RAF Danby Beacon

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TypeRadar station
Coordinates54°28′38″N 0°52′14″W / 54.47716°N 0.8705°W / 54.47716; -0.8705
Height360 feet (109.7 m)
Built1937 (1937)
RAF Danby Beacon
near Danby, North Yorkshire in England
Site information
TypeRadar station
Location
RAF Danby Beacon is located in North Yorkshire
RAF Danby Beacon
RAF Danby Beacon
Shown within North Yorkshire
Coordinates54°28′38″N 0°52′14″W / 54.47716°N 0.8705°W / 54.47716; -0.8705
Height360 feet (109.7 m)
Site history
Built1937 (1937)
In use1937–1954
Demolished1957

Royal Air Force Danby Beacon or more simply RAF Danby Beacon was an early warning radar Royal Air Force station that formed part of the Chain Home network of radar (or Radio Direction Finding (RDF)) stations built by the Royal Air Force immediately prior to the Second World War.

The receiving masts were 240 feet (73.2 m) high timber structures and the transmitting masts were 360 feet (109.7 m) steel masts. The construction of these masts was the work of the RAF controlled, but civilian staffed, No. 2 Installation Unit of No. 1 Maintenance Unit RAF (1 MU).[1]

Second World War

During the first part of the war the station was under the control of 13 Group of RAF Fighter Command.[2] On 3 February 1940 it was a plot from Danby that led Hawker Hurricane aircraft from Blue section, 43 Squadron stationed at RAF Acklington to shoot down a Heinkel He 111 bomber over Whitby. This was the first German aircraft shot down over England during the war, the British aircraft being under the command of (then) Flight Lieutenant Peter Townsend.[3] The intercept is described in detail in Townsend's highly-successful book about the Battle of Britain, "Duel of Eagles."[4]

Soon after control of the station passed to the newly formed 60 Group but its information was passed to 13 Group headquarters in Kenton, Newcastle upon Tyne.

Cold War

Memorial

References

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