![]() |
'Old' names for British airports
The ones I can remember... Ringway (Manchester), Speke (Liverpool), 'London Airport'... wasn't Gatwick called 'Croydon Airport' ?
Any idea where the 'non city' names came from? e.g. Ringway? |
Croydon was a separate airfield, located in er.. Croydon.
Most were named after the nearest village. Aberdeen - Dyce Edinburgh - Turnhouse Newcastle - Woolsington E.Midlands - Castle Donington (Derby - Burnaston before that) Birmingham - Elmdon Coventry - Baginton Bristol - Lulsgate Cardiff - Rhoose can't remember any more |
A few more
Norwich - Horsham St Faith Teesside - Middleton St George Gloucestershire - Staverton Wolverhampton Business Airport (you've got to be kidding!) - Halfpenny Green |
Glasgow - Hillington
Bournemouth - Hurn |
Swansea - Fairwood Common
|
Leeds.. Yeadon
Glasgow, was.. Renfrew Heathrow... Hounslow Isle of Man.. Ronaldsway we aim to please, it keeps the cleaners happy |
Blackpool - Squires Gate
Glasgow - Abbotsinch Belfast - Aldergrove Inverness - Dalcross Islay - Port Ellen Oxford - Kidlington Plymouth - Roborough |
OK, thats 3 old names for Glasgow, including mine.
If the Abbot could only muster 1 inch, then no wonder they changed the name!! I'm happy to stand corrected, if anybody else can confirm which is right. Maybe they all were/are. Answers on a postcard to.....:confused |
AFAIK, the 'old name' for the present Glasgow Airport is 'Abbotsinch'. Nearby 'Renfrew Airport' had been used for scheduled air services, but it lacked the space to cope with the increase in air travel in the 1950s. Services were therefore moved to Abbotsinch, which was renamed Glasgow Airport, and Renfrew eventually closed in 1966. I believe it is now the site of a retail park.
None of the above, of course, to be confused with Glasgow (Prestwick) Airport !!! |
and not forgetting
Southampton- Eastleigh |
When did Roborough get renamed? I used to live a couple of miles away when I was growing up (not that I have entirely grown up)...
R |
And before the opening of Aldergrove, Belfast was Nuts Corner!
They had such fun in the old days...... Scottie Dog |
Abbotsinch was the correct old name for Glasgow International. I believe it still says ABBOTSINCH in the grass to the left of rwy 23. The site of Renfrew airport's runway, is now part of a large straight portion of the M8 which passes the David Lloyd centre. Hillington was never the name of any of the 2 airports. (As far as I am aware.) ;)
Incidently, Abbotsinch was an RAF base during WWII home to 602 (Glasgow) Squadron. You can still see some of the old buildings belonging to the base. They are now largely outwith the boundry of the existing airport,m on the western edge, but if you travel along the perimiter road towards Erskine, you will see them on your left. Eff Oh :D |
Renfrew airport had a magnificent terminal building and modern (for its time) control tower. The Tesco supermarket at Renfrew now stands on the actual site of the terminal. The M8 when it was built in the late 60's cut through the old runway location, but there are hangers from Renfrew still visible in the Hillington area.
A visit to the supermarket is worth it to see the painting Tesco commisioned of the original terminal building, lovely painting and a superb building. Glasgow Airport also have scale models of both Renfrew & Abbotsinch. |
From the memory banks
Try these
Coventry - Baginton Leeds/Bradford - Yeadon Teeside - Middleton St. George Newcastle - Woolsington Barrow - Walney Island Chester - Hawarden Wolverhampton International - Halfpenny Green Bristol - Lulsgate Bottom (Yes it was!) I could go on but my anorak is getting a bit hot...... |
Just to add a bit more to the history of Glasgow/Abbotsinch:-
RAF Abbotsinch 1933 - 1943 RNAS Abbotsinch (HMS Sanderling) 1943 - 1963 Glasgow Airport 1966 - to date |
If memory serves me correctly, I believe Heathrow and Gatwick were named after their respective villages. Hounslow Air Park was a separate place, along with Heston Airpark, and Kenley Air Park, which later became RAF Kenley (Now the home of 615 Volunteer Gliding School). Chichester/Goodwood was previously RAF Westhampnet, and London Stansted is named for the local village, Stansted Mountfitchet.
Tailwinds |
Blackbushe = RAF Hartfordbridge
(The geographical plateau on which the airfield stands is known as Hartfordbridge Flats). |
Humberside = Kirmington
|
I can tell that this has to be the place to ask these two questions:
1) Does Sherburn-in-Elmet airfield still exist, and if so can anyone provide some form of directions? Searching a bit hard from this side of the pond. 2) Is there yet any evidence of the airship station at Howden in Yorkshire? Thank you muchly. llater, llamas |
Sherburn-in-Elmet
EGCJ N5347.09 W 00113.02 Southeast of the vllage between the B1222 and the railway line. Operator Sherburn Aero Club Phone (0)1977 682674 |
sherburn aero club website
For a road map, put the postcode (LS25 6JE) in here... streetmap ...zoom out one step, and there it is. also, aerodrome info from the CAA might be worth a look. |
Thank you, folks, I must have had a dyslexic moment when I typed in my search parameters.
Any ideas about Howden? llater, llamas |
Renfrew's runway was quite short, just on 6000ft. if I remember correctly. One of the approaches was over the tall cranes of the Clydebank shipyards. It was a prime design requirement of the Vickers Vanguard that it could operate from this runway with a full load on the LHR in all conditions.
|
Goodwoods ICAO code is dead easy to remember.
EGHR (Horse Racing) ;) Coventry ... Bagington Peterboghorror.. Sibson Nottingham.. Tollerton Northampton... Sywell And the best one...... Manchester International.... BARTON:D Well it was in the '30s:rolleyes: we aim to please, it keeps the cleaners happy |
Gatwick was purpose built in 50s on the site of Gatwick race course being adjacent to a main railway line and a proposed motorway.
Hounslow.....Hounslow Heath Cambridge Marshall's Nutts Corner was this the civil name for R.A.F. Aldergrove or a seperate airfield. We had parked the other way round I might have known all I could see out of my window was a drizzley Irish day and a hare stareing at me across the grass. |
Chiglet - small typo, it's Baginton. "Bagington" is just the West Midlands accent taking over.
Pom Pax - if you go to Aldergrove, it's much the same as Nutts, lots of drizzle and several bewildered hares! |
As an exiled Yorkshireman, I might point out that LBA is only there (on a ridgeline, in Yorkshire = quite often WX'd) because Bradford Council thought the Leeds swine would get the benefit if it was built at Sherburn (near the A1 and now the M62 and the main railway). The joys of local politics! A quite new old name - RAF Manston, we're now expected to say London Manston....so how much is the taxi fare!
|
Nutts Corner was the much smaller civil airfield about two miles South-East of Aldergrove. In the early sixties, before "The Troubles" really started, just about the only active unit at R.A.F. Aldergrove was the Handley Page Hastings Met flight. The airfield's primary function was as a maintenance unit. The scandalous under use of this large airfield was finally recognised. They built the civil terminal facilities and Nutts Corner was closed once everything transferred.
|
I believe there are one or more amusing anecdotes about pilots mistaking Nutts Corner for Aldergrove, or was it the other way round? - The details have faded .......
|
I think the most recent case of "mistaken identity" was a 748 landing at Langford Lodge, 3nm SW of Aldergrove. The approach plates carry a warning about it.
|
'Old' names for British airports
Hawarden is still Hawarden it has never been Chester
The dreaded Wolverhampton Business Airport was Bobbington before it became Halfpenny Green. Shotwick became Sealand, now a gliding site Scopwick became Digby |
East Midlands - Castle Donington
Leicester - Stoughton Wasn't Manchester called Ringway? Barton is still there and further north. Gatwick goes much farther back than the fifties. In the thirties, that strange round building just behind Handbrake House (CAA HQ) was the terminal, called the 'beehive' |
Last time I looked the old Control Tower of Heston Airport (as featured in the Peace in Our Time newsclip) was still there next to M4 Heston Services westbound.
|
Arkroyal I stand corrected
"1930 saw the opening of the Gatwick Aerodrome nearby (the first airport in the UK to have its own railway station)." source Crawley OnLine "The present station was opened by British Railways in 1958. It was built on the original Gatwick Racecourse, which it was intended to serve, when it was built in 1891." "Gatwick Racecourse opened in 1891 and proved popular - the Grand National was even hosted there during the Great War. An airfield was opened nearby in the 1930s, and soon after, the circular `Beehive' terminal building was built - a radical design at the time. Gatwick Aerodrome was requisitioned by the R.A.F. during WW2, then returned to commercial use until it was closed in 1956 to be redeveloped as an alternative to Heathrow. was opened by H.M.The Queen in June 1958. " However on the fifties construction and the closure of Gatwick racecourse I submit a .map of Gatwick Racecourse overlain on the present site. Heston . But in 1929 Heston Airport was built, and arterial roads began to be widened and constructed. By 1937 the airport had been bought by the government and plans were in motion to demolish the whole of Cranford apart from the church, and build the country's principal airport. If the second world war hadn't intervened, jets might have been flying from London Cranford airport instead of London Heathrow! Heston Airport is famous for a single event — it was there that Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain landed after flying back from Germany and talks with Adolf Hitler in 1939, waving a piece of white paper and announcing that there would be "Peace in our Time". During the second world war, RAF Spitfires and Hurricanes flew from Heston airport, followed by US Air Force bombers. But after the war plans for enlarging the airport were transferred to Heathrow Spiney Norman the bemused hare was at Aldergrove '58. Wonderfull what few Yahoo searches and a bit of cut and paste can turn up |
You may be interested in this link.......
http://www.homepages.mcb.net/bones/0...elds/UK/uk.htm |
Bigears -
What a great site! Fire up multimap and there's hours of fun to be had (well, if you like that kind of thing.) Here's Thurleigh for example. Not only is that one monster runway (about EGLL length), but the site says there were plans to extend it to five miles. Blimey. Thurleigh |
Paulo, Glad you found the site useful, especially as you started this thread. Unfortunately I can take absolutely no credit for the site - I'm not that clever :(
By co-incidence you have done me a favour- I've often flown over that airfield inbound to LHR, and wondered what airfield it was that had those cars parked on it- now I know! :) What might have been- maybe that would have been 'the other' London airport :eek: Cheers |
Cambridge - Teversham ? or even just after WW2 seemed to be called 'Marshalls' (for obvious reasons) in all the briefing manuals...
|
Apparently before Heathrow became so many square miles of concrete (and a bit like Gatwick and its railway, became the only building site with its own airport), one of the perks that came with the airport managers job, was the shooting rights over the whole airfield!
|
| All times are GMT. The time now is 23:38. |
Copyright © 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.