RAF College Cranwell
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
RAF College Cranwell | |
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College Hall |
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Active | 1919-Present |
Country | United Kingdom |
Branch | Royal Air Force |
Type | Training |
Role | Officer Training |
Part of | No. 22 Group |
Based at | RAF Cranwell |
Motto | Superna Petimus (Latin: We seek higher things) |
Commanders | |
Current commander |
Air Commodore R B Cunningham |
The Royal Air Force College (RAFC) is the Royal Air Force establishment which provides initial training to all RAF personnel who are preparing to be commissioned officers. The RAF College is based at RAF Cranwell, near Sleaford in Lincolnshire, and is sometimes titled as the Royal Air Force College Cranwell.
Contents |
[edit] History
Following the foundation of the RAF in 1918 and the cessation of hostilities, the Chief of the Air Staff, Sir Hugh Trenchard was determined to maintain the Air Force as an independent service. The establishment of an air academy, which would provide basic flying training for the future leaders of the Service was therefore a priority. Trenchard chose Cranwell as the College's location because, as he told his biographer:
"Marooned in the wilderness, cut off from pastimes they could not organise for themselves, the cadets would find life cheaper, healthier and more wholesome."
The Royal Air Force College was formed on 1 November 1919 as the RAF (Cadet) College. On 5 February 1920 the College was raised to command status. It is the oldest military air academy in the world.
On 20 June 1929, an aeroplane piloted by Flight Cadet C J Giles crashed on landing at the College and burst into flames. A fellow flight cadet, William McKechnie pulled Giles, who was incapable of moving himself, from the burning wreckage. McKechnie was awarded the Empire Gallantry Medal for his actions.
[edit] College Hall
Prior to the construction of the neo-classical College Hall, training took place in old naval huts. In the 1920s Sir Samuel Hoare (later to become Lord Templewood) battled to get permission for a substantial College building and in 1929 archietects plans were drawn up for the construction of the present-day College. In September 1933 the building was completed; it was built of rustic and moulded brick and had an 800 foot frontage.
In front of the Hall there is a rougly circular grass area with orange gravel paths leading around it from the front gates towards the parade ground known to those at Cranwell as "The Orange".
The Building was officially opened by HRH the Princes of Wales, later Edward VIII in October 1934 and has been used for RAF officer training since.
[edit] Current training
At present, most RAF officer cadets complete a 32-week course before they are commissioned. The College is the RAF equivalent of the British Army's Royal Military Academy Sandhurst or the Royal Navy's Britannia Royal Naval College.
[edit] Commandants
From 1920 to 1936 the Collage Commandant was double-hatted as the Air Officer Commanding (AOC) RAF Cranwell.
- 1 November 1919 Air Commodore C A H Longcroft (5 February 1920 appointed AOC RAF Cranwell)
- 15 August 1923 Air Commodore A E Borton
- 1 November 1926 Air Vice-Marshal F C Halahan
- 16 December 1929 Air Vice-Marshal A M Longmore
- 30 January 1933 Air Vice-Marshal W G S Mitchell
- 3 December 1934 Air Vice-Marshal H M Cave-Browne-Cave
- 21 December 1936 Air Vice-Marshal J E A Baldwin
- 15 August 1939 Air Commodore D Harries (the reference raises doubt about this appointment)
- Dates unknown Air Commodore R Halley (the reference raises significant doubt about this appointment)
- Month unknown 1945 Air Commodore W E G Bryant
- 12 October 1946 Air Commodore R L R Atcherley
- 1 January 1949 Air Commodore G R Beamish
- 31 July 1950 Air Commodore L F Sinclair
- 25 August 1952 Air Commodore H Eeles
- 16 April 1956 Air Commodore T A B Parselle
- 26 August 1958 Air Commodore D F Spotswood
- 16 April 1961 Air Commodore E D McK Nelson
- 21 August 1963 Air Commodore M D Lyne
- 28 December 1964 Air Commodore, later Air Vice-Marshal I D N Lawson
- 1 February 1967 Air Vice-Marshal T N Stack
- 9 March 1970 Air Vice-Marshal F D Hughes
- 23 September 1972 Air Vice-Marshal R D Austen-Smith
- 9 July 1975 Air Vice-Marshal W E Colahan
- 28 January 1978 Air Vice-Marshal D Harcourt-Smith
- 9 January 1980 Air Vice-Marshal B Brownlow
- 31 January 1982 Air Vice-Marshal R C F Peirse
- 18 January 1985 Air Vice-Marshal E H Macey
- 17 July 1987 Air Vice-Marshal R H Wood
- 8 December 1989 Air Vice-Marshal R M Austin
- 21 February 1992 Air Vice-Marshal D Cousins
- 7 October 1994 Air Vice-Marshal A J Stables
- 22 January 1997 Air Vice-Marshal J H Thompson
- 30 July 1998 Air Vice-Marshal T W Rimmer
- 21 July 2000 Air Vice-Marshal H G MacKay
- 27 June 2002 Air Vice-Marshal A J Smith
- Month unknown 2003 Air Commodore M C Barter
- 24 November 2005 Air Commodore R B Cunningham
[edit] References
- Bruce Barrymore Halpenny Action Stations: Wartime Military Airfields of Lincolnshire and the East Midlands v. 2 (ISBN 978-0850594843)
- RAF Cranwell - College History
- Air of Authority - Schools and Staff Colleges