Paras at Watchfield in The 1950s
Yes, I lived on the Watchfield housing estate from 1952 to 1953. Large numbers of paras and their equipment were dropped regularly at the airfield. Trainees jumped from large silver barrage balloons, but experienced paras from aircraft, often dozens at a time. The equipment canisters, jeeps, etc., came down with colour-coded parachutes. It was famously one of the sites used in the making of the film "The Red Beret", sometimes retitled "Paratrooper", starring Alan Ladd, Leo Genn & Harry Andrews. There was a small Army base nearby where my father, a REME staff-sergeant worked maintaining all the paras' equipment, such as the sprung-bases the jeeps landed on. A few years ago, I met a retired SAS chap who told me he had done jumps from a Blackburn Beverly aircraft over Watchfield around that time. There was no Watchfield School in those days... we Army "brats" had to walk or bus into Shrivenham... older kids went to secondary school in Farringdon. For the Coronation, there was a huge party in the grounds of the nearby Royal Military College of Science. The only cinema was an old corrugated-iron Nissen Hut ... the RC church was also housed in a similar hut.
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RE: RE: Paras at Watchfield in The 1950s
I have many memories of Watchfield Airfield and everything to do with growing up in a small Berkshire (it was then...it's in Oxfordshire now) village. So much so that I felt compelled to write the history of the village after many years researching. It is available for all to read free of charge at: www.neil-maw.co.uk/watchfield.chronicle
Comment from Neil Maw on Monday, 8th August 2011.