Building record 2855/0/3 - Southern General Service Hanger at Hooton Park Airfield
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Summary
Map
Type and Period (2)
Full Description
<1> English Heritage, 2005, List of Buildings of Special Architectural or Historic Interest, 441793 (Digital Archive). SCH4666.
General service hangar. 1917 for the Royal Flying Corps; altered. Red Brick with bitumin-felted roof. Single storey twin-range hangar of 16 bays in length, with flanking workshops. Only south-west corner pylon survives; it has 6 brick piers linked at top by segmental arches. Doors at South end are in 3 tiers of horizontally-sliding pairs; modern opening inserted in centre of right-hand bay; segmentally-headed gables with verticle studding and blocked central louvres. Continuous roof lantems to each range. West side has raking buttersses to each bay and contmporary lean-to offices to central part; bricked window openings. East side has modern addition (not of special interest). North end has modern brick facade. Interior:each bay divided by a wooden-latticed 'Belfast' roof truss; central arcade of twin brick piers linked by segmental arches
<2> Oxton and Prenton Edition, 1997, Wirral Champion (Book). SCH3855.
In 1914 the Government requisitioned the hall and estate of Hooton Park, for use as a military training ground. The 18th Battalion of The Kings Liverpool Regiment arrived in September 1914. After the army had departed, the Royal Flying Corps selected the site for use as an aerodrome. Hundreds of pilots were trained here until its closure in 1919. In 1927 the site was acquired by G. Dawson, for the new Liverpool Airport. He also set up the Liverpool and District Aero Club and his financial support assisted the set up of the Comper Aircraft Factory and Pobjoy Airmotors Manufacturers in the Hooton Hangers. The site was the home to No.610 squadron Auxiliary Airforce from 1936. Prior to WWII they were re-equipped with spitfires for convoy duty in the Atlantic. Later the site was used as an aircraft store and dump. After the war it was used as a base for the No.’s 610, 611 and 633 squadrons of the Auxiliary Airforce.
Sources/Archives (2)
Related Monuments/Buildings (6)
- Related to: Ancillary Building adjacent to Hooton Hangars, Hooton Park Airfield (Building) (2855/0/9)
- Related to: Building 27, Hooton Park Airfield (Building) (2855/0/5)
- Related to: Central General Service Hanger at Hooton Park Airfield (Building) (2855/0/2)
- Related to: Motor Transport Sheds, Hooton Park Airfield (Monument) (2855/0/4)
- Related to: Northern General Service Hanger at Hooton Park Airfield (Building) (2855/0/1)
- Related to: RAF Hooton Park Airfield (Monument) (2855/0/0)
Related Events/Activities (0)
External Links (0)
Location
| Grid reference | Centred SJ 373 787 (71m by 77m) (2 map features) |
|---|---|
| Map sheet | SJ37NE |
| Civil Parish | ELLESMERE PORT NON-PARISH AREA, ELLESMERE PORT AND NESTON, CHESHIRE WEST AND CHESTER |
| Historic Township/Parish/County | HOOTON, EASTHAM, CHESHIRE |
Protected Status/Designation
Record last edited
Dec 15 2021 9:37AM