Difference between revisions of "Howden Air Station"

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==In Command==
 
==In Command==
 
<div name=fredbot:office0 otitle="In Command, Howden Air Station" nat="UK">
 
<div name=fredbot:office0 otitle="In Command, Howden Air Station" nat="UK">
{{Tenure|rank=Wing Commander|name=Frederick Lewis Maitland Boothby|nick=Frederick L. M. Boothby|appt=1 March, 1916|end=February, 1918}}
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{{Tenure|rank=Wing Commander|name=Frederick Lewis Maitland Boothby|nick=Frederick L. M. Boothby|appt=1 March, 1916<ref>Boothby Service Record.  {{TNA|ADM 196/46/125.|}} f. 125.</ref>|end=February, 1918<ref>Boothby Service Record.  {{TNA|ADM 196/46/125.|}} f. 125.</ref>}}
 
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Latest revision as of 10:33, 28 March 2022

Howden Air Station was a Royal Naval Air Service command during the Great War. It opened on 26 June, 1916.

Facilities

The station consisted of barrack huts, officers' quarters, and a pigeon loft for the two carrier pigeons each airship carried to relay messages back to the station in the event of radio failure or if the airship ditched.

A large shed was built to accommodate a rigid airship and two smaller sheds for non-rigids. By 1919, the station boasted the largest shed in the world: 750 feet in length and 130 feet at the top of the doors.

In Command

See Also

Footnotes

  1. Boothby Service Record. The National Archives. ADM 196/46/125. f. 125.
  2. Boothby Service Record. The National Archives. ADM 196/46/125. f. 125.