Royal Naval Air Station Hatston (RNAS Hatston, also called HMS Sparrowhawk), was a military airfield located one mile to the north west of Kirkwall, on the island of Mainland, Orkney, Scotland, built as a Royal Naval Air Station. It was located near the strategically vital naval base of Scapa Flow, which for most of the twentieth century formed the main base of the ships of the Home Fleet. The airbase was designed to provide accommodation for disembarked Front-Line squadrons and accommodation for disembarked Ship's Flight Aircraft and was home to the Home Fleet Fleet Requirements Unit, 771 Naval Air Squadron.
The airbase was situated near two notable landmarks, it was located next to the town and port of Kirkwall, with Scapa Flow 2.5 miles (4 km) south. The airfield was sited on the south bank of the Bay of Kirkwall, 1 mile (2 km) north east of the town of Kirkwall, and the road from Kirkwall to Finstown forms the southern boundary of the airfield.[1]
It was purpose built by the Admiralty and commissioned on 2 October 1939 as HMS Sparrowhawk, the airbase remained operational for almost six years, before It was ‘paid off’ on 1 August 1945. It immediately re-commissioned on the same day as HMS Tern II. Six weeks later it decommissioned for a second time, on 15 September and the airbase was reduced to care and maintenance.[1]
History
In 1939 an Admiralty representative sought the advice of Ted Fresson on the best site for an airfield in Orkney. Fresson, the founder of Highland Airways and now working for Scottish Airways, recommended the site at Hatston. Fresson had earlier wanted to create an airfield there, but the land owner had refused him. Fresson warned that the location would become very muddy and unsuitable for modern aircraft, and recommended that asphalt runways be built.[2] Thus once the airfield was established later that year, it was probably the first in Britain to have hard runways.[3] The airfield was declared operational in early 1940.[4]
During the Second World War large numbers of various front line Fleet Air Arm squadrons and their associated aircraft used RNAS Hatston for short periods of time after disembarking from Royal Navy aircraft carriers before they anchored in Scapa Flow. Two Fleet Air Arm units did have a more permanent presence at the airbase. 700 Naval Air Squadron (700 NAS), which provided final training for catapult aircraft aircrew before they embarked on their assigned ships, formed at the airbase in 1940 remaining until moving the short distance to nearby RNAS Twatt (HMS Tern) during 1942. 771 Naval Air Squadron (771 NAS), a Fleet Requirements Unit (FRU), was based at RNAS Hatston from 1939, relocating around the same time as 700 NAS to RNAS Twatt, in 1942. It operated a number of different aircraft types, undertaking various tasks, supporting the Home Fleet at Scapa Flow.[5]
One of the functions of the airbase was to provide an airfield to a Fleet Requirements Unit, which was tasked with operational training for the Home Fleet, which was based in Scapa Flow.
700 Naval Air Squadron formed at RNAS Hatston on 21 January 1940 as a result of amalgamating the 700 series of Catapult Squadrons. It was initially equipped with forty-two Supermarine Walrus, eleven Fairey Seafox and twelve Fairey Swordfish foatplanes. From July, a small number of Supermarine Walrus operated from RAF Sullom Voe, designated as the Shetland Flight, with aircraft and crews from RNAS Hatston and disembarked Flights from the Home Fleet. These carried out local anti-submarine patrols and shipping escort under the control of No. 18 Group RAF, within RAF Coastal Command. In November the squadron took over the 701 Naval Air Squadron aircraft which were operating from Stornoway harbour and this became known as 700 Stornoway Flight. This Flight moved to RAF Sullom Voe and joined the Shetland Flight, in March 1941, but this then disbanded in May, when RAF aircraft became available.[7]
In June 1942 700 NAS moved its HQ, known as ‘A’ Flight, to RNAS Twatt (HMS Tern). By this time the squadron provided a ten-week training course for new catapult Flights. The final two weeks of the course were spent attached to ‘A’ Flight at RNAS Hatston for final training, before joining their allocated ship.[8] The training was broken down into an initial three weeks of aerodrome flying, consisting circuits and landings, dive-bombing, photography and anti-submarine warfare, at RNAS Donibristle (HMS Merlin), in Fife. A second three-week block was spent at RNAS Dundee (HMS Condor II), a seaplane base / repair depot, in Dundee, where the focus was on water operations, which included night landings. Week seven was a catapult course aboard HMS Pegasus, a Royal Navy aircraft carrier/seaplane carrier, in the Irish Sea. Week eight was then a return to RNAS Donibristle (HMS Merlin).[7]
Units
List of first and second line squadrons, station flight and other flying units based at this location:[9]
After the Second World War, the aerodrome of RNAS Hatston, became Kirkwall's main civilairport and was served by both Allied Airways and Scottish Airways, which were absorbed by British European Airways (BEA) in 1947. By 1948 BEA was operating Douglas Dakota transport aircraft which were deemed too large to use the runways safely. They moved operations to a larger airfield, RAF Grimsetter, 3 miles (4.8 km) south-east of Kirkwall. RNAS Hatston was officially closed in 1948, but from 1953 until 1957 was the home of the Orkney Flying Club.[5]
Finally it was closed and turned into an industrial estate, with some buildings becoming council housing.[11] Several local street names commemorate the airfield, including Sparrowhawk Road, Seafire Road, Swordfish Road, Skua Road, Dakota Road and Gladiator Road.
Ballance, Theo; Howard, Lee; Sturtivant, Ray (2016). The Squadrons and Units of the Fleet Air Arm. Air Britain Historians Limited. ISBN978-0-85130-489-2.
Jefford, C. G. (1988). RAF Squadrons. A comprehensive record of the movement and equipment of all RAF squadrons and their antecedents since 1912. Shrewsbury: Airlife. ISBN1-85310-053-6.
Smith, David J. (1989). Action Stations 7: Military Airfields of Scotland, the North-East and Northern Ireland (2nd ed.). Wellingborough, UK: Patrick Stephens Ltd. ISBN1-85260-309-7.
Sturtivant, R; Ballance, T (1994). The Squadrons of The Fleet Air Arm. Tonbridge, Kent, UK: Air-Britain (Historians) Ltd. ISBN0-85130-223-8.
Warner, Guy (2005). Orkney by Air. Erskine, Scotland: kea publishing. ISBN0951895877. Retrieved 28 April 2023.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to RNAS Hatston.