraft to land and take off.
20 Apr 41: employed 2,022 non-German workers.
14 Jul 43: bombed by 52 B-17 Fortresses – 6 x Ju 88 C-6s from V./KG 40, 2
x LeO 451s from Transportfliegerstaffel Hansa, plus 1 x Fw 190 A-5 from 1.
(F)/SAGr. 128 destroyed or damaged on the ground.
16 Aug 43: bombed by 171 B-17s – 1 x Fh 104 and 1 x Bf 108 from
Kurierstaffel Ob.d.M., plus 1 x Ju 88 R-3, 1 x Fw 58 and 2 x Fi 156 from
Flugbereitschaft Luftflotte 3 destroyed or damaged on the ground.
Immense destruction and damage done to the landing area and buildings.
25 Nov 43: bomb craters covering a part of the landing area measuring
1370 x 365 meters (1500 x 400 yards) have been filled in and serviceability
restored. The rest of the landing area was still unserviceable although
repairs were underway. No evidence of repair work yet on hangars,
workshops and buildings.
3 Mar 44: landing area now serviceable after being repaired. On the E side
of the airfield, 4 of the 5 large hangars had been repaired and the fifth one
was under repair. One small hangar was repaired, 1 was under repair and
the remaining 2 were in the process of being removed. The double hangar
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and workshops had been repaired while the terminal building was still being
repaired. On the W side of the airfield, 2 triple hangars, 4 double hangars
and 1 single hangar undamaged, but the workshops behind the double
hangars were still in a state of damage and little was being done to repair
them.
4 Jun 44: runway reported to have been prepared for demolition.
14 Jun 44: bombed by 134 B-17 Fortresses – 1 x Do 17P, 2 x Fw 58 E-1s, 1
x Ju 86 E-1 and 2 x Ju 88 A-4s from Wetterflugstelle Paris – Le Bourget
destroyed or damaged on the ground – airport terminal building destroyed,
9 hangars destroyed, quarters and accommodations damaged, 2 fuel storage
tanks blown up, 30% of repair parts lost, electrical power and water cut,
radio beacon, direction-finding and landline communications knocked out.
28 Jun 44: bombed by 19 B-17s as a target of opportunity – 1 barrack
building slightly damaged, power, water and landlines all severed, 1 man
KIA and several others WIA.
25 Aug 44: airfield evacuation and demolition ordered by Luftflotte 3.
Operational Units: III./KG 54 (Jun-Jul 40); Flugbereitschaft Luftflotte 3
(c.Jul 40 – Aug 44); Wetterflugstelle Paris – Le Bourget (Sep 40 – Aug 44);
I./St.G. 77 (Jan 41); 2.(F)/Aufkl.Gr. Ob.d.L. (Mar 41); III./KG 26 (Feb-Jul
41); Erprobungsstaffel 190 (Jul-Sep 41); 10./JG 26 (Jun-Jul 42);
Flugzeugleitstelle (Flugzeugschleuse) Luftflottenkdo. 3 (1943-44); KGr.
z.b.V. 700 (Apr 43); IV./TG 4 (May-Jun 43); Transportfliegerstaffel Hansa
(Jun 43 – Aug 44); Verbindungsstaffel Luftflotte 3 (1943/44 – Aug 44);
II./KG 53 (Aug 44).
School Units: Jagdlehrerüberprüfungsstelle (Sep – Oct 42).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 63/XI (Jun-Jul 40); Fl.H.Kdtr. E 16/XII (Jul
40 – Dec 42); Fl.H.Kdtr. E 16/VII (c. Jan 42 – Sep 43); Fl.H.Kdtr. A 202/XII
(Dec 42 – Mar 44); Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v) 201/XII (Apr-Aug 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): Luftgaustab z.b.V. 12 (Jun
40); Stab/Flak-Rgt. 104 (Jun 40); Luftzeugstab 5 (Jun 40); 7. Flgh.Betr.Kp.
KG 26 (Apr 41); Bauleitung Le Bourget (1940-44); Feldlufttanklager Dugny
bei le Bourget (1940-42); Feldlufttanklager 1/III (1942-44);
Kohlensäurelager d.Lw. 1/XII Dugny (1944); Munitionsausgabestelle d.Lw.
17/XII (Apr 41)?; LE-Kolonne 1/III (Aug 40 - ? ); Ldssch.Kp. d.Lw. 9/XII
(1940 – 1943/44)?
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1694-96 (31 May 43 updated to 4 Jun 44) and
A5260 pp.2098-2104 (31 May 43 updated to 3 Mar 44); chronologies; BA-
MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Paris-Orly (FR) (a.k.a. Orly – Villeneuve-le-Roi) (48 43 50 N – 02 23 00
E)
General: airfield in N France 14.5 km SSE of Paris and 1.6 km SW of Orly,
a suburb of Paris.
History: Orly was a joint military, naval and civil airfield that dated back to
at least 1920 when the airship sheds were constructed. The majority of the
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buildings were former assembly and testing workshops used by the Amiot
aircraft firm, the Société Embouttissage Mécanique and the Gnome-Rhône
aero engine company. The Luftwaffe greatly extended and developed the
airfield after the occupation in Jun 40 and turned it into a major operational
and training base.
Dimensions: approx. 1920 x 1510 meters (2100 x 1650 yards).
Surface and Runways: good quality flat grass surface. Had 2 concrete
runways – (1) approx. 1280 meters (1400 yards) aligned NNE/SSW; (2)
approx. 1280 meters (1400 yards) aligned ENE/WSW. Equipped with
boundary lighting, obstruction lighting, permanent runway illumination,
flare-paths and a radio beacon.
Fuel and Ammunition: refueling points and underground bulk storage were
at the SW corner near the large hangar, on the E boundary and at the SW
corner. The main ammunition dumps were located SE of the airfield, S of
the airship sheds on the SW corner and on the N boundary near the NE
corner.
Infrastructure: Orly had a total of 16 hangars – at the SW corner were 2
very large airship hangar sheds (built of reinforced concrete and their
interiors subdivided by blast walls) and 1 large hangar; at the NW corner
were 13 small hangars. Workshops were all grouped at the SW corner near
the airship hangars. Many personnel were billeted in 3 nearby châteaux off
the E and SE boundaries, and some officers in quarters at the SW corner.
The officers’ mess was at the NW corner. A light branch rail line served the
airfield.
Dispersal: the 3 dispersal areas – North, East and South – had a total of 52
aircraft shelters, almost all covered.
Defenses: protected by 2 heavy and 13 light Flak positions in Jul 43. The
positions surrounded the airfield on all sides and all were within 5 km of the
landing area.
Remarks:
20 Apr 41: employed 3,413 non-German workers.
20 May 44: bombed by 90 B-17 Fortresses - Ju 252 V-7 from
2./Versuchsverband d.Ob.d.L. destroyed on the ground.
22 May 44: low-level attack by 9th AAF P-38 Lightnings – 8-10 x Ju 88s from
II./KG 30 destroyed or damaged on the ground.
24 May 44: bombed by 151 B-24 Liberators – the 2 large airship hangar
sheds and 1 small hangar were destroyed and 2 of the admin buildings were
damaged.
25 May 44: bombed - Hawker Typhoon from 2./Versuchsverband d.Ob.d.L.
destroyed on the ground.
25 Jun 44: bombed by 18 B-17 Fortresses as a target of opportunity.
16 Aug 44: evacuation and demolition of airfield ordered by Luftflotte 3.
Operational Units: I./KG 51 (Jun-Aug 40); Stab/Aufkl.Gr. Ob.d.L. (Jun-Oct
40); Stab/KG 51 (Jun 40 – Mar 41); 2.(F)/Aufkl.Gr. Ob.d.L. (Jun 40 – Jun
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airfield for several years and it may also have been used as a salvage depot
where old French bombers were dismantled.
Dimensions: approx. 1000 x 595 meters (1100 x 650 yards).
Surface and Runways: stony surface with only a few sprigs of grass. No
paved runways. Equipped with obstruction and perimeter lighting, and a
visual beacon.
Fuel and Ammunition: underground fuel storage was at the NW corner.
There was limited bomb and ammunition storage along the taxiways leading
to the dispersals.
Infrastructure: had 1 medium and 2 small hangars near the NW corner, one
of which was reportedly fitted out as a workshop and have also been used as
a motor vehicle garage. Station HQ, admin offices, messes, dispensary and
20 long barrack huts were behind the hangars off the N boundary and NW
corner. A few additional barrack huts were located off NE and SW corners.
The Perpignan-Riversaltes rail line passed within c. 200 meters of the E
boundary.
Dispersal: there were 2 areas in Jul 43 – North and Southwest – with a total
of 12 covered aircraft shelters, 3 open aircraft shelters and 2 aircraft parking
hardstands. The taxiways serving the Southwest dispersal were
camouflaged by painting.
Defenses: had just 4 light Flak positions to late 1942, but this number rose
to 12 during 1943-44.
Remarks:
1 Aug 43: one of the hangars was being enlarged, more huts were being
constructed just N of the hangars and a large new dispersal area was being
laid out and developed off the W boundary.
2 May 44: further development of the new dispersal area noted and 1
aircraft shelter has so far been built for it.
Operational Units: none identified.
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. A 209/XII (Nov 42 - ?)?
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 pp.179-83 (16 Nov 42 updated to 2 May 44);
chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Perpignan – Saint-Hippolyte (FR) (42 47 00 N – 02 55 00 E)
General: landing ground in S France 7.25 km NE of Perpignan-Labanère, 4
km NE of Rivessaltes and 4 km W of Saint-Hippolyte. History: under
construction in Apr 44, probably as a satellite for Perpignan-Labanère. At
the beginning of Jul 44 it was being prepared for demolition. Surface and
Dimensions: grass surface measuring approx. 1370 x 185 meters (1500 x
200 yards). Infrastructure: none noted.
[Sources: A.I.2.(b)/Air Ministry Amendment dated 5 Jul 44 in
BNA(PRO)/AIR 40]
Peuplingues (FR) (c. 50 55 N – 01 46 E)
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on both sides. A wide perimeter road encircled the landing area and
connected the dispersal areas with the runways. Equipped with boundary
lighting, permanent runway illumination, a beam approach system and
visual Lorenz systems for both runways.
Fuel and Ammunition: aircraft fueled from fuel trucks. Underground bulk
fuel storage reportedly off the N boundary and near buildings on the W
boundary. The main bomb dumps were 2 km N of the airfield in an orchard
and 2.5 km NE of the airfield on both sides of a track through a woods. The
ammunition dump was on the SE side of a large wood between the villages
of Poix and Croixrault.
Infrastructure: had 1 hangar in the North dispersal area. Station HQ was
in a small group of buildings on the W boundary. A larger group of
buildings about 700 meters S of those were for storage and there was a
small group of buildings in the South dispersal area. Barrack huts erected
by the Luftwaffe were on the NE outskirts of Croixrault and the NW outskirts
of Poix. Flying personnel were accommodated in Courcelles-sous-
Moyencourt and in the Château Moyencourt. The nearest rail connection
was in Poix.
Dispersal: the 2 dispersal areas – North and South – had a total of 38
covered aircraft shelters in Jun 43.
Defenses: protected by 4 heavy and 10 light Flak positions in Jun 43, all
within 3 km of the airfield. Ground defenses included 1 reinforces machine
gun strongpoint, 4 trench systems with barbed wire and road blocks on all
connecting roads.
Satellites and Decoys:
See Poix-Moyencourt.
Remarks:
Sep 40: assigned airfield code number 555.
Feb 41: closed for runway and other construction and remained so for the
next year.
26 Jul 42: assigned new airfield code number 277.
15 May 43: bombed by 8th AAF.
18 May 43: bombed – 1 x Fw 190 A-5 from Stab/SKG 10 and a LeO 451
from IV./SKG 10 destroyed.
20 Jun 43: bombed – 2 x Fw 190s damaged, hangar and a barracks
damaged.
31 Jul 43: bombed by 8th AAF B-26 Marauders.
16 Aug 43: bombed by 65 B-17 Fortresses.
19 Aug 43: bombed by approx. 35 B-17s.
27 Aug 43: bombed by 36 B-26 Marauders.
29 Nov 43: work to re-camouflage the taxi tracks and assembly hardstands
underway; 2 aircraft shelters in the North dispersal were destroyed in recent
attacks.
10 Feb 44: bombed by 9th AAF B-26s.
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5 Mar 44: both runways serviceable, landing area still cratered in places,
stores buildings to the SW damaged in recent attacks.
20 Mar 44: dive-bombed by 9th AAF P-47 Thunderbolts.
10 May 44: NNE/SSW runway prepared for demolition.
24 May 44: bombed by 58 B-24s.
Operational Units: Stab, I./JG 54 (Jun 40); III./JG 3 (Jun-Jul 40); III./KG
26 (Sep 40 – Feb 41); II./KG 100 (Feb-Apr 42); Erprobungs-u.Lehr-Kdo. 17
(May 42); III./JG 2 (Sep-Nov 42); 11.(Höh.)/JG 2 (Sep-Nov 42); I./JG 27
(Apr-Jun 43); Stab/JG 26 (Jun 44).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 42/XI (1941/42 – Mar 44); Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v)
226/XI Poix/Nord (Apr-Aug 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): 1. Flugh.Betr.Kp./KG 100
(Feb-Apr 42).
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 pp.2249-57 (27 Jun 43); chronologies; BA-MA;
NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Poix-Moyencourt (FR) (a.k.a. Poix/Ost) (49 47 00 N – 02 02 30 E)
General: former landing ground in N France 22 km SW of Amiens, 6 km SE
of Poix (Poix/Nord) airfield and 2.5 km SSE of the village of Moyencourt.
History: used by the RAF 1939-40 and by the Luftwaffe 1940-42.
Deactivated and ploughed up in 1943. Reactivated and rehabilitated in May
44 as a satellite of Poix/Nord airfield. Surface and Dimensions: grass
surface measuring approx. 1190 x 1190 meters (1300 x 1300 yards).
Infrastructure: none noted. Dispersal: the 2 dispersals – Northeast and
Southeast – had a total of 6 small open aircraft shelters and 24 aircraft
parking bays in adjacent woods.
Remarks:
Sep 40: assigned airfield code number 556.
26 Jul 42: assigned new airfield code number 278.
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 p.1790 (29 Jun 44) and A.I.2.(b)/Air Ministry
Amendment dated 5 Jul 44 in BNA(PRO)/AIR 40]
Pons-Avy (FR) (c. 45 34 10 N – 00 30 35 W)
General: wartime emergency landing ground in W France 86 km SE of La
Rochelle and c. 5 km SE of Pons. History: no evidence found of use by the
Luftwaffe. On 27 Apr 44 the landing area was permanently obstructed and
under cultivation. Surface and Dimensions: not found. Infrastructure:
none found.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 p.2258 (27 Apr 44) and p.2471; chronologies; BA-
MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Pontarlier (FR) (a.k.a. Pontarlier-Champ-de-Tir) (c. 46 54 18 N – 06 19
40 E)
General: former landing ground in east-central France approx. 83-84 km W
of Berne/Switzerland. No record found of use by the Luftwaffe. Listed as
operational in June 1944.
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Q
Querqueville (FR): see Cherbourg.
Quille
Quilly (FR): see Ouilly-le-Tesson.
Quimper (FR) (a.k.a. Pluguffan) (47 58 20 N – 04 10 15 W)
General: landing ground in Brittany 50 km SSE of Brest, 5.5 km WSW of
Quimper and 1.2 km SSE of the village of Pluguffan.
History: a former private civil landing ground that received limited
development after the Germans took it over in Jun 40. Received very little
use during the war. Surface and Dimensions: all-weather grass surface
that was camouflaged with painted “hedges” and measuring approx. 870 x
640 meters (950 x 700 yards) with a very irregular shape. No paved
runway. A perimeter road ran along the E and S boundaries. Fuel and
Ammunition: there were 2 possible refueling points with storage tanks on
the W and S boundaries. Infrastructure: had 1 medium hangar with a
paved apron at the NW corner, 1 small hangar in the far N corner, 1 small
hangar off the center of the E boundary, and 1 small hangar off the SE
corner. Workshops adjoined the medium hangar and the small hangar off
the SE corner. Station motor pool and garages were at the NW corner and
the flight control building was also at the NW corner. Barracks were near
the crossroads off the NW corner and other personnel were billeted in a
hotel in Quimper. There were also a few buildings in the S dispersal area
and at the SE corner. Rail connections were off the SW corner and off the S
boundary. Dispersal: the 3 dispersal areas – North, East and South – had
a total of 10 medium open aircraft shelters and 2 medium covered shelters.
Defenses: a single light Flak position. Ground defenses included a numbr of
machine gun positions fortified with barbed wire and defensive trenches.
Remarks:
20 Apr 41: employed 348 non-German workers.
26 Apr 44: observed to be permanently obstructed by trenches.
Operational Units: 2.(H)/Aufkl.Gr. 12 (Aug – c. Nov 40); Luftdienstkdo.
Westfrankreich (Aug 40 – Dec 42).
Station Commands: as Fl.Pl.Kdo. Quimper (Apr 41); Flugplatzkdo. of
Fl.H.Kdtr. E 9/XII Lorient – Kerlin-Bastard (1942-43)?; Fl.Pl.Kdo. C 23/XII
(Jan 43 – Jun 44).
Station and Nearby Units (on various dates – not complete): Stab II.
(Flum.)/Luftgau-Nachr.Rgt. 13 (Bénodet, Aug 40 - ? ); 5.
(Ln.Telbau)/Luftgau-Nachr.Rgt. 12 (fall 42 – 1944); Lw.-Bauleitung Quimper
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R
Rambures (FR) (c. 49 57 N – 01 41 E)
General: satellite or dispersal field in NE France approx. 20 km SW of
Abbeville. History: classified as a former landing ground. No record found
of any Luftwaffe air or ground units being stationed there.
Remarks:
Sep 40: assigned airfield code number 575. Came under Koflug 19/XI
(Beauvais).
26 Jul 42: assigned new airfield code number 279.
Station Commands: Flugplatzkdo. of Fl.H.Kdtr. E 3/VI (1940-41/42?).
[Sources: chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Reims (FR) (a.k.a. Rheims) (49 14 N – 04 01 E)
Lw. Garrison and Station Units (on the airfield, in the city or nearby on
various dates – not complete): Transportfliegerführer 1 (Aug 44);
gem.Flak-Abt. 553 (May 44)?; 23.(Flum.Mess)/Ln.-Rgt. 52 (c.1943 – Aug
44); Stab III.(Flum.Mess)/Ln.-Rgt. 203 (Guignicourt?, c.Oct 42 – early
1943); Flugmelde-Funk-Kp. z.b.V. 40 (Jun 44); Stab/Ln.-Ausb.Rgt. 302 (Mar
43 – Aug 44); III./Ln.-Ausb.Rgt. 302 (c.mid-43 – Aug 44); Fallschirmjäger-
Rgt. 5 (c. May-Nov 42); Lehrkdo. Reims (1943 – Aug 44); Fallschirmjäger-
Rgt. 9, 13, 14 (c. Jan-May 44); Fallschirmjäger-Art.Rgt. 3 (c. Jan-May 44);
3. Fallschirmjäger-Div. (Reims, Nov 43 – Feb 44 44); 5. Fallschirmjäger-Div.
(Reims, Apr-May 44) plus many, many other Falschirmjäger units that were
components of these divisions.
Reims-Champagne (FR) (a.k.a. Bétheny, Reims-Bétheny, Courcy)
(49 18 40 N – 04 02 25 E) [AFHRA]
General: airfield in NE France 130 km ENE of Paris and 6.5 km N of Reims.
Bétheny is 4 km NNE of Reims and Courcy is 8 km NNW of Reims.
History: 1925-28: built as a large and important French Air Force base.
Served as an RAF base Sep 39 – May 40. Taken over by the Luftwaffe in
Jun 40 and improved over the next several years. Used as a bomber base
during the air offensive against England (Battle of Britain) and from mid-
1941 by glider units and for twin-engine fighter training.
Dimensions: approx. 1,692 x 1,372 meters (1,850 x 1,500 yards).
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
Surface and Runways: grass surface on chalky sub-soil. Did not have a
paved runway as of 17 May 43. Equipped for night landings with a beam
approach system and ample illumination.
Fuel and Ammunition: there were 2 sets of refueling points on the N
boundary, 1 set on the S boundary near the hangars and 1 set on the W
boundary. Had large capacity underground fuel tanks off the SW corner. A
small ammunition dump was off the center of the N boundary and a larger
dump at Fort de Brimont 5.5 km to the NW.
Infrastructure: major workshops were set up at Reims-Champagne by the
Junkers firm for the overhaul and repair of Ju 88s. In total there were 3
very large double hangars at the NW corner, 1 very large double hangar, 3
large hangars and numerous workshops along the W boundary, some with
concrete aprons, and 3 large hangars at the S end of the field. A large
number of barracks and storage buildings were on the W side between the
main road and the railway and other personnel were probably billeted in
Reims. The main rail connection was in Reims, but there was a railway
siding at the SW corner of the airfield.
Dispersal: two areas concealed in woods, one NE of the field and the other
NW, had a total of 6 covered aircraft shelters and 19 concrete hardstands in
May 43. Both dispersals were served by concrete taxiways.
Defenses: in May 43 there were 3 heavy Flak positions each with multiple
guns located within 1.6 km of the airfield, and 9 light Flak positions
surrounding the airfield on all sides. There were also 4 ground defense
strong points with bunkers and trenches.
Remarks:
26 Sep 43: bombed by 40 B-17 Fortresses with hits on the hangars and
barracks along the W boundary of the airfield as well as on the landing area;
11 x Go 242 gliders belonging to I./Luftlandegeschwader 2 were destroyed
or damaged on the ground.
3 Oct 43: post-raid photos revealed unfilled craters on the W side of the
landing area, 3 of the 4 bays of the very large double hangar on the W
boundary destroyed, 1 workshop and several of the barrack blocks on the W
boundary destroyed.
2 Jan 44: landing area repaired and again fully serviceable but the hangars
and barrack buildings had been left unrepaired, according to an Allied recce
report this date.
11 Feb 44: low-level attack by VIII Fighter Command P-47 Thunderbolts –
claimed 1 x Bf 109 destroyed, 2 x Bf 109s and 2 x Bf 110s damaged; 4
hangars were also shot up and damaged.
17 Mar 44: low-level attack by VIII Fighter Command P-47s – claimed 1 x
Do 217 destroyed and another damaged, 4 x Bü 133s damaged and 1 x
unidentified aircraft damaged.
28 Mar 44: bombed by 59 B-17s.
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surface measuring approx. 915 x 915 meters (1000 x 1000 yards) and
square in shape. No paved runway. Infrastructure: none. Dispersal: no
organized dispersal areas. Defenses: none noted.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 pp.187-88 (4 Dec 42 updated to 16 Jul 43);
chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Roanne (FR) (Roanne-Renaison) (46 03 17 N – 04 00 05 E)
General: landing ground/emergency landing ground in east-central France
approx. 46 km ESE of Vichy. No record found of Luftwaffe units being
based here.
Remarks:
Jun 40: possibly used for a few days by 3.(H)/Aufkl.Gr. 12 (Pz) during the
third week of June.
Jun 44: listed as operational.
[Sources: Mattiello; AFHRA; chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA]
Rochefort (FR) (a.k.a. Soubise) (c. 45 55 57 N – 00 59 22 W)
General: airfield and seaplane station in W France 29-30 km SSE of La
Rochelle and 2.7 km W of Rochefort on the E bank of the Charente River
across from the town of Soubise.
History: an important French air base, flight training school, airship school
and aircraft factory prior to Jun 40. Used very little by Luftwaffe aircraft.
Dimensions: approx. 1235 x 1050 meters (1350 x 1150 yards) with an
irregular shape.
Surface and Runways: grass surface on clay soil that could get
unserviceable in wet weather. No paved runway. A slipway for seaplanes
was connected to the main buildings by taxiway but was unfit for use at low
tide. Equipped with boundary lighting.
Fuel and Ammunition: there were fuel storage facilities.
Infrastructure: had 1 large airship hangar, 1 large aircraft hangar, 14
medium and small aircraft hangars, and extensive workshops. All of the
buildings were at the N end of the airfield except for 1 hangar at the E
corner. Ample barrack accommodations and storage buildings were
concentrated at the N end. The nearest rail connection was in Rochefort.
Dispersal: no organized dispersal facilities.
Defenses: none identified.
Remarks:
1942: landing area obstructed.
Apr 43: airfield barracks reportedly occupied by a large number of troops
(18. Lw.-Feld-Div.).
30 Apr 44: airfield ordered plowed up, made unserviceable and then
abandoned (Qu./Feldluftgaukdo. W/F).
Operational Units: none identified.
School Units: Fl.Ausbildungs-Rgt. 32 (1941-44).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 18/VII (to Apr 41).
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runways was settling and even collapsing in places and taking the runway
concrete with it.
Dimensions: approx. 1465 x 870 meters (1600 x 950 yards) and roughly
rectangular in shape.
Surface and Runways: grass surface. Had 3 independent concrete runways
– (1) approx. 1800 meters (1970 yards) aligned E/W and located 365
meters S of the main landing area; (2) approx. 1675 meters (1830 yards)
aligned NE/SW and located to the E of the main landing area; (3) approx.
1620 meters (1770 yards) aligned NW/SE and located to the SE of the main
landing area. The NW/SE runway had an assembly hardstand at one end.
Equipped with perimeter lighting, runway illumination, permanent flare-path,
a beam approach system and visual Lorenz systems for the runways.
Fuel and Ammunition: fuel storage was on the S boundary, in the South
dispersal area and in a woods on the E side of the road running S from Amy.
The bomb dump was in a woods off the S boundary.
Infrastructure: had 1 small repair hangar in the East dispersal area. All
station offices and most accommodations were in the villages of
Crapeaumesnil and Amy which reportedly were completely taken over by the
Luftwaffe. Other personnel were billeted in Fresnières, 4 km to the S, and
base supplies were stored in Beuvraignes, 4.25 km WSW of Amy. The
nearest rail connection was in Beuvraignes where a light rail branch run
directly to the airfield.
Dispersal: the 2 dispersal areas – South and East – had a total of 59 aircraft
shelters.
Defenses: protected by 2 heavy and 7 light Flak positions surrounding the
airfield in Dec 43. The ground defenses consisted to numerous strongpoints
and machine gun emplacements with interconnecting trench systems with
liberal use of barbed wire entanglements.
Satellites and Decoys:
Roye-Villiers (49 42 35 N – 02 45 00 E), decoy 5.25 km NNW of Roye-
Amy airfield. A former French civil airport. Outfitted with painted runways.
Landing area obstructed by rough plowing.
Remarks:
Sep 40: airfield assigned code number 545 or 584.
26 Jul 42: airfield assigned new code number 248 S (this “new” code
number was probably for the dummy/decoy at Roye-Villiers).
7 Sep 43: all 3 runways seen to be temporarily obstructed with portable
obstacles and logs.
26 Nov 43: bombed by 9th AAF medium bombers – bursts observed on the
E/W and NW/SE runways.
31 Dec 43: obstructions on runways and landing area believed to have been
removed and the craters on the E/W runway repaired; the NW/SE runway is
still unserviceable due to craters.
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31 Jan 44: obstructions removed from all 3 runways and prepared strips
were being leveled on both sides of each.
3 Mar 44: bombed by 9th AAF medium bombers – serviceability of runways
and landing area not affected.
27 Apr 44: dive-bombed by 52 P-38 Lightnings carrying 1,000 lb. bombs to
break up the concrete runways.
1 May 44: bombed by 18 B-17 Fortresses as a target of opportunity.
18 Aug 44: bombed by 43 B-24 Liberators.
22 Aug 44: low-level attack by 9th AAF – claimed 10 aircraft destroyed on
the ground.
Operational Units: III./KG 1 (Mar-Jun 41); I./SKG 10 (Mar-May 44).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 23/VI (Sep 40 – Jul 42); Fl.Pl.Kdo. A 36/XI
(1943 – Mar 44); Flugplatzkdo. Amy of Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v) 223/XI (Montdidier)
(Apr-Aug 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): all or part of 142.
Flugh.Betr.Kp. (Qu) (May 44 - ?).
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 pp.2302-11 (18 Aug 43 updated to 6 Mar 44);
chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
S
Saaralben (FR) (a.k.a. Sarralbe) (49 00 N – 07 00 E)
General: landing ground in E France 25 km S of Saarbrücken/Germany.
History: no record found of Luftwaffe air or ground units being stationed
there.
Saarburg (FR) (Sarrebourg, Sarrebourg-Buhl) (48 43 05 N – 07 04 40
E)
General: emergency landing ground in E France c. 65 km E of Nancy and
2.5 km SSE of Sarrebourg. History: no records of use by the Luftwaffe
found. Surface and Dimensions: grass surface on clay sub-soil measuring
approx. 795 x 595 meters (870 x 650 yards). Infrastructure: a former
French military airfield with 1 hangar.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 p.2470 (27 Aug 43); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA;
PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Saargemünd (FR) (a.k.a. Sarreguemines) (49 07 50 N – 07 06 25 E)
General: landing ground (Landeplatz) in E France, c. 65 km E of Metz, 15
km SE of Saarbrücken/Germany and 3.5 km NE of Sarreguemines. History:
a former French military airfield. No record of use by the Luftwaffe until
early 1944 when glider training was seen there. Surface and Dimensions:
grass surface on clay soil that was very soggy after heavy rain. Measured
approx. 805 x 775 meters (880 x 850 yards) and rought triangular in
shaqpe. No paved runway. Infrastructure: had a small hangar and a few
small accommodation buildings on the SE boundary. The nearest rail
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3 Nov 43: bombed by 71 9th AAF B-26 Marauders – 1 x Fw 190 A-6 from
I./JG 2, plus 1 x Caudron 445, 1 x Bf 108 and 1 x Fi 156 from I./SKG 10
destroyed (2) or damaged (2) on the ground and 1 man KIA. The E half of
the landing area was cratered but both runways were probably still
serviceable, although the assembly hardstand at the S end of the NW/SW
runway was it my a number of bombs; large double hangar on S boundary
received direct hits and severely damaged; a large concentration of burst
seen on the barracks for flying personnel on the E boundary.
16 Dec 43: both runways and most of the landing area repaired and again
serviceable.
6 Feb 44: bombed by 60 B-17 Fortresses - large double hangar on S
boundary destroyed; workshops off S boundary damaged; all 3 refueling
loops on S boundary damaged; secondary ammunition dump hit; some of
the barrack huts in the South dispersal destroyed and others damaged; at
least 8 aircraft shelters destroyed and 7 damaged in the South dispersal;
taxiways cratered.
27 May 44: several taxi tracks seen to be under construction to connect the
main landing area with the Saint-André/Le Favril dummy. A new West
(remote) dispersal area was being built.
7-9 Jun 44: 13 x Bf 109 G-6s from III./JG 3 in a damaged and unserviceable
state were abandoned and found on the airfield by the Allies in Aug 44.
13 Jun 44: carpet bombed by 40 B-17s – main runways completely
destroyed, 2 aircraft damaged, 2 KIA and 3 WIA. (German report).
16 Jun 44: bombed by 12 B-24 Liberators.
8 Jul 44: bombed by 11 B-17s as a target of opportunity.
Operational Units: I./JG 2 (Jun 40); II./KG 54 (Jul 40 – Apr 41); I./KG 30
(Jul-Aug 41); II./KG 55 (Nov 41 – Apr 42); 2./JG 2 (May-Nov 42); 10.
(Jabo)/JG 26 (Jul-Aug 42); 10.(Jabo)/JG 2 (Sep-Nov 42); Stab/SKG 10 (Dec
42 – Jun 43); I./SKG 10 (Dec 42 – Nov 43); Erprobungs-u.Lehrkdo. 22
(Mar-Apr 43); 1./KG 51 (Dec 43 – Apr 44); I./KG 54 (May 44); III./JG 3
(Jun 44); elements of II./KG 51 (Jun 44); 4./KG 6 (Jun 44); 4./KG 66 (Jun
44); 4.(F)/Aufkl.Gr. 123 (Jun-Jul 44); Stab/JG 3 (Jul 44).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 31/XIII (Jul 40 – Mar 44); Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v)
206/XII (Apr-Aug 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): part of gem.Flak-Abt.
683(v) (1942-43); le.Flak-Abt. 984 (Jun-Jul 44); Lw.-Bauleitung III St-
Andre (c.1940-44); Lw.-Bau-Btl. 8/VII (Aug 41); Flieger-
Geräteausgabestelle (mot) 103/VII (Bf 109 parts, Jun-Jul 44).
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 p.1838 (27 May 44), A5260 pp.2312-19 (1 Jul 43
updated to 16 Dec 43) and A.I.2.(b)/Air Ministry Amendment dated 18 Jul
44 in BNA(PRO)/AIR 40; chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site
ww2.dk]
Saint-Auban-sur-Durance (FR) (a.k.a. Château-Arnoux) (44 03 40
N – 05 59 20 E)
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Defenses: protected by 3 heavy and 13 light Flak positions in Apr 43. Very
strong ground defenses with barbed wire completely encircling the airfield,
numerous strongpoints, machine gun positions and trenches in the dispersal
areas, and an antitank ditch off the NE side.
Satellites and Decoys:
Saint-Brieuc/Pordic (c. 48 34 30 N – 02 47 35 W), dummy approx. 7.5
km N of Saint-Brieuc airfield.
Remarks:
11 Nov 40: bombed by 3 RAF Blenheims.
20 Apr 41: employed 1,174 non-German workers.
3 Apr 43: camouflaged landing area observed to be badly faded.
18 Aug 43: landing area recamouflaged with a road pattern.
26 Nov 43: work observed to be underway to greatly strengthen the
airfield’s ground defenses.
27 May 44: landing area permanently obstructed by grid system of trenches
and holes had been dug in the northern part of it. The southern part of the
landing area had apparently been prepared for demolition.
29 May 44: attacked by approx. 34 aircraft – buildings and landing area
damaged.
24 Jul 44: unchanged from 27 May, but upright posts had also been erected
between the trenches.
Operational Units: 3.(F)/Aufkl.Gr. 31 (Jul 40 – Mar/Apr 41); Stab III., 8.,
9./JG 77 (Jan-Feb 41); III./JG 53 (Mar-Apr 41); III./JG 26 (Apr-May 41); 1.
(H)/Aufkl.Gr. 23 (Jun-Oct 42); 4.(H)/Aufkl.Gr. 13 (c. Jul-Oct 42); Stab, 1.,
2./NAGr. 13 (Dec 42 – c. Aug 43); I./JG 2 (Jan-Mar 43).
Station Commands: as Fl.Pl.Kdo. St-Brieuc (Apr 41); Fl.Pl.Kdo. A 16/XII
(Jan 43 – Jun 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): Stab/5. Flak-Brig. (Apr
42); le.Res.Flak-Abt. 752 (Sep 41, Jan 44); elements of le.Flak-Abt. 912
(May 43); 25.(Flum.Funk)/Luftgau-Nachr.Rgt. 12 (1941 – c.Apr 43); 5.
(Fspr.u.Fschr.Betr.)/Luftgau-Nachr.Rgt. 112 (c.Mar 43 – Aug 44); Lw.-
Bauleitung St-Brieuc (c.1940-44); Ldssch.Zug d.Lw. 314/VI (May 44);
Fluganwärter-Btl. I (Jun 42 – Apr 43); I.(or II.?)/Flieger-Rgt. 90 (c/Apr 43 –
Jun/Jul 44).
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 p.1842 (24 Jul 44) and A5260 pp.2320-25 (7 Jun
43 updated to 1 Dec 43); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site
ww2.dk]
Sainte-Cècile (FR) (44 13 00 N – 04 53 00 E)
General: satellite airstrip and dispersal field in SE France c. 10.5 km NE of
Orange town center, 8 km NNE of Orange-Caritat airfield, 5 km NNW of
Orange-Plan-de-Dieu airfield and 3 km S of the village of Sainte-Cècile-les-
Vignes. History: under construction on 2 Jul 44 with the clear and leveling
work almost completed. Not yet serviceable. Surface and Dimensions:
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[Sources: AFHRA A5259 p.1774 (6 Jul 44), p.1846 (17 Jul 44) and A5260
pp.2329-33 (14 Jul 43 updated to 18 Nov 43); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA;
PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Saint-Dizier-Vouillérs (FR): see Vouillérs.
Sainte-Livière (FR) (48 36 00 N – 04 51 00 E)
General: satellite strip and dispersal field in E France 5.5 km SW of Saint-
Dizier airfield and 1.6 km ENE of the village of Sainte-Livière. History: built
spring 1944 as a satellite for Saint-Dizier airfield and serviceable in June.
Surface and Dimensions: measured approx. 1190 x 110 meters (1300 x 120
yards). Infrastructure: none noted.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 amendments (18 Jul 44)]
Saint-Étienne-Bouthéon (FR) (45 32 05 N – 04 17 50 E)
General: airfield in south-central France 49 km SW of Lyon, 23 km NNW of
Saint-Étienne and 2.5 km ESE of Bouthéon (Andrézieux-Bouthéon).
History: unknown. No information found.
Dimensions: approx. 730 x 550 meters (800 x 600 yards).
Surface and Runways: grass surface. Had an incomplete paved runway of
approx. 685 meters (750 yards) that was aligned NNW/SSE.
Infrastructure: had 1 airship-type hangar, 2 small hangars and a group of
barrack huts on the W boundary. The nearest rail connection was in
Andrézieux, c. 1.6 km SW of the airfield.
Dispersal: no organized dispersal facilities.
Remarks:
12 May 43: runway blocked with portable obstacles and the entire landing
area plowed or otherwise obstructed by ditches and barricades. All work on
the runway had been long abandoned.
Jun 44: listed as operational in German records.
Operational Units: none identified.
Station Commands: none identified.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 p.190 (17 Jun 43); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA;
PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Saint-Étienne-de-Saint-Geoirs (FR) (45 21 40 N – 05 20 00 E)
General: landing ground in SE France c. 63 km SE of Lyon, 36 km NW of
Grenoble and 2.5 km NNW of the town of Saint-Étienne-de-Saint-Geoirs.
History: existed pre-war but is not believed to have been used operationally
by French air units or by the Luftwaffe. In May 43, half of the landing area
was plowed up and the other half was under cultivation. Surface and
Dimensions: well-drained grass on gravel sub-soil measuring approx. 1100
meters (1200 yards) along the E/W axis. No paved runway.
Infrastructure: no hangars or workshops but there was a narrow
rectangular building at the SE corner. The nearest rail connection was in
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106/XII (K) (Apr 44); Sanitätsbereitschaft (mot) d.Lw. 1/XIII (Arles, Apr,
Jun 44); 10./Flieger-Rgt. 63 (Dec 43).
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of August 1939 to May 1940. The Luftwaffe turned Wizernes into a first-
class fighter airfield by putting down a concrete runway and building
hangars, dispersal areas, blast shelters and Flak positions. It was the
controlling airfield for the St. Omer group of fighter airfields and landing
grounds.
Dimensions: approx. 1145 x 775 meters (1250 x 850 yards) and wedge-
shaped.
Surface and Runways: grass surface. Has 1 concrete runway approx. 670
meters (730 yards) in length and aligned ENE/WSW. A perimeter road
surrounded the landing area.
Fuel and Ammunition: buried fuel storage on N boundary on the W side of
the hangar and in the North dispersal area. The 2 main ammunition dumps
were off the NW corner and in the woods off the center of the N boundary.
Each had rectangular magazines protected by thick blast walls. A third
storage site was probably in the South dispersal area.
Infrastructure: had 1 medium hangar on the N boundary with a small
French hangar next to it. The 2 hangars were camouflaged to appear as
one. The station HQ was in a small château and most of the barracks were
located in the woods off the N boundary. Flying personnel were billeted in
St. Omer. The nearest rail connection was in St. Omer.
Dispersal: the 2 dispersals – North and South – had a total of 57 aircraft
shelters.
Defenses: protected by 5 heavy and 18 light Flak positions that encircled
the airfield on the W, N and E sides out to a radius of 4 km. Barbed wire
entanglements were positioned just S of the South dispersal.
Satellites and Decoys:
Saint-Omer – La Borne (50 42 55 N – 02 19 15 E), dummy 6 km ESE
of Saint-Omer – Wizernes airfield.
Remarks:
2 Jun 40: first occupied by the Germans this date.
2 Oct 42: bombed – 3 x trainers destroyed and 3 x fighters slightly
damaged; hangar burned, 2 aircraft dispersals damaged, several buildings
destroyed or damaged.
9 Sep 42: bombed by 6 B-17 Fortresses.
13 May 43: bombed by 31 B-17s.
26 Jul 43: bombed by 15 8th AAF B-26 Marauders.
19 Sep 43: a single crater seen on the S edge of the runway, otherwise the
airfield appears to be serviceable.
25 Sep 43: bombed by 68 8th AAF B-26 Marauders – landing area cratered
but these had been filled in by 3 Oct 43.
23 Nov 43: bombed by 9th AAF B-26 Marauders – bursts observed on the
runway and landing area and also in the dispersal areas.
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5 Dec 43: craters on runway filled in but it may not be serviceable yet;
landing area appears reduced to a single ENE/WSW strip due to unfilled
craters.
7 Mar 44: runway serviceable and landing area mostly serviceable.
18 Apr 44: evidence suggests that the runway is probably prepared for
demolition.
4 Jun 44: mines detonated on the runway and the landing area was being
trenched.
25 Jun 44: bombed by 10 B-24 Liberators.
9 Jul 44: bombed by 12 B-17s as a target of opportunity.
Operational Units: 1.(H)/Aufkl.Gr. 13 (Jul 40 – Apr 41); I./JG 3 (Oct 40 –
Feb 41); III./JG 51 (Feb-May 41); Stab/JG 53 (Mar-Jun 41); Stab/JG 26
(Jun 42 – Jan 43); 10.(Jabo)/JG 26 (Aug-Nov 42); I./JG 26 (Sep 42 – Jan
43); 10.(Jabo)/JG 54 (Feb-Apr 43).
Reserve Training & Replacement Units: Erg.St./JG 3 (Oct-Dec 40).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 5/VI (Jun 40 – c. Oct 42); Fl.H.Kdtr. A
205/XI (c. Oct 42 – c.Sep 43?); Fl.Pl.Kdo. A 40/XI (1943-44); Fl.Pl.Kdo. B
63/XI (1943 – Mar 44); Flugplatzkdo. Wizernes of Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v) 217/XI
Denain (Apr-Aug 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): Koflug 8/III (Jun 40 – Sep
43); Flieger-Geräteausgabe- und Sammelstelle 6/VI (Apr-May 42);
Ldssch.Zug d.Lw. 165/VI (Esquerdes, Sep 40); Ldssch.Zug d.Lw. 169/VI
(Esquerdes, Sep 40).
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 p.1875 (4 Jun 44) and A5260 pp.2363-71 (26 May
43 updated to 18 Apr 44); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site
ww2.dk]
Saint-Pol – Bryas (FR) (a.k.a. Brias, Bryas/Süd) (50 23 45 N – 02 21
40 E)
General: landing ground in NE France 2.5 km NE of St-Pol-sur-Ternoise and
2 km SW of the village of Bryas. History: early history not found, but the
Luftwaffe began using it on 25 May 40 so it was built prior to that by the
French AF or by the British RAF. It served the Luftwaffe mainly as a fighter
and dive bomber field until mid-1943. But of much greater significance was
the fighter control bunker on the grounds of the Château de Bryas on the
SW outskirts of the village of Bryas. Code-names PLUTO, it controlled all
day fighter intercept activity in the Pas de Calais/NE France sector and was
staffed by a large number of male and female signals personnel. Surface
and Dimensions: turf surface in good condition measuring approx. 100 x
825 meters (1200 x 900 yards) with an irregular shape. No paved runway.
A perimeter track and road encircled the landing area. Fuel and
Ammunition: fuel was probably stored in a woods off the SE boundary, and
ammunition storage was in a wood near the railway line 2.5 km ENE of the
field. Infrastructure: there were 2 small repair hangars with paved aprons
and 2 workshop buildings along the N and NW sides of the landing area.
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The station HQ was reportedly in a château between Bryas and the landing
ground while personnel were billeted in huts set up just S of Bryas. Other
personnel were accommodated in the village itself. While a single tract rail
line passed close to the E side of the field, the nearest station was in Saint-
Pol. Dispersal: had 3 dispersals – North, South and West – with shelters
for a total of 63 aircraft. Defenses: at least 8 light Flak positions were
identified around the landing ground. Ground defenses were anchored on 6
reinforced strongpoints.
Remarks:
1941-43: Bryas landing ground attacked frequently by RAF aircraft.
17 Aug 43: landing ground bombed by 29 8th AAF B-26 Marauders.
15 Sep 43: attacked by medium bombers – at least half of the landing area
cratered and left unserviceable. Still unrepaired and unserviceable 3 weeks
later.
12 Feb 44: low-level attack by VIII Fighter Command P-47 Thunderbolts –
claimed 3 x Ju 88s damaged.
7 Mar 44: a few of the craters had been filled in but the landing area was
still unserviceable except for a single NE/SW strip.
Operational Units: Stab, I./JG 27 (May 40); Stab, I., II., III./St.G. 1 (Sep
40 - Feb 41); Stab, I./JG 3 (May-Jun 41); Stab, III./JG 2 (Jun-Dec 41); 11.
(Höh.)/JG 2 (Jul 42); 5.(F)/Aufkl.Gr. 123 (Nov 42 – Jul 43).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 3/IV (1940-41); Fl.Pl.Kdo. C 80/XI (1943-
44)?; Fl.Pl.Kdo. A 94/XI (formerly at Denain)?; Flugplatzkdo. St-Pol – Bryas
of Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v) 219/XI Monchy-Breton (Apr-Aug 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): Stab/Jagdfliegerführer 2
(spring 42 – Sep 43); Stab/Jagdfliegerführer 4 (Sep 43 – Aug 44); I./Flak-
Rgt. 11 (gem. mot.) (May-Jun 40); I./Flak-Rgt. 23 (gem. mot.) (c. Aug-Dec
40); le.Flak-Abt. 680(v) (c. Jul 42 – Feb/Mar 43); Stab and I.(Ln.-Betr.)/Ln.-
Rgt. 52 (c. Apr 42 – Aug 44); 12.(Flum.Mess)/Ln.-Rgt. 52 (c.1942 – Aug
44); part of Lw.-Bau-Btl. 15/VI (May-Jun 40); Flugzeugbergungstrupp 20/IV
(Anvin, May 44).
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1479-41 (27 Jun 43) and A5260 pp.1807-10
(27 Jun 43 updated to 7 Mar 44); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA;
web site ww2.dk; http://www.gyges.dk/Gefechtsstand%20Bunker%20Jafu
%204.htm]
Saint-Pol – Nuncq (FR): see Nuncq.
Saint-Quentin – Clastres (FR): see Clastres.
Saint-Quentin – Roupy (FR) (49 49 00 N – 03 12 30 E)
General: landing ground in NE France 8 km WSW of St-Quentin. History:
used by the Luftwaffe in 1940 and then turned into a decoy. Surface and
Dimensions: grass surface measuring approx. 825 x 825 meters (900 x 900
yards). Infrastructure: there were 2 medium hangar-type buildings and a
cluster of auxiliary huts in the NE corner. As a decoy, mock aircraft shelters
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constructed of netting were located around the perimeter and replica aircraft
were parked on the landing area, which by 1942-43 was obstructed with
portable objects.
Operational Units: Stab/JG 27 (Jun 40).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 2/VI (Jun 40); Fl.H.Kdtr. E 12/XII (Jun
40).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): 5./gem.Flak-Abt. 364(o)
(Jun 40).
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 p.2468 (30 Aug 43); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA;
PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Saint-Rambert-d’Albon (FR) (45 15 15 N – 04 49 35 E)
General: landing ground in SE France 57 km S of Lyon, c. 39 km N of
Valence and 4.5 km SSE of Saint-Rambert-d’Albon. History: existed as a
small civil airfield/airport for many years before the war. Although enlarged
in 1939, no record has been found of either French or German military use
by operational air units. Surface and Dimensions: inadequately drained
grass surface measuring approx. 1000 meters (1100 yards) in length and
had an “L” shape. No paved runway. Equipped with obstruction lighting
and a visual beacon. Fuel and Ammunition: there were 3 bulk fuel storage
tanks with a total capacity of 12,000 gallons. Infrastructure: reportedly
had 1 hangar and a small workshop near the NW corner. The nearest rail
connection was in Saint-Rambert-d’Albon. Dispersal: no organized
dispersal facilities. Defenses: none noted.
Remarks:
3 Feb 44: landing area temporarily obstructed by portable objects and what
appeared to be 25 Dewoitine D. 520 fighters without engines or
undercarriages.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 pp.192-94 (1 Dec 42 updated to 3 Feb 44);
chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Saint-Raphaël – Fréjus (FR) (c. 42 29 00 N – 06 44 45 E)
General: combined landing ground and seaplane station in S France c. 28
km SW of Cannes. History: a pre-war experimental seaplane station and
naval test center in existence for a number of years. Seized by the
Germans on 27 Nov 42. Dimensions: approx. 1,830 x 1,050 meters (2000
x 1150 yards). Runway: grass surface. Infrastructure: 1 large and 4
medium hangars of reinforced concrete with large workshops and smaller
engineering workshops located among the eastern cluster of buildings. Also
had a large meterological station, officer quarters, barrack blocks, base
services, motor pool and garages. The seaplane landing included a slipway,
2 jetties, 2 cranes and a light derrick. Nearest rail connection in Frejus, less
than 1 km from the station. Dispersal: by 24 Aug 43 there were a total of
6+ large and 14 medium aircraft shelters as well as 10 aircraft hardstands in
the N and NE dispersal areas. Defenses: 3 emplacements for heavy Flak,
at least one of which accommodated a 6-gun battery, and 9 sites with light
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Flak (24 Aug 43). Beach frontage protected by trenches, machine gun
bunkers and barbed wire barriers.
Remarks:
Dec 42: French and Italian military personnel evicted from the station while
many of the French civilian workers were retained.
5 Jan 43: German civilians arrived and took over the extensive base
workshops.
2 Mar 43: GFM Hugo Sperrle, commander-in-chief of Luftflotte 3, visited the
airfield.
2 Apr 43: construction began on the NE dispersal area.
9-10 Apr 43: camouflage painting of buildings and the construction of
trenches and other base defence infrastructure commenced.
20-21 Oct 43: Germans began dismantling the base, removing all useful
equipment including the central heating system, pipes, sinks, aircraft
shelters, etc.
Nov 43: French civilian workers dismissed, many transferring to the
Luftwaffe airfields at and around Salon.
8 Nov 43: landing area rendered unserviceable by digging 1 meter wide
trenches across it.
29 Nov 43: airfield permanently obstructed by trenches and piles of dirt, and
the seaplane facilities no longer usable, either.
15 Dec 43: base abandoned by this date.
Operational Units: (go to Google and enter: Saint Raphael - Frejus
site:ww2.dk ).
School Units: Stab and I./St.G. 101 (c. May – Sep 43).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. A 228/XII (May-Nov 43).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): elements of gem.Flak-Abt.
481 (Mar-Aug 44); 8.(Flum.Mess)/Ln.-Rgt. 51 (1943-44).
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 pp.195-200 (18 Feb 43 updated to 29 Nov 43);
chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Saint-Simon-Clastres (FR) (see Clastres).
Sainte-Solange (FR) (47 07 25 N – 02 34 15 E)
General: emergency landing ground in C France 13.75 km ENE of Bourges
and 2 km SE of Sainte-Solange. History: a French landing ground that was
still under construction in Jun 40 when it was taken over by the Germans.
No record of use by the Luftwaffe. Surface and Dimensions: no information
found. Infrastructure: unknown.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 p.2471 (27 Aug 43); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA;
PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Saint-Symphorien-Chaponnay (FR) (45 39 10 N – 04 55 05 E)
General: landing ground in east-central France 14 km SSE of Lyon city
center, 8.5 km SSW of Lyon-Bron airfield, 5.25 km ENE of Saint-
Symphorien-d’Ozon and 3.25 km NNW of the town of Chaponnay. History:
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practice parachute jumping tower were off the NW corner. The station
motor pool and garages along with a few huts were next to the hangars on
the N boundary. The nearest rail connection was in Salon-de-Provence.
Dispersal: by mid-Mar 44, there were 4 dispersal areas – Northeast, South,
Southwest and Northwest (under construction) – with a total of 54 large
aircraft shelters, 11 medium aircraft shelters and 28 aircraft parking
hardstands.
Defenses: protected by 4 heavy and 11 light Flak positions in Nov 43.
Remarks:
17 Aug 43: bombed – 2 x He 111s from KGr.z.b.V. 25 and 1 x He 111 H-11
from Flugbereitschaft Bevollm. für die Lufttorpedowaffe destroyed (2) or
damaged (1) on the ground.
11 Nov 43: 19 barrack huts off the N boundary have been removed and 2
others are in the process of being taken down. There is considerable
development in the Northeast dispersal area where it is being extended as
far as 4 km from the center of the airfield. This dispersal now has 12 large
open aircraft shelters, 4 medium open aircraft shelters and 5 aircraft parking
hardstands.
16 Nov 43: bombed by 42 B-26 Marauders from 15th AAF – claimed 6 He
111s destroyed on the ground. This claim cannot be corroborated in the
surviving German loss reports.
21 Jan 44: bombed by 37 15th AAF B-17s – considerable damage to buildings
and landing areas; airfield temporarily unserviceable.
27 Jan 44: bombed by 66 15th AAF B-17s – claimed craters in the landing
area and heavy damage to buildings, and hangars; airfield temporarily
unserviceable.
27 May 44: bombed by 111 15th AAF B-24 Liberators – claimed bursts on the
landing area and damage to the control tower, workshops, admin buildings,
barracks and dispersal areas.
17 Aug 44: immediate evacuation and demolition of airfield ordered (but not
carried out).
Operational Units (Regia Aeronautica): 3º Nucleo Addestramento Silurante
(Jul-Sep 43).
Operational Units (Luftwaffe): I./KG 100 (Apr 43); Stab, I./KG 26 (May 43
– Apr 44); II./KG 26 (May-Jun 43); TGr. 30 (Jul-Aug 43); KGr.z.b.V. 25 (Jul
43); III./KG 77 (Mar 44); 1./ZG 1 (May 44); 8./ZG 1 (May-Jun 44); Stab,
I./KG 77 (Jun-Jul 44).
School Units: I./Kampfschulgeschwader 1 (1942 – Jan 43); I./KG 101 (Feb
– May 43).
Reserve Training & Replacement Units: Erg.JGr. Süd (later JGr. Süd) (Nov
42 – Aug 43).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 67/XI (Feb 43); Fl.H.Kdtr. A 224/XII (Feb
43 - Mar 44); Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v) 239/XII (Apr-Aug 44).
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Remarks:
28 Feb 44: low-level attack by VIII Fighter Command P-47 Thunderbolts –
claimed 1 x Ju 88 destroyed.
20 May 44: low-level attack by VIII Fighter Command P-38s – claimed 1 x Ju 88 destroyed and
another damaged.
Operational Units: none identified.
Station Commands: none identified.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): gem.Flak-Abt. 364
(Soissons, Jun 40); Fl.Ausbildungs-Rgt. 52 (Soissons, 1941 – Dec 42); 18.
Lw.-Feld-Div. (Soissons, Dec 42 – Jan/Feb 43).
[Sources: chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Soissons-Saconin (FR): see Saconin.
Sommesous (FR) (48 44 05 N – 04 14 15 E)
General: an emergency landing ground in north-central France 27.5 km SW
of Châlons-sur-Marne and 3.25 km E of Sommesous. History: no evidence
of use by the Luftwaffe found, but listed as serviceable in Jun 44. Surface
and Dimensions: grass surface approx. 775 x 550 meters (850 x 600
yards). Infrastructure: had 1 small triple hangar and some other small
buildings on the NE side.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 p.2470 (27 Aug 43); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA;
PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Soucelles (FR) (a.k.a. Seiches-sur-le-Loir) (47 33 50 N – 00 24 25 W)
General: field airstrip in NW France 15.5 km NE of Angers and 1 km SE of
the village of Soucelles. History: prepared late spring 1944 as a satellite
and dispersal field for Angers landing ground. Surface and Dimensions:
pasture or farm land with undefined boundaries but a run of at least 1645
meters (1800 yards). Infrastructure: none noted. Dispersal: aircraft
could be parked in open fields off the N boundary. Defenses: unknown.
Remarks:
22 Jun 44: 8 fighters seen parked in a field off the N boundary.
24 Jun 44: bombed during the early morning hours and low-level attack the
following evening by VIII Fighter Command P-51s – claimed 28 x Bf 109s
destroyed and 8 x Bf 109s damaged. German reports state 14 x Bf 109s
destroyed and several other aircraft damaged.
25 Jun 44: bombed and strafed by VIII Fighter Command P-38s – 2 x Bf 109
G-6s from 6./JG 53 destroyed on the ground.
Operational Units: part of II./JG 53 (Jun 44).
Station Commands: none identified.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 p.1890 (22 Jun 44) and A.I.2.(b)/Air Ministry
Amendment dated 17 Jul 44 in BNA(PRO)/AIR 40; chronologies; BA-MA;
NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Soudron (FR) (48 52 00 N – 04 13 00 E)
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the SW corner, one at a distance of 2 km from the airfield and the other at a
distance of 5 km. Both dumps were served by a branch rail line.
Infrastructure: had 4 large hangars on the E boundary and 2 very long
hangars on the SE corner. Barrack buildings were off the W boundary and
behind the long hangars at the SE corner. A branch rail line served the
hangars and barracks at the SE corner. Docks on the Rhine were also used
to bring in supplies.
Dispersal: no organized dispersal facilities.
Defenses: protected by 2 heavy and 2 light Flak positions within 3 km of the
airfield in Sep 43.
Remarks:
Aug 43: operational using airfield code number 767.
11 Oct 43: bombed (by whom?)? – 8 x Ar 66s, 6 x Bü 131s, 1 x Bü 181, 3 x
Fw 44s and 6 x Kl 35s, all from FFS A 2, destroyed on the ground. No
evidence of an attack this date by either the RAF or the USAAF. The RAF
bombed Stuttgart the night of 7/8 Oct 43. Could some of the bombs been
released early or late over Strasbourg?
Operational Units: II./LLG 1 (Oct 43 – Mar 44).
School Units: FFS A 2 (Oct 43 - Aug 44).
Station Commands: Flugplatzkdo. of Fl.H.Kdtr. A(o) 10/VII Hagenau
(1944).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 pp.2384-85 (20 May 44); chronologies; BA-MA;
NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
T
Tarascon (FR) (43 47 40 N – 04 41 30 E)
General: landing ground in S France c. 20.5 km SW of Avignon and 3 km
ESE of Tarascon. History: once a private airfield, it was believed to have
been more of an emergency landing ground than a landing ground during
the war years. Surface and Dimensions: probable grass surface measuring
505 x 505 meters (550 x 550 yards). No paved runway. Infrastructure:
none. The Tarascon-Avignon rail line passed by 400 meters off the N
boundary. Dispersal: none. Defenses: none.
Remarks:
3 Mar 43: landing area obstructed by rough plowing.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 pp.221-22 (29 Nov 42 updated to 3 Mar 43);
chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Tarbes-Ossun (FR) (a.k.a. Tarbes-Juillan) (43 11 10 N – 00 00 30 W)
General: factory airfield in SW France 8 km SW of Tarbes and 1.6 km E of
Ossun.
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History: construction of the factory and airfield began during the winter of
1939/40, was put on hold for a few months after the armistice in Jun 40,
and then continued during 1941, 1942 and into 1943. The Luftwaffe used it
for fighter training from spring 1943 to late spring 1944.
Dimensions: approx. 915 x 915 meters (1000 x 1000 yards).
Surface and Runways: grass surface. No paved runways.
Fuel and Ammunition: refueling points were at the NE corner and
underground storage for bulk fuel was off the NE corner and at the W end of
the NW/SE airfield extension. A camouflaged bomb dump was near the
large repair hangar and another dump was E of the Ossun railway station.
Infrastructure: had 2 hangars, including a very large repair hangar, and a
number of workshops at the NE corner and 2 more off the W boundary for a
total of 4. A new medium hangar was under construction in early 1944.
The Morane factory buildings were off the E boundary and consisted of a
large assembly building for the Dewoitine 520 fighter and also used by the
Luftwaffe for repair work, and an even larger tool shop building. Both
factory buildings were fronted with a paved apron and had separate
workshop buildings nearby with 3 more off the SW corner. The large
number of factory works lived mainly in Tarbes. The nearest rail connection
was in Ossun.
Dispersal: there was just one dispersal in early 1944 – Northeast – with 2
large aircraft shelters under construction.
Defenses: 3 light Flak positions protected the airfield on the N and E sides.
Ground defenses consisted of a few machine gun emplacements and a large
number of defensive trenches.
Satellites and Decoys:
Tarbes-Laloubière (43 12 54 N – 00 04 35 E), suspected satellite or
alternate landing ground for T-Ossun aqnd located 8 km to the NE.
Remarks:
10/11 Mar 44: bombed by 23 RAF Lancasters – tool and assembly shops
severely damaged; buildings at the foot of the hill severely damaged; the
roof of very large repair hangar damaged.
Operational Units: none identified.
Reserve Training & Replacement Units: 1./(Erg.) JGr. West (Apr 43 – May
44); 4./(Erg.) JGr. Süd (May 44).
Station Commands: Flugplatzkdo. Tarbes-Ossun of Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v) 236/XII
Pau (Apr-Aug 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 pp.164-66 (18 Nov 42 updated to 16 Mar 44);
chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Tavaux (FR): see Dôle-Tavaux.
Tergnier (FR) (49 40 00 N – 03 15 00 E)
General: satellite strip and dispersal field in NE France 22 km S of Saint-
Quentin, 9.75 km SSE of Clastres airfield and 3.25 km NW of the village of
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was only part of what had been planned. The Luftwaffe took it over in late
1942 and began major improvements in 1943 to turn it into a bomber base.
Dimensions: approx. 1690 x 1414 meters (1850 x 1550 yards) in Nov 42.
Surface and Runways: grass surface. Had 2 concrete runways, each 825
meters (900 yards) in length, and aligned NW/SE and WNW/ESE. The
NW/SE runway was also flanked by prepared (grass or dirt) strips. A
perimeter road encircled the landing area and joined the ends of both
runways. Equipped with a beam approach system and a visual Lorenz
system was installed during the second half of 1943.
Fuel and Ammunition: both available.
Infrastructure: (a) off the NE corner – 1 very large workshop hangar, 1
large double hangar and 1 large hangar; the very large workshop hangar
had a long building next to it and the two probably belonged to the S.N.C.A.
du Midi factory that manufactured Dewoitine aircraft; (b) off the SW corner –
1 very large and 2 smaller factory buildings belonging to S.N.C.A. du Midi
and used in the manufacture of fuselages and the assembly of aircraft.
There were groupsw of barrack buildings off the NE corner, on the outskirts
of Colomiers village and S of the airfield near the hamlet of Fleurance. A
special branch rail line served the N side of the airfield.
Dispersal: a North and Southwest dispersal area were under construction in
Oct 43 with a planned total of 20 aircraft shelters.
Defenses: there were 3 heavy and 10 light Flak positions plus 6 antiaircraft
machine gun positions in Nov 43, this representing a very large reinforcing
of the airfield’s air defenses.
Satellites and Decoys: see under Toulouse-Francazal airfield.
Remarks:
1 Sep 43: clearing and leveling work noted off the W boundary and the
taxiways were undergoing limited camouflaging by being darkened to match
the surrounding soil.
9 Nov 43: refueling loops were under construction in the new North and
Southwest dispersal areas, and an ammunition dump off the NW corner had
just been completed.
5 Apr 44: landing area being extended along the E/W axis; and the NW/SE
runway is being extended at both ends to provide a run of 1830 meters
(2000 yards).
12 May 44: a new taxiway approx. 10 km in length now connects the
Northwest dispersal of Toulouse-Francazal to the S boundary of Toulouse-
Blagnac.
25 Jun 44: bombed by 72 B-17 Fortresses - station reported 3 hangars
burned out, 2 more damaged, fuel and munitions dumps destroyed and
runway unserviceable for 3 days following Allied attack.
Operational Units: Stab/KG 100 (Nov 43 – Mar 44); II./KG 100 (Nov 43 –
Mar 44); 6./KG 100 (Nov 43 – May 44); I./KG 40 (Jun-Jul 44).
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Reserve Training & Replacement Units: elements of Erg.JGr. Ost (later JGr.
Ost) (Apr – Dec 43).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v) 238/XII (Apr-Jul 44); Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v)
230/VII (Jul-Aug 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): 3. Flugh.Betr.Kp./KG 100
(1944); Werft-Abt. (v) 140/XII (Jun-Aug 44); Flugh.Betr.Kp. (FK) 4 (Jun,
Aug 44); all or a branch of Frontreparaturbetrieb GL 2582 (1943-44)?;
elements of gem.Flak-Abt. 356 (Jul 44); elements of schw.Flak-Abt. 557 (Jul
44); 21.(Flum.Res.)/Luftgau-Nachr.Rgt. Westfrankreich (1943-44); Trsp.Kol.
d.Lw. 112/XII (? – Aug 43); Ldssch.Zug d.Lw. 48/III (May 44); Ldssch.Zug
d.Lw. 294/XI (May 44); 6./Ldssch.Rgt. Lisieux (May 44 - ?).
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 pp.228-35 (14 Nov 42 updated to 12 May 44);
chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Toulouse-Francazal (FR) (43 32 30 N – 01 22 05 E)
General: airfield in SW France 9 km SW of Toulouse city center, 8 km
directly S of Toulouse-Blagnac airfield and immediately NE of the town of
Cugnaux.
History: an old joint civil and military airfield and airport that existed long
before the war. The French Air Force used it as an operational bomber
base, a base for a reserve training group and as an aqircraft park and
maintenance depot. After the armistice in Jun 40, the Vichy Air Force used
Francazal for flight training and the Luftwaffe had a small meteorological
station there. A Luftwaffe reserve training bomber group used in from Nov
42 to Feb 44 and then operational bomber units arrived in Feb 44 and stayed
until the airfield was evacuated in Aug 44.
Dimensions: approx. 1370 x 1000 meters (1500 x 1100 yards) and
diamond shaped.
Surface and Runways: all-seasons grass surface in good condition. No
paved runway. Equipped with boundary lighting and a visual beacon.
Fuel and Ammunition: refueling points with storage tanks were in front of
the hangars on the NE boundary, at the SE corner and on the NW boundary
near the hangars. Additionally, there were refueling loops in the Northeast,
Southwest and Northwest dispersal areas. The main bulk fuel storage site
was reportedly at the end of a row of buildings on the SW boundary. A
large ammunition dump was off the SE boundary and a smaller dump was
located 1.6 km SSW of the airfield.
Infrastructure: (a) on the SW boundary - 1 large double hangar and 6
large hangars of which 2 were used for repairs, 1 as a garage and the rest
accommodated training aircraft; (b) on the NW boundary - 4 large hangars
of which one was for transient aircraft and the other 3 stored French aircraft
dismantled shortly after the armistice in Jun 40; (c) on the NE boundary -
1 large double hangar, 2 medium hangars and 5 small hangars with the
double used by Air France and the others probably inactive. The large
number of station buildings were in a group behind the hangars on the SW
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Dimensions: grass surface measuring approx. 885 x 275 meters (970 x 300
yards) with a rectangular shape. No paved runway. Equipped with
boundary lighting and a visual beacon. Infrastructure: had 2 medium
hangars on the NE boundary and behind them was a large concentration of
buildings comprising the S.N.C.A. du Midi Breguet aircraft factory. These
included a main assembly shop, a components manufacturing shop, metal
treatment shop, maintenance workshop and stores. General offices were in
buildings S of the main assembly shop. Workers were probably
accommodated in nearby villages andf in Toulouse. The Toulouse-
Castelnaudray railway line formed the NE boundary of the landing ground.
Dispersal: no organized dispersal facilities. Defenses: none noted.
Operational Units: none identified.
Station Commands: none identified.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 pp.241-43 (18 Jun 43 updated to 23 Mar 44);
chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Tournus-Cuisery (FR) (46 33 42 N – 04 58 33 E)
General: landing ground in east-central France approx. 85 km S of Dijon
city center and 5 km E of Tournus. No record found of use by the Luftwaffe.
Listed as serviceable in Jun 44.
[Sources: Mattiello]
Tours (FR) (St-Symphorien, Parcay-Meslay) (47 25 50 N – 00 43 15 E)
General: airfield in W France c. 200 km SW of Paris and 5 km NNE of
Tours.
History: an old and important French military airfield that became a joint
civil-military field in 1929 with the civil operation at the N end. The
Luftwaffe used it as a bomber base during the air offensive against England
(Battle of Britain), but it became relatively idle from summer 1941 to
summer 1942 and then became a base mainly for school units and reserve
training and replacement units.
Dimensions: approx. 1370 x 1190 meters (1500 x 1300 yards) and irregular
in shape.
Surface and Runways: sufficiently drained grass surface on clay subsoil.
Had 2 intersecting concrete runways – (1) approx. 1465 meters (1600
yards) aligned NE/SW with assembly hardstands at both ends; (2) approx.
1325 meters (1450 yards) aligned NW/SE with assembly hardstands at both
ends. A concrete perimeter road encircled the landing area. Equipped with
a beam approach system, permanent runway illumination and visual Lorenz
systems for both runways.
Fuel and Ammunition: refueling loops were in front of the hangars on the S
boundary and immediately E of the hangars on the N boundary. Bulk fuel
storage was at the NW corner. The main bomb dump was c. 1 km off the
SW corner while ammunition dumps and storage areas were located in the
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North dispersal area, at the N end of the E boundary, and behind the
hangars on the S boundary.
Infrastructure: had 10 hangars – (1) on the N boundary were 3 large double
hangars with adjacent workshop huts; (2) on the S boundary were 3 large
double hangars, including 1 for repairs, and adjacent workshop huts; (3) on
the W boundary were 1 large double, 1 long rectangular and 2 medium
hangars with 5 groups of hangar-type buildings probably serving as
workshops to the rear. Station buildings were the old French buildings
across the main road from the W boundary. Barrack huts and storage huts
were also in the North dispersal area. Flying personnel were billeted at the
Château des Belles Ruries, 7.25 km NNE of the airfield, while officers were
accommodated in a hotel in Tours. The station HQ was on the Boulevard
Beranger in Tours while another HQ (possibly Flak) was at the Château
Rosnay, 2 km SSE of the airfield. The nearest rail connection was in Tours.
Dispersal: there were 5 dispersal areas in Jul 43 – North, East, South, West
and Perimeter – with a total of 41 covered aircraft shelters.
Defenses: protected by 1 heavy and 8 light Flak positions within 1.6 km of
the airfield in late Jul 43. Ground defenses included 4 machine gun
positions and barbed wire strung around all of the dispersal areas.
Satellites and Decoys:
Tours-Bray (c. 47 28 50 N – 00 43 15 E), dummy 5.5 km N of Tours
airfield.
Tours/East (a.k.a. Azay) (47 21 30 N – 00 50 35 E), satellite landing
strip and dispersal field 12 km SE of Tours airfield. Prepared late spring
1944 on pasture or farm land and measured approx. 1465 x 230 meters
(1600 x 250 yards) with an irregular shape. Equipped with boundary
lighting. Had 1 small hangar near the SE corner. Aircraft were parked in
bays cut into a small woods off the NE boundary. There were 3 small
aircraft seen parked there on 13 Jul 44.
Tours – Saint-Genouph (47 22 10 N – 00 37 45 E), dispersal field and
emergency landing ground for Tours airfield and located 9.5 km to the SW of
it and 2.5 km ESE of Saint-Genouph village. Prepared spring 1944 on
pasture or farm land. Aircraft could be parked along tree lines at the N and
S boundaries. At least 1 aircraft shelter was under construction on 29 Apr
44 when 4 planes were seen parked there.
Remarks:
24 Jun 40: German report this date gave measurements of 1200 x 900
meters, a count of 8 large and 11 small hangars, and said it was ready for
use as an operational airfield.
20 Apr 41: employed 1,820 non-German workers.
19 Oct 43: 1 additional aircraft shelter built in the North dispersal. A new
taxiway has been built leading from the landing area to fields off the N
boundary.
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d.Lw. 61/IV (Aug 41, Feb 42); Ldssch.Zug d.Lw. 393/VI (Dec 41 – Aug 43);
Ldssch.Zug d.Lw. 399/VI (Nov 41 – Aug 43?).
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 p.1906-09 (13 Jul 44) and A5260 pp.2394-2401
(27 Aug 43 updated to 11 Apr 44); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA;
web site ww2.dk]
Tours-sur-Marne (FR): see Athis.
Toussus-le-Noble (FR) (a.k.a. Paris-Toussus) (48 45 10 N – 02 06 45
E)
General: airfield in N France 21 km SW of Paris city center, 2.5 km SSW of
the village of Buc and immediately N of the village of Toussus-le-Noble.
Separate and different from Buc airfield but close to it.
History: received modest use during the air offensive against England
(Battle of Britain) period in 1940 – Jun 41 but there was not much activity
after that. Toussus-le-Noble was the fusion of an airfield by that name and
another just a short distance from it by the name of Toussus-Paris (or Paris-
Toussus?).
Dimensions: approx. 1000 x 660 meters (1100 x 720 yards).
Surface and Runways: grass surface. No paved runway. Perimeter roads
ran along the N and S boundaries.
Fuel and Ammunition: fuel was available with bulk storage facilities
probably located N of the double hangars.
Infrastructure: had 2 double hangars, large workshops and several small
buildings that were closely grouped at the S end of the landing area and
belonged to the S.N.C.A. du Centre aircraft assembly and repair plant, plus 2
medium hangars in the same general location. The nearest rail connection
was in Versailles, 5 km N of the airfield.
Dispersal: the 2 dispersals – North Perimeter and South Perimeter – had a
total of 22 covered aircraft shelters and 4 open aircraft shelters in Dec 43.
Defenses: there were 1 heavy and 6 light Flak positions within c. 1.6 km of
the airfield in May 43. It was surrounded by barbed wire and well guarded.
Remarks:
16 Jun 44: low-level attack by VIII Fighter Command P-51s – claimed 3 x Ju
52s.
24 Jun 44: bombed by 45 B-24 Liberators.
11 Aug 44: bombed by 45 B-24s.
16 Aug 44: evacuation and demolition of airfield ordered by Luftflotte 3.
Operational Units: Stab/ZG 2 (Jul-Sep 40); Stab/St.G. 77 (Dec 40 – Mar
41); II./St.G. 77 (Dec 40 – Mar 41).
School Units: 3./JFS 5 (May 41 – Oct 42).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 23/XII (Jul 40 – c.Jan 41?); Fl.H.Kdtr. E
30/XII (Jan, Jun 41 – c. fall 41).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): Bauleitung Toussus-le-
Noble (1940-44); Luftzeugstab 15 (Saint-Rémy-les-Chevreuse, Nov 40).
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 p.1910 (31 May 43) and A5260 pp.2402-05 (31
May 43 updated to 20 Dec 43); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web
site ww2.dk]
Tramecourt (FR) (50 27 35 N – 02 09 55 E)
General: landing ground in NE France 40 km E of Le Touquet and c. 1 km
SE of the tiny village of Tramecourt. History: used by Stuka dive-bombers
during the 1940-41 air campaign against England. Became inactive in
spring 1941. Surface and Dimensions: grass surface on meadowland
measuring approx. 915 x 640 meters (1000 x 700 yards). No paved
runway. Infrastructure: none. Dispersal: originally had 30 open aircraft
bays on the SE outskirts of Tramecourt. Defenses: originally protected by
2 light Flak positions.
Remarks:
Jul 43: landing area permanently obstructed with trenches; aircraft bays
deteriorating from disuse.
Operational Units: IV.(Stuka)/LG 1 (Jul-Sep, Nov-Dec 40).
Reserve Training & Replacement Units: Erg.St. IV.(Stuka)/LG 1 (Aug 40,
Nov 40 – Jan 41).
Station Commands: none identified.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 p.2406 (Jul 43); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA;
PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Tranqueville-Graux (FR) (a.k.a. Martigny-les-Gerbonvaux) (c. 48 26
N – 05 50 E)
General: former landing ground in E France approx. 38 km SW of Nanct
city center. No record found of use by the Luftwaffe. Listed as serviceable
in Jun 44.
[Sources: Mattiello; AFHRA]
Tricqueville (FR): see Triqueville.
Triqueville (FR) (a.k.a. Tricqueville, Pont-Audemer) 49 20 15 N – 00 27
45 E)
General: landing ground in N France 32.5 km ESE of Le Havre, 4.5 km SW
of Pont-Audemer and 1.6 km E of the village of Triqueville. History: under
construction by the French in 1940 and taken over by the Germans that
June. The Luftwaffe improved it with extension of taxiways, drainage and
building barrack hut encampments. Surface and Dimensions: artificially
drained grass surface measuring approx. 1000 x 1370 meters (1200 x 1500
yards). No paved runway. Landing area equipped with boundary lighting.
Fuel and Ammunition: fuel storage believed to have been in the woods off
the West dispersal area and well camouflaged. Ammunition dump probably
in the same woods as the fuel. Infrastructure: had 4 small hangars with
paved aprons off the W boundary. Numerous buildings and huts were off
the W boundary and additional huts in the woods to the NE. Barrack hut
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camps had been erected 1 km to the ENE and 1.25 km to the SE. The
nearest rail connection was in Pont-Audemer. Dispersal: the only dispersal
was the West dispersal and it had 31 covered aircraft shelters in Apr 43.
Concrete taxiways connected the shelters to the landing area and additional
taxiways were under construction. Defenses: there were 2 heavy and
approx. 15 light Flak positions surrounding the landing ground out to a
radius of 4 km with 2 of the light positions mounted in Flak towers. Barbed
wire entanglements protected some of the Flak positions.
Satellites and Decoys:
Pourmetot (49 24 30 N – 00 30 20 E), decoy 7.5 km NE of Triqueville
landing ground. A former private French airfield. The Luftwaffe parked
replica aircraft around the landing area which had been returned to
cultivation.
Remarks:
20 Apr 41: employed 320 non-German workers.
26 Jun 43: bombed by 39 8th AAF B-17 Fortresses – barracks hit.
29 Jun 43: bombed by 40 B-17s.
27 Jul 43: bombed by 17 B-26 Marauders.
31 Jul 43: bombed by 18 B-26s.
25 Aug 43: bombed by 31 B-26s – bursts observed across center of landing
area and in the West dispersal area.
16 Sep 43: bombed by 33 B-26s – direct hits in the West dispersal; craters
from the 25 August attack had been filled in and landing area again
serviceable.
3 Nov 43: bombed by 71 9th AAF B-26s – landing area hit hard and mostly
unserviceable and 2 double aircraft shelters in West dispersal destroyed.
16 Dec 43: craters on the landing area roughly repaired but only partially
serviceable.
2 Feb 44: bombed by 36 9th AAF B-26s.
5 Feb 44: landing area obstructed by trenches.
Operational Units: I./JG 2 (May-Nov 42, Mar-Jun 43); 11.(Höh.)/JG 2 (Jul-
Sep 42).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 15/VII (Jun 40 – Feb 41); Fl.Pl.Kdo. A
12/XII Jan 43 – c.Sep 43).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): Bauleitung Tricqueville
(1940 - 1943/44); Lw.-Bau-Kp. 5/IV (Jun 40 - ?).
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 p.1915 (5 Feb 44) and A5260 pp.2407-11 (27 May
43 updated to 16 Dec 43); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site
ww2.dk]
Trosly-Breuil (FR) (a.k.a. Berneuil-sur-Aisne) (49 24 00 N – 03 00 00
E)
General: landing ground in NE France 11.5 km E of Compiègne and 1.2 km
NE of the village of Trosly-Breuil. History: under construction in Jul 44.
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U
Ussel-Thalamy (FR) (45 32 00 N – 02 25 15 E)
General: landing ground in south-central France 58.5 km WSW of Clermont-
Ferrand, 9 km ESE of Ussel and 3.25 km NW of the hamlet of Thalamy.
History: believed to have been built just before the war started. No record
found of operational use by either the French Air Force or the Luftwaffe.
Surface and Dimensions: grass surface on clay sub-soil that was
unserviceable in wet weather. Measured approx. 915 x 595 meters (1000 x
650 yards). No paved runway. Infrastructure: had 1 medium double
hangar at the NW corner. The nearest rail connection was in Ussel.
Dispersal: no organized dispersal facilities. Defenses: none noted.
Remarks:
24 Sep 43: landing area permanently obstructed by rough plowing.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 pp.244-46 (27 Nov 42 updated to 24 Sep 43);
chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
V
Vailly (FR) (a.k.a. Vailly-sur-Aisne) (c. 49 25 N – 03 30 E)
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Defenses: there were 2 heavy and 10 light Flak positions around the airfield
out to a radius of approx. 3 km. Only a few machine gun positions were
available for ground defense.
Satellites and Decoys:
Vannes – Grand-Champ (c. 47 45 30 N – 02 51 45 W), dummy 11.5
km WNW of Vannes airfield. Imitated the layout of Vannes. However, by
June 1944 the Luftwaffe was listing it as an Ausweichplatz (satellite or
dispersal field).
Remarks:
15/16 Mar 41: bombed by 4 RAF Blenheims during the night.
20 Apr 41: employed 690 non-German workers.
23 Sep 43: bombed by 55 American B-17 Fortresses at 0825 hours – 1 x Fw
190 A-6 from III./JG 2 destroyed on the ground. Bursts observed on one of
the runways, in the center of the landing area and in the Northwest dispersal
area where the medium hangar and 1 aircraft shelter were destroyed.
3 Nov 43: runways and landing area repaired and again serviceable.
10 Jun 44: bombed mid-morning by 59 B-17s – 4 x Bf 109 G-6s from II./JG
53 destroyed (2) or damaged (2) on the ground; bursts on runway and
taxiways, one dispersal area destroyed, airfield lighting, runway illumination
and beacon cables cut in multiple places, base technical services buildings
and parts storage destroyed. (German report).
4-6 August 1944: evacuated by the Luftwaffe after demolishing as much of
the infrastructure as possible.
Operational Units: KGr. 100 (Aug 40 – Jun 41); detachment of Sonderkdo.
Mausi (Feb 42); Stab, III./KG 77 (Jun 42); III./JG 2 (Nov 42 – Oct 43);
1./MSGr. 1 (1943-44); Erprobungsstaffel d.Lw. 188 (4./KG 66) (Jun-Nov
43); 2./ZG 1 (Jan-Jun 44); II./KG 2 (Mar 44)?; Wekusta 51 (May-Jun 44);
I./JG 27 (Jun 44); II./JG 53 (Jun 44).
Reserve Training & Replacement Units: 1./Erg.Gr. JG 51 (Oct 41 – Jan 42);
IV./JG 1 (Jan 42).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 20/XIII (Aug 40 – Mar 44); Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v)
228/XII (Apr-Aug 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): Stab/Fliegerführer Atlantik
(Chateau Branderion, Mar 41 – Jun 42); Luftminen-Zug 10 ( ? – Jun 44);
schw.Flak-Abt. 676 (Aug 42); elements of gem.Flak-Abt. 153 (Mar 43 –
c.Mar 44); gem.Flak-Abt. 497 (May-Aug 44); Stab V.(Flum.Mess)/Ln.-Rgt.
54 (1943 – Jul 44); 26.(Flum.Funk)/Luftgau-Nachr.Rgt. 12 (1941 – c.Apr
43); Flugmeldemesszug z.b.V. 15 (1943 – Jul 44); Flugmeldemesszug z.b.V.
64 (1943 – Jul 44); Lw.-Bauleitung Vannes (c.1940-44);
Wetterberatungszentrale d.Lw. 2/XII (Oct 41); elements of I./Flieger-Rgt. 32
(Jul-Aug 44).
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 pp.2413-17 (30 Jun 43 updated to 3 Nov 43);
chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Varades (FR) (47 22 55 N – 01 03 45 W)
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
Remarks: none.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 pp.259-61 (27 Nov 42 updated to 12 Apr 44);
chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Vignacourt (FR) (50 00 45 N – 02 13 35 E)
General: landing ground in NE France 15 km NNW of Amiens and 2 km E of
the village of Vignacourt. History: laid out by the Luftwaffe in summer
1940 but no evidence found of use. Abandoned and returned to cultivation
by Aug 43. Surface and Dimensions: grass surface approx. 1000 x 915
meters (1100 x 1000 yards). Infrastructure: none noted.
Remarks:
Jan 42: operational using airfield code number 346.
26 Jul 42: assigned new airfield code number 283.
Operational Units: none identified.
Station Commands: Flugplatzkdo. of Fl.H.Kdtr. E 8/I Amiens-Glisy (c. Jun
40 – mid-1942).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 p.2462 (30 Aug 43); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA;
PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Villacoublay (Complex) (FR) (a.k.a. Vélizy-Villacoublay) (48 48 07 N
– 02 10 53 E)
General: airfield complex in N France 13.2 km SW of Paris city center and
6.4 km ESE of Versailles. Two airfields: Villacoublay/Nord and
Villacoublay/Süd. History: Villacoublay was an important French military
aircraft factory and research station to June 1940. Shortly after the
German occupation, the research station was moved to Lyon and the factory
workshops at Villacoublay/Süd were taken over by the Junkers firm and used
for assembly and repair work. The Morane factory at Villacoublay/Nord was
put to work assemblying Fieseler aircraft. Operationally, Villacoublay was
an important bomber base from summer 1940 to June 1941, then used
mainly by long-range reconnaissance units after that. Defenses: in Nov 43
there were 7 heavy Flak positions, each of 6 guns or 4 guns, and 9 light Flak
positions in towers, emplacements and on rooftops, these protecting both
airfields. Ground defenses were comprised of trench systems with machine
gun strongpoints.
Satellites and Decoys:
Villacoublay-Villeras (48 44 50 N – 02 11 05 E), dummy 3.25 km SSW
of the airfield complex and immediately E of the village of Villeras. Located
on agricultural land and outfitted with perimeter lighting and a flare-path for
use as a night decoy.
Remarks:
20 Apr 41: employed a combined total of 4,997 non-German workers.
26 Jun 43: Villacoublay airfields bombed by 12 B-17 Fortresses.
29 Jun 43: Villacoublay airfields bombed by 108 B-17s.
14 Jul 43: Villacoublay airfields heavily bombed by 101 B-17s.
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24 Aug 43: 86 B-17s dropped 257 tons of bombs on the two airfields.
20 May 44: Villacoublay airfields bombed by 73 B-17s.
25 Jun 44: Villacoublay airfields bombed in the evening by 63 B-24
Liberators - many hits in the dispersal areas with 3 x Bf 109s destroyed and
2 more damaged, 10 x Fw 190s destroyed and 1 more damaged, 1 x Fi 156
destroyed and 1 x He 111 damaged; hangars, admin buildings, parachute
and spare parts storage areas, refueling points and billets were all destroyed
(German report).
11 Aug 44: Villacoublay airfields bombed by 76 B-17s.
Station Units (on various dates – specific airfield not identified):
Luftzeugamt Villacoublay (1941); part of Res.Flak-Abt. 142 (Jun 40); part of
Res.Flak-Abt. 364 (Jun 40); 2./schw.Flak-Abt. 677(v) (Jul-Oct 43); part of
gem.Flak-Abt. 683(v) (1942-43); elements of le.Flak-Abt. 978 (1943); 11.
(Flus.)/Ln.-Rgt. 3 (Jul/Aug 40 - ? ); Stab and I.(Betr.)/Ln.-Rgt. 35 (Jul 40 –
May 41); I.(Ln.Betr.)/Ln.-Rgt. 54 (c.spring-fall 1943); 3.(Y-Gerät)/Ln.-
Versuchs-Rgt. (Jul 43); Ln.-Abt. 35 (Jul-Oct 40); Bauleitung Villacoublay
(1940-44).
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 pp.2418-25 (20 Jul 43 updated to 20 Mar 44);
chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Villacoublay/Nord (FR) (a.k.a. Villacoublay/Morane) (48 47 00 N –
02 12 45 E)
General: airfield adjacent to the village of Vélizy and on the north side of
the Versailles – Choisy-le-Roi road (RN 186).
History: see under Villacoublay (Complex).
Dimensions: approx. 1550 x 1325 meters (1,700 x 1,450 yards) with an
irregular shape.
Surface and Runways: grass surface with good drainage. No paved
runway. Outfitted with a permanent flare-path, boundary lighting and
beacons for night landings.
Fuel and Ammunition: there were refueling pumps in front of the small
hangar with underground fuel storage probably nearby.
Infrastructure: had 3 medium hangars, 1 small hangar, and admin and
storage buildings at the SW corner. A small Morane aircraft assembly plant
located at the SE corner. No barracks noted so station personnel were
probably housed in surrounding villages.
Dispersal: as of July 1943 there were 21 covered aircraft shelters plus 8
open bays along a wooded area bordering the airfield.
Defenses: see under Villacoublay (Complex).
Remarks:
14 Jul 43: bombed – 4 x Ar 96s, 1 x Bf 108, 3 x Bü 131s, 6 x Dewoitines, 2
x Fw 56s and 9 x Fw 190 A-2s/A-3s from JG 105, plus 4 x Fw 190 A-4s from
SG 101, plus 1 x Bf 109T from Erprobungsstelle Travemünde, plus 7 x Fw
190As from I./JG 2, plus 4 x Fw 190 A-4s/A-5s from I. and II./JG 1, plus 1 x
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Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-45
Fw 190 A-5 from from 10.(Jabo)/JG 54, plus 5 x Fw 190 A-4/A-5s from
I./SKG 10 destroyed or damaged on the ground.
20 Mar 44: Allied photo reconnaissance revealed the airfield as mostly
unserviceable due to bomb damage and little effort had been made to carry
out repairs.
20 May 44: bombed by 73 B-17s – 1 x Ar 79B belonging to
Luftverkehrsstaffel Tempelhof destroyed on the ground.
16 Aug 44: evacuation and demolition of airfield ordered by Luftflotte 3.
Operational Units: see under Villacoublay/Süd.
School Units: Jagdfliegerschule 5 (Villacoublay/Nord) (Jun 41 – Feb 43);
Stab and I./JG 105 (Villacoublay/Nord) (Feb – Aug 43).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 11/XIII Villacoublay/Nord (Jul 40 – Jun
42); Flugplatzkdo. of Fl.H.Kdtr. Villacoublay/Süd (Jul 42 – Aug 44).
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 pp.2418-25 (20 Jul 43 updated to 20 Mar 44);
chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Villacoublay/Süd (FR) (a.k.a. Villacoublay- Vélizy) (48 46 40 N – 02
12 00 E)
General: airfield adjacent to the village of Vélizy and on the south side of
the Versailles – Choisy-le-Roi road (RN 186). The South airfield was the
more important of the two.
History: see under Villacoublay (Complex).
Dimensions: approx. 2195 x 1370 meters (2400 x 1500 yards) and roughly
triangular in shape.
Surface and Runways: grass surface with good drainage. A single 1280
meter (1,400 yards) concrete runway with a paved assembly hardstand at
the south end. Outfitted with a permanent flare-path, boundary lighting,
beacons and a visual Lorenz system for night landings.
Fuel and Ammunition: refueling pumps were near the NW corner with
underground fuel storage probably on the N boundary. A small bomb dump
was located in the East dispersal area.
Infrastructure: had a large number of hangars and workshop buildings
surrounding the airfield on 3 sides, these having previously housed the
Breguet and Bloch aircraft factories along with a French Air force
experimental station. A small number of barrack-type buildings were
erected by the Lw. just off the SW boundary, but most station personnel
were housed in nearby Jouy-en-Josas. Officers were housed in the Château
Monteclin near the station. Dining facilities and canteens were in the
buildings of the former French military school at the NW corner of the
airfield. Nearest rail connection located 2 km from the SW corner of the
airfield.
Dispersal: as of July 1943 there were 35 covered aircraft shelters plus 4
open bays along the airfield’s east and south perimeter.
Defenses: see under Villacoublay.
Remarks:
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infrastructure. Aircraft were parked in 9 bays along the edge of a wood off
the S boundary.
Vitry/II (50 21 00 N – 03 02 00 E), satellite strip and dispersal field 3.5
km ENE of Vitry-en-Artois airfield. Under construction in early Jul 44 with
measurements of 1100 x 230 meters (1200 x 250 yards).
Remarks:
15 Aug 43: bombed by 61 B-17 Fortresses – 3 x Bf 109Gs from II./JG 2
destroyed or damaged on the ground.
9 Sep 43: bombed by 51 B-17s – 2 x Me 410 A-1s from 15./KG 2 damaged
on the ground; E/W runway and landing area cratered, heavy concentration
of bursts in the North dispersal area and the Southwest dispersal, and hits
among the buildings at the SW corner.
14 Nov 43: the E/W runway and landing area repaired and again
serviceable.
Jul 44: Allied reconnaissance photos showed Vitry-en-Artois to have a main
airfield with 4 dispersals (Southwest, Northwest, North and Southeast) and 2
satellite strips (Vitry I and Vitry II).
Operational Units: I./JG 54 (May-Jun 40); II./JG 51 (Jun 40); Stab, II./KG
1 (Jun 40); III./LG 1 (Jun 40); I./KG 53 (Jul 40 – Jun 41); II./JG 26 (Jan-Jul
43); 10./JG 26 (May-Jul 43); V./KG 2 (Jan-Feb 44); II./KG 51 (Feb 44 - ?);
I./JG 26 (Aug 44).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 3/I (May-Jun 40); Fl.H.Kdtr. E 11/XI
(c.Aug 40 – Aug 41); Fl.Pl.Kdo. A 39/XI (Feb 43 – Mar 44); Flugplatzkdo.
Vitry-en-Artois of Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v) 218/XI Cambrai-Épinoy (Apr-Aug 44);
Fl.H.Kdtr. E(v) 233/XI (Sep 44).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): le.Flak-Abt. 757 (Feb-Sep
43).
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 pp.1343-44 (13 May 43), p.1937 (25 Jun 44),
A5260 pp.2428-32 (13 May 43 updated to 28 Mar 44) and AFHRA A5260
amendments (6 Jul 44); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site
ww2.dk]
Vittel-Auzainvilliers (FR): see Auzainvilliers.
Vivaise (FR): see Laon-Couvron.
Vouillérs (FR) (a.k.a. St-Dizier-Vouillérs) (48 40 00 N – 04 52 00 E)
General: satellite strip and dispersal field in E France 6 km NW of St-Dizier
airfield. History: developed in May 44 and serviceable in June. Measured
1510 x 200 meters (1650 x 220 yards).
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 amendments (18 Jul 44)]
Vouziers (FR): see Challerange.
Vouzy (FR) (48 56 00 N – 04 08 00 E)
General: satellite strip and dispersal field in NE France 5.25 km ESE of
Villeneuve-Vertus landing ground and 2 km E of the village of Vouzy.
History: recently prepared and serviceable in Aug 44. Surface and
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W
Waben (FR) (c. 50 22 N – 01 39 E)
General: former landing ground in NE France approx. 15.5 km S of Étaples.
No record found of Luftwaffe units being based here.
Remarks:
1940-42: listed as operational using airfield code number 435. Initially
under Koflug 8/III (Saint-Omer).
[Sources: Mattiello; AFHRA]
Wardrecques (FR) (c. 50 42 N – 02 20 E)
General: landing ground in NE France approx. 8 km SE of Saint-Omer town
center. No record found of Luftwaffe units being based here.
Remarks:
1941-42: operational using airfield code number 371. Initially under Koflug
8/III (Saint-Omer).
5 May 42: assigned new airfield code number 372 S, the suffix used for
dummy/decoy fields.
[Sources: Mattiello]
Wierre-au-Bois (FR): see Samer.
Wierre-Effroy (FR) (c. 50 46 N – 01 44 E)
General: landing ground in NE France approx. 10.5 km NE of Boulogne. No
record found of any Luftwaffe units being based here.
Remarks:
Sep 40: assigned airfield code number 436. Came under Koflug 8/III
(Saint-Omer).
[Sources: Mattiello]
Wissant (FR) (a.k.a. Wissant-Sombrin (Sombre?)) (50 53 N – 01 39 E)
General: coastal town and landing ground in the Pas de Calais that was
often used in conjunction with the two airfields shown below.
Remarks:
Sep 40: assigned airfield code number 370. Came under Koflug 8/III
(Saint-Omer).
Operational Units: see Audembert and Saint-Inglevert airfields.
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Lw. Garrison and Station Units (on various dates and not specifically
identified with the nearby airfields – not complete): Stab/Jagdfliegerführer
1 (fall 40); 5.(Funkempf.)/Ln.-Funkhorch-Rgt. West (1942-43); 6.
(Funkstör.)/Ln.-Funkhorch-Rgt. West (1942-43); 7.(Flugm.)/Luftgau-
Nachr.Rgt. 1 (Jul 40 – Apr 41); 22.(Flum.)/Feldluftgau-Nachr.Rgt.
Belgien/Nordfrankreich (Apr 41 – spring 43); Ldssch.Zug d.Lw. 214/XI
(1941-44?).
[Sources: Mattiello]
Wizernes (FR): see Saint Omer – Wizernes.
X
Xaffévillers (FR) (48 25 00 N – 06 36 00 E)
General: landing ground in E France 45 km SE of Nancy and 1.6 km NW of
the village of Xaffévillers. History: in existence during 1939-40 then
rendered inactive and unserviceable by the Luftwaffe in 1942. Rehabilitated
in May 1944. Surface and Dimensions: measured approx. 1000 x 915
meters (1100 x 1000 yards). Infrastructure: had a few huts at the NW
corner that may have been used as offices and/or workshops.
Operational Units: none identified.
Station Commands: none identified.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: Mattiello; AFHRA A5260 amendments (25 Jun 44)]
Y
Yvrench (FR) (a.k.a. Conteville) (50 10 05 N – 02 03 30 E)
General: landing ground in NE France 14 km NE of Abbeville, 4.5 km ESE
of Yvrench and 1.6 km SW of Conteville. History: used by the RAF during
the 1939-40 campaign. The Luftwaffe developed it into a forward station
for twin-engine fighters for the air offensive against England (Battle of
Britain). Had very little use after the end of 1940. Surface and
Dimensions: grass surface measuring approx. 1000 x 1370 meters (1100 x
1500 yards). Had a single concrete runway approx. 600 meters (660
yards) in length with taxiways connecting it to the dispersal areas. Fuel and
Ammunition: believed to have used tank trucks (bowsers) for fueling.
Ammunition was probably stored in a large woods at the SW corner.
Infrastructure: had 1 medium hangar with adjacent workshops at the NE
corner and 1 small wooden hangar at the SW corner, the latter protected by
an earthen blast wall. A large farm off the N boundary served as station HQ
and offices. Personnel were accommodated in local villages. The nearest
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rail connection was at the N end of the landing ground. Dispersal: the 3
areas – Northeast, Southwest and West – had a total of 33 aircraft shelters
in 1943. The shelters were of wood construction and surrounded by blast
walls approx. 3 meters high and 1 meter thick. Defenses: there were 3
light Flak positions and the approaches to the landing ground were patrolled
by sentries.
Remarks:
Jan 42: operational using airfield code number 582.
26 Jul 42: assigned new airfield code number 277 or number 284.
1942: landing area temporarily obstructed with tripod devises.
Jul 43: now permanently obstructed with trenches across the runway and
landing area.
Operational Units: I./ZG 26 (Jun-Nov 40).
Station Commands: Fl.H.Kdtr. E 13/VI (summer 1940 – Apr 41); Platzkdo.
of Fl.H.Kdtr. E 42/XI Poix/Nord (1942).
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 pp.2433-34 (17 Aug 43); chronologies; BA-MA;
NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Z
Zabern-Steinburg (FR) (a.k.a. Saverne) (48 45 15 N – 07 25 40 E)
General: landing ground in E France 34 km WNW of Strasbourg, 5 km ENE
of Saverne and 2 km SSE of Steinbourg. History: a pre-war French Air
Force landing ground. Not used by the Luftwaffe until summer 1944.
Surface and Dimensions: undulating grass surface measuring approx. 825 x
500 meters (900 x 550 yards). No paved runway. Marshy when wet.
Infrastructure: had 1 small hangar and an accommodations shed at the NW
corner. Nearest rail connection at Steinbourg. Dispersal: no organized
dispersal areas.
Remarks:
Jul 44: observed to be in use for glider training.
28 Aug 44: low-level attack by VIII Fighter Command P-51s – claimed 3 x Ju
88s destroyed.
Operational Units: none identified.
Station Commands: none identified.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: AFHRA A5259 p.1339 (19 Aug 44) and A5260 p.2378 (17 Aug
43); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA; PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
Zutkerque (FR) (50 50 40 N – 02 04 05 E)
General: landing ground in NE France 19 km SE of Calais and 1.2 km S of
the village of Zutkerque. History: possibly laid out by the Luftwaffe in
summer 1940 as a base for transport aircraft. No evidence of any units
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being station there. Surface and Dimensions: grass surface that was soggy
in wet weather and measured approx. 870 x 825 meters (950 x 900 yards).
No paved runway. Infrastructure: none – local farms may have been used
as workshops. Personnel were accommodated in surrounding villages and
farms. The nearest rail connection was in Audruicq, c. 4 km NNE of the
landing ground. Dispersal: the 3 dispersal areas – Northeast, Southeast
and West – had a total of 25 large aircraft shelters. Defenses: originally
had 2 light Flak positions.
Remarks:
Sep 40: assigned airfield code number 441. Came under Koflug 8/III
(Saint-Omer).
Sep 42: landing area now obstructed.
Apr 43: landing area permanently obstructed with narrow trenches.
Operational Units: none identified.
Station Commands: none identified.
Station Units (on various dates – not complete): none identified.
[Sources: AFHRA A5260 p.2435 (13 Aug 43); chronologies; BA-MA; NARA;
PRO/NA; web site ww2.dk]
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