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CFB Chatham
Canadian Forces Base Chatham or CFB Chatham was a Canadian Forces Base located immediately south of the town of Chatham, New Brunswick, Canada. Parts are now operating as Miramichi Municipal Airport since 1974 with a partial runway available (09/27 - asphalt).
Air training facilities were established across Canada during the Second World War as part of the British Commonwealth Air Training Plan and local MLA William Stafford Anderson applied for two schools in the Miramichi Valley region. The site was on level, cleared land with ready rail and road access. The Canadian government initially balked at paying for more expensive farmland, but the Government of New Brunswick agreed to front a portion of the cost. Construction began in the summer of 1940 and the airfield was ready by the following spring.
No. 21 Elementary Flying Training School (EFTS) began operations on 3 July 1941 using 31 Fleet Finch loaned from the RCAF, while No. 10 Air Observer School (AOS), flying the Avro Anson, opened the following month. 21 EFTS was disbanded in August 1942 and re-established in Neepawa, Manitoba as No. 35 EFTS. 10 AOS remained at Chatham until it was disbanded in April 1945.
On 7 May 1943, a flight of 14 Ansons took off from Chatham. Heavy fog rolled into the area soon afterward, obscuring the airfield. Two aircraft ditched in the Gulf of St. Lawrence and a third crashed in a field near Elgin, New Brunswick. Four trainee aircrew and one instructor were killed.
Detachments of No. 113 Squadron and No. 119 Squadron patrolled the Gulf of St. Lawrence from Chatham in 1942 and 1943 flying Lockheed Hudsons. U-Boats were active in the Gulf and both U-165 and U-517 were attacked by Chatham-based aircraft, although neither were sunk.
The facility lay dormant at war's end, but after three years of inactivity, it reopened as part of the defence buildup associated with the Cold War. Royal Canadian Air Force Station Chatham was established on 1 May 1949 as part of 1 Air Defence Group. By October of that year, Chatham was home to 421 Squadron, 1 Fighter Operational Training Unit (1 OTU) and 2 Aircraft Warning & Control Unit (2 ACWU). 421 and the OTU operated the de Havilland Vampire fighter. 421 Squadron moved to the UK in 1950, but the OTU's operations expanded significantly. By the end of 1952, the base was home to 38 Canadair Sabres, 15 Canadair CT-133 Silver Stars, 4 Mustangs, 2 Beechcraft Expeditors and 7 Harvards, as well as a total of 980 personnel, consisting of 164 officers 74 senior NCOs, 590 airmen and 152 civilians. By 1954, the OTU was graduating courses of 50 pilots every 12 weeks, including many from other countries.
2 ACWU was disbanded in 1952 upon the formation of 21 Air Control & Warning Squadron, later redesignated 21 Radar Squadron. This unit moved to the newly established RCAF Station St. Margarets, a nearby radar station, in 1953.
In 1961, 1 Operational Training Unit was disbanded and the Saber Transition Unit was formed (STU). The STU was intended as transition training between the CT-133s flown in advanced pilot training and CF-104 Starfighter training at Cold Lake. STU operations were gradually wound down and disbanded in 1968 as the RCAF's fighter squadrons in Europe built up their strength and the Sabre was retired from service. Over 400 Canadian and 67 Norwegian pilots were trained.
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CFB Chatham
Canadian Forces Base Chatham or CFB Chatham was a Canadian Forces Base located immediately south of the town of Chatham, New Brunswick, Canada. Parts are now operating as Miramichi Municipal Airport since 1974 with a partial runway available (09/27 - asphalt).
Air training facilities were established across Canada during the Second World War as part of the British Commonwealth Air Training Plan and local MLA William Stafford Anderson applied for two schools in the Miramichi Valley region. The site was on level, cleared land with ready rail and road access. The Canadian government initially balked at paying for more expensive farmland, but the Government of New Brunswick agreed to front a portion of the cost. Construction began in the summer of 1940 and the airfield was ready by the following spring.
No. 21 Elementary Flying Training School (EFTS) began operations on 3 July 1941 using 31 Fleet Finch loaned from the RCAF, while No. 10 Air Observer School (AOS), flying the Avro Anson, opened the following month. 21 EFTS was disbanded in August 1942 and re-established in Neepawa, Manitoba as No. 35 EFTS. 10 AOS remained at Chatham until it was disbanded in April 1945.
On 7 May 1943, a flight of 14 Ansons took off from Chatham. Heavy fog rolled into the area soon afterward, obscuring the airfield. Two aircraft ditched in the Gulf of St. Lawrence and a third crashed in a field near Elgin, New Brunswick. Four trainee aircrew and one instructor were killed.
Detachments of No. 113 Squadron and No. 119 Squadron patrolled the Gulf of St. Lawrence from Chatham in 1942 and 1943 flying Lockheed Hudsons. U-Boats were active in the Gulf and both U-165 and U-517 were attacked by Chatham-based aircraft, although neither were sunk.
The facility lay dormant at war's end, but after three years of inactivity, it reopened as part of the defence buildup associated with the Cold War. Royal Canadian Air Force Station Chatham was established on 1 May 1949 as part of 1 Air Defence Group. By October of that year, Chatham was home to 421 Squadron, 1 Fighter Operational Training Unit (1 OTU) and 2 Aircraft Warning & Control Unit (2 ACWU). 421 and the OTU operated the de Havilland Vampire fighter. 421 Squadron moved to the UK in 1950, but the OTU's operations expanded significantly. By the end of 1952, the base was home to 38 Canadair Sabres, 15 Canadair CT-133 Silver Stars, 4 Mustangs, 2 Beechcraft Expeditors and 7 Harvards, as well as a total of 980 personnel, consisting of 164 officers 74 senior NCOs, 590 airmen and 152 civilians. By 1954, the OTU was graduating courses of 50 pilots every 12 weeks, including many from other countries.
2 ACWU was disbanded in 1952 upon the formation of 21 Air Control & Warning Squadron, later redesignated 21 Radar Squadron. This unit moved to the newly established RCAF Station St. Margarets, a nearby radar station, in 1953.
In 1961, 1 Operational Training Unit was disbanded and the Saber Transition Unit was formed (STU). The STU was intended as transition training between the CT-133s flown in advanced pilot training and CF-104 Starfighter training at Cold Lake. STU operations were gradually wound down and disbanded in 1968 as the RCAF's fighter squadrons in Europe built up their strength and the Sabre was retired from service. Over 400 Canadian and 67 Norwegian pilots were trained.
