I was worried I might not get this as the release date was December 2007, however it arrived last week. Ok so what can we say about this latest in a long line of books on military airfields. Well the author approaches this from a rather different, possibly unique angle. Rather than laying out the usual `what flew from where' format he has looked at the `why was that airfield built where it was'. Now this might be obvious to many who have an aviation interest, however there are many surprises. In a publication world obsessed with WWII it is good to see other periods receiving equal attention. The author takes us from the first sites pre-WWI around Salisbury Plain, the RNAS Airship station and Home Defence Squadron distribution and Training Depot Stations of the Great War. Covers the first Expansion in the mid-1920s that spawned Abingdon, Bicester and the reopening of Boscombe Down. The Expansions of the 1930s and subsequent sites across the UK for WWII. This is followed by a very useful section on the Cold War including distribution of the V Force and the subsequent hardening of airfields towards the end of the 1970s. The final chapter discusses some of the issues surrounding the preservation of `large landscape features' (typical archaeological speak) such as airfields. This nicely summarised work underway and the sites/stations already protected. There are a large number of photographs embedded within the text including some nice shots of Caldale Airship Station on the Orkneys. The distribution maps worked very well. The Advanced Landing Ground layout map was a little confusing and maybe slightly optimistic at the size presented however I did work it out. There are a few typos, but nothing that detracts from the text. And I was glad to see that the author states clearly in the intro that this book does not cover every station in the United Kingdom, but lets face it if he had it would have been the size of a telephone directory!!
So overall does the book do what it says on the tin? Yes. I spent three days reading it and enjoyed every minute. The text across the chapters is underpinned with extracts from various historical sources, all demonstrating the reasons for the airfields being built or distributed across Britain. There are some unusual stories including what happened to Stonehenge Airfield and why Boscombe Down survives today, How we re-equipped in the 1920 in case we had to bomb France, the Aircraft Storage Units and their brilliant use of the local topography and some of the more chaotic aspects of the wartime stations. The Cold War structure of warfare and how that drove those airfields retained and rather importantly what is happening now in the wake of `Options for Change'. Splendid publication with a unique and interesting story to tell, especially since the majority of stations are now closed and the majority have been built over or are about to be so.