Bristol (Whitchurch) Airport, also known as Whitchurch Airport, was a municipal airport in Bristol, England, three miles (5 km) south of the city centre, from 1930 to 1957. It was the main airport for Bristol and the surrounding area. During World War II, it was one of the few civil airports in Europe that remained operational, enabling air connections to Lisbon and Shannon and onwards to the United States.
In 1929, the Corporation of the City of Bristol bought 298 acres (1.21 km2) of farmland to the south of the city, near Whitchurch, for a new municipal airport.[2] On 31 May 1930, the airport was officially opened by Prince George, Duke of Kent. In its first year of operation, the airport handled 915 passengers, and by 1939 it handled 4,000 passengers.[2] The Bristol and Wessex Aeroplane Club relocated from Filton Airfield,[3] and together with Bristol Corporation, managed the facilities.[4] The first buildings were a hangar, a clubhouse for the flying club, and an aircraft showroom.[5]
In July 1935, a new terminal building was opened, and regular international services started with flights on the Cardiff-Whitchurch-Le Touquet-Paris Le Bourget route.[9]
In 1937, Irish Sea Airways (precursor of Aer Lingus), and Great Western and Southern Airlines commenced operations from Whitchurch.[10]
In July 1938, the Government formed a Civil Air Guard to train pilots for what was widely seen as the forthcoming war.[11] The Bristol and Wessex Aeroplane Club was one of the training organisations enlisted in this effort,[3] and in addition No. 33 Elementary and Reserve Flying Training School was established at Whitchurch to prepare RAFVR pilots.[12] In August 1938, Frank Barnwell, the chief designer of the Bristol Aeroplane Company, died when an ultralight monoplane he had designed and built himself, the Barnwell B.S.W., struck a bump when taking off and stalled, crashing onto a nearby road.[13]
Second World War
In late August 1939, the airport was requisitioned by the Air Ministry, and was declared a Restricted Area. Starting on 1 September 1939, 59 aircraft belonging to Imperial Airways and British Airways Ltd were evacuated from Croydon Airport and Heston Aerodrome to Whitchurch. The two airlines, which were in the process of merging to form British Overseas Airways Corporation (BOAC), became the nucleus of National Air Communications (NAC), formed to undertake wartime air transport work.[14] Airport security was increased, with barbed wire fencing and Air Ministry police posts. During the next two years, an east–west tarmac runway and taxiways were constructed.[15] In late 1939, civilian flights resumed.[16] From September 1940, six aircraft of the Dutch airline KLM, which had escaped to Britain after the German invasion of the Netherlands, were also based at Whitchurch. These aircraft with their Dutch crews operated flights to Lisbon in neutral Portugal, under charter to BOAC.[17]
The airport had become too small for airline operations, with surrounding housing estates limiting runway extension, so a new site at the former RAF Lulsgate Bottom was opened in May 1957 as Bristol Airport.[23] In 1957, flying ceased at Whitchurch, and in 1959 the airfield was re-opened as Whitchurch Circuit, a car racing circuit holding Formula Two and Formula Three races. Over the years, the area has been developed as housing and trading estates known as Hengrove Park, although part of the main runway still exists.[24]
In 1993, a Cessna 152 aircraft made an emergency landing there, short of fuel.[25]
In 2009, it was announced that part of the former airfield was to be developed as South Bristol Community Hospital, a Skills Academy and a leisure centre.[26]
Cluett, Douglas; Bogle, Joanna; Learmonth, Bob. 1984. Croydon Airport and The Battle for Britain. London Borough of Sutton. ISBN0-907335-11-X.
Cluett, Douglas; Nash, Joanna; Learmonth, Bob. 1980. Croydon Airport 1928 - 1939, The Great Days. London Borough of Sutton ISBN0-9503224-8-2
Doyle, Neville. 2002. The Triple Alliance: The Predecessors of the first British Airways. Air-Britain. ISBN0-85130-286-6
Moss, Peter W. 1962. Impressments Log (Vol I-IV). Air-Britain.
Wakefield, Kenneth (1997). "Somewhere in the west country": the history of Bristol (Whitchurch) Airport, 1930-1957. Wilmslow: Crécy. ISBN0-947554-65-3.