Kent International Airport

Kent International Airport (IATA airport code: MSE) is an airport, formerly a Royal Air Force airbase (RAF Manston), in Kent, England. It was formerly called London Manston Airport.

Contents

History

At the outset of the Great War, the Isle of Thanet was equipped with a small and precarious landing strip for aircraft at Westgate, above the cliffs at the foot of the sea where a seaplane had been based at the end of the promenade.

The landing grounds atop the cliff soon became the scene of several accidents, with at least one plane seen to fail to stop before the end of the cliffs and tumble into the sea, which for the fortunate pilot had been on its inward tide.

In the winter of 1915-1916 these early aircraft first began to use the open farmlands at Manston as a site for emergency landings. Thus was soon established the Admiralty Aerodrome at Manston. It was not long after this that the training school, set up originally to instruct pilots in the use of the new Handley-Page bombers, was established, and so by the close of 1916 there were already two distinct units stationed at Manston, the Operational War Flight Command and the Handley-Page Training School.

Its location near the Kent coast gave Manston some advantages over the other previously established aerodromes and regular additions in men and machinery were soon made, particularly, in these early days, from Detling. By 1917 the Royal Flying Corps was well established and taking an active part in the defence of England.

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London Manston Airport

At a time when Zeppelin raids were bringing the war directly to English civilians, daylight bombing raids by German 'Gotha' Bombers, a twin engined biplane, would have been considerably more effective were it not for the RFC's presence at Manston.

The German air raids had lasted for thirteen weeks, the last being on 22nd August 1917. On this occasion, of the 15 bombers that set out for England five did not reach the Kent coast, and the 'spirited' intervention from Manston based fighters prevented those remaining from flying further west, three being destroyed outright and the remaining seven returning to Germany with dead and wounded on board.

Shortly after such formation raids and in consequence the Cabinet recommended the creation of a separate Air Ministry. The RAF was officially formed on 1 April 1918.

An item of some interest and great curiosity relating to the inter-war history of Manston and its personnel, is one of the long list of inspired rescues off the Thanet coast. A link between the airfield and the Goodwin Sands is revealed in the pages of: The History of R.A.F Manston by Flt. Lt. Rocky Stockman RAF, and is told by Wing Commander Bryson who recalled an adventure at sea involving the high speed launches stationed at Ramsgate Harbour in 1936 for duty with the no. 48 (gr) Squadron.

He reports: "we had two of these launches, equipped with old areo engines by a firm in Cowes - they had never run for more than 15 minutes without conking out. One afternoon the Royal Temple Yacht Club had a race from Ramsgate. A squall blew up and the yachts ran aground on the treacherous quicksands. With trepidation I ordered out the two high speed rescue launches, which, miraculously, managed to keep going and rescued the boats - as if old Culmer White had been watching over them!"

World War II

In World War II Barnes Wallis used the base to test his bouncing bomb prior to the Dambusters raid. Hawker Typhoon attack aircraft were based there later in the war, and also the first jet squadron of the RAF. It was used as a departure point for airborne forces in Operation Market Garden. It was one of the few airfields installed with the FIDO system (Fog Investigation Dispersal Organisation) designed to remove fog from airfields by burning it off with petrol.

1950-90

During the long period of the Cold War the American Strategic Air Command chose Manston as a base for its fighter and fighter-bomber units. Each unit served for 90 days on a temporary and rotational basis, and in conjunction with RAF Fighter Command.

From July 1950 to June 1958 USAAF, fighter bombers, such as F-84 Thunderstreaks, F-86 Sabre fighters, and T-6 Harvards, and Lockheed T-33 trainers, and air-sea rescue H-16 Albatross 'amphibians', were operational at Manston. The airfield became a joint civilian and RAF airport from 1960 and was thence employed for occasional package tour and cargo flights, alongside its continuing role as an RAF base. The Air Cadets used the northern side of the airfield as a gliding site, and an Air Experience Flight flying De Havilland Chipmunks was based there. Thanks to its broad long runway, Manston was used as a diversionary airfield for emergency military and civilian landings.

From 1989 Manston became optimistically styled as Kent International Airport, and a new terminal was officially opened that year by the Duchess of York.

In view of its east/west running runway, and the fact it is the fourth longest in the UK, Manston has also been listed by NASA, although never used, as an emergency diversionary landing strip for the space shuttle program.

Source: Kent aviation: Roy Humphreys

Post-1990

Manston is now a wholly commercial airport. Development began in 2004 in an attempt to make it a budget airline hub and an Irish airline EUjet formed in 2002 began scheduled flights in September 2004 with a small fleet of Fokker F100 airliners. Car parking areas were built and a direct coach service from Bluewater via Chatham was instituted to support this enterprise, which follows the low fare, no-frills, web-marketing style pioneered by easyJet in the UK.

In 1998 Thanet District Council produced the Isle of Thanet local plan which recognised the economic development potential of abandoned parts of the old military airfield, particularly on its north western edge.

After this plan was published, the Ministry of Defence announced plans to sell off RAF Manston, a wartime aerodrome, situated about 1000 metres off Ramsgate. After a ruling by the British Labour Government's Treasurer Mr. Gordon Brown, instructing government departments to generate money by the sale of surplus assets, following the example of the Thatcher government, the Ministry of Defence sold the site.

In the case of RAF Manston the then local MP, Dr. Steve Ladyman opposed the decision to sell the base to a property developer (Wiggins Group PLC). The ministry sold the site at the end of March, 1999 for the sum of £4.75m. The airfield comprises 700 acres (2.8 km²).

Kent International Airport was initially a 38 acre (150,000 m²) civilian area within the former RAF Manston including the existing terminal building and an apron where passengers embark and the largest of freighters may be loaded. The runway however, is not included within this enclave. In 1988 the owners of Kent International Airport negotiated a 125 year legal agreement with the RAF obliging the Air force to maintain the runway, the air-traffic control and to provide ongoing emergency services.

The cost of providing runway maintenance, air-traffic control and Fire and Rescue services had been estimated at up to £3,000,000 per annum by the MoD.

The RAF faced a compensation claim of £50-100 million if they then closed the base and terminating their earlier agreement with Kent International Airport. The Wiggins Group therefore purchased the Kent International Airport and inherited the legal agreement obliging the RAF to continue maintenance of the airfield. Within six months the RAF announced that they were leaving the airfield and Wiggins as the successful bidders then purchased the remainder of the airfield.

Constraints

Manston has only one runway with its glidepath crossing Ramsgate, a Victorian seaside resort of some 40,000 residents. The town is situated about a kilometre from the eastern end of the runway. To one side of the runway lies the village of Cliffsend where housing stands within 200 m of the runway. Manston village stands to the north east of the passenger terminal.

A 1993 report from the Department of Trade and Industry examined runway capacity in the South East and found that Manston was unsuitable for development as a major airport considering this proximity to the town. Yet still the sale was hurried through, against the local councils plan and better judgement, at a loss of about £65,000,000.

In July 1998 the government issued a White Paper outlining its intention to develop an 'integrated transport strategy'.

The RAF Manston History Museum is still on the site, as is the Spitfire and Hurricane memorial.

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