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Errol Airfield

Airfield (20th Century), Prisoner Of War Camp (20th Century)(Possible)

Site Name Errol Airfield

Classification Airfield (20th Century), Prisoner Of War Camp (20th Century)(Possible)

Canmore ID 30473

Site Number NO22SE 18

NGR NO 27200 24270

NGR Description Centred NO 27200 24270

Datum OSGB36 - NGR

Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/site/30473

Ordnance Survey licence number AC0000807262. All rights reserved.
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Administrative Areas

  • Council Perth And Kinross
  • Parish Errol
  • Former Region Tayside
  • Former District Perth And Kinross
  • Former County Perthshire

Archaeology Notes

NO22SE 18.00 centred 27200 23270

Airfield (disused) [NAT]

OS (GIS) MasterMap, May 2010.

NO22SE 18.01 centred NO 2730 2352 Dispersal Bays; Aircraft Hangars

NO22SE 18.02 NO 27098 24590 Control Tower

NO22SE 18.03 NO 26252 24130 Aircraft Hangar

NO22SE 18.04 centred NO 2705 2490 Buildings; Huts; Parachute Packing building

NO22SE 18.05 centred NO 2769 2438 Dispersal Bays; Aircraft Hangars

NO22SE 18.06 centred NO 2684 2338 Dispersal Bays; Aircraft Hangars

NO22SE 18.07 centred NO 2737 2489 Aircraft Hangars

NO22SE 18.08 centred NO 27311 25391 Buildings; Huts (assigned to NO22SE 18.00)

Errol opened on 1 August 1942 and was constructed with three runways. The airfield now lies derelict and its tower survives, as do many of the huts near the road.

D J Smith 1983

Situated on the S side of the A 90 trunk road. The control tower and many other buildings are extant, including one T1 hangar. The control tower is in a ruinous state, but many of the other buildings are still in use.

J Guy 2000; NMRS MS 810/9

The airfield is visible on RAF WW II vertical air photographs (NLA 68, 3089-3091, 4088-4092, flown 27 August 1943), which show that at that date the airfield had five large hangars and 13 Blister hangars linked to dispersal area can be seen around the perimeter.

The technical area in the NE corner consisted of several smaller structures all relating to the servicing and repair of aircraft.

One hangar (T1 type) survives (NO22SE 18.3) adjacent to East Leys farmsteading and the control tower lies within the perimeter track on the NE side of the airfield.

Vertical air photographs taken in 1988 (All Scotland Survey, 50788, frames 226-227, flown 10 June 1988) show that the runways survive, but most of the dispersal areas have been converted back to arable land, though some appear as cropmarks on the 1988 imagery. Nearly all the hangars have been removed and a go-karting circuit has been built on the W side of the airfield between the perimeter track and the NW-SE runway.

Information from RCAHMS (DE), September 2005

Part of this airfield may have been utilised as a prisoner of war camp. Noted in English Heritage list of PoW camps.

R J C Thomas, Project Report. Twentieth Century Military Recording Project, Prisoner of war camps (1939-1948), July 2003.

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