Stonehenge Aerodrome and the Stonehenge Landscape: Stonehenge World Heritage Site Landscape Project (Research Reports)

by Martyn Barber

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Book cover for Stonehenge Aerodrome and the Stonehenge Landscape

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Between 1917 and 1921, Stonehenge had an aerodrome for a near-neighbour. Initially a Royal Flying Corps training establishment, from January 1918 it became the number one School of Aerial Navigation and Bomb Dropping, home to a contingent of RNAS Handley Page bombers. The aerodrome featured two camps either side of a take-off and landing ground, the first located close to Fargo Plantation, and a subsequent and more substantial technical and domestic site situated either side of what is now the A303, a few hundred yards west of Stonehenge. After the war, the aerodrome buildings became the focus of debate about what constituted unacceptable modern intrusions in the Stonehenge landscape. Following a public appeal the aerodrome and neighbouring farmland was purchased, the buildings dismantled and removed and thus the Stonehenge landscape was restored to something deemed more appropriate as a setting the for the monument.
  • ISBN10 1848023480
  • ISBN13 9781848023482
  • Publish Date 15 June 2014
  • Publish Status Active
  • Publish Country GB
  • Imprint Historic England
  • Format Paperback
  • Pages 114
  • Language English