After the war, Brampton Grange was later adapted for use as a hotel, bar and restaurant. It closed in 2007–2008. Several years later it was redeveloped for luxury residences. In November 2015 work was completed on 11 apartments and associated amenities in the building.[2][3]
Brampton's First Girls School
Until the removal of the eastern wing by developers, marks could be seen on the walls from school girls carvings from their pencils.
Ridley Haim Herschell was asked by Lady Olivia Sparrow to manage her schools in Leigh-on-Sea, Essex and Brampton, Cambridgeshire. The school was at the Grange. Herschell had married Helen Skirving, daughter of William Mowbray of Edinburgh. Their eldest son, Farrer (1837–1899), was born at Brampton on 2 November 1837.
RAF Brampton Grange – Station 103 – Brampton, 1st Air Division.[4]
Brampton Grange was the headquarters of the 8th Air Force 1st Bombardment Wing.[5] (It was renamed as the 1st Bombardment Division on 13 September 1943, to end confusion of the term "wing" with the operational combat wings. In December 1944, it was renamed as the 1st Air Division.)[4] It was termed RAF Brampton Grange in official records.
The 1st BW/BD/AD directed combat operations of Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress bomber and fighter groups under its command from August 1942 to 25 April 1945.[6] It was an administrative headquarters which relied on RAF Alconbury for logistical support and its flying requirements.[citation needed]
Bomb Groups assigned to the 1st Air Division conducted mercy missions in 1945 over the German-occupied part of the Netherlands to drop food to starving Dutch. Operation Chowhound delivered 4,000 tons of food. On the ground, Dutch teams gathered to distribute it to the starving population, though due to travel difficulties this sometimes took up to ten days.
The Germans largely withheld their fire. But both operations sustained some losses: Three US aircraft were lost, two to a collision and a third to an engine fire.
Maurer, M. Air Force Combat Units Of World War II. USAF Historical Division. Washington D.C., USA: Zenger Publishing Co., Inc, 1980. ISBN0-89201-092-4.