The range opened to aerial operations in August 1938; but had previously been used as a range from 1890 by the 1st Lincolnshire Artillery. However, there is evidence that the area was in use for military practice as far back as Napoleonic times when the River Steeping was navigable and Wainfleet itself was an important harbour.[2]
During the 1920s and 1930s it was also used by the RAF and Royal Artillery.[3] The range was administered by RAF Coningsby as an Air Weapons Range within RAF Strike Command. During the Second World War, it was used by 617 Squadron to test the Stabilised Automatic Bomb Sight.[1] Postwar, it was used by both fixed wing and rotary aircraft from NATO. On 1 April 2006 control was transferred to Defence Estates and the range was then administered by Defence Training Estates (East) from their headquarters at West Tofts Camp near Thetford.[4]
Due to funding cuts the range was closed for operations on 2 December 2009[5] and finally closed in July 2010.[6]
The tower and some surrounding buildings reopened as holiday accommodation in 2017.[7]
Operation
The site was controlled from the Control Tower. Targets included old ships. There were two smaller wooden observation towers to the east nearer the shore but these were demolished in 2009. Access was via a narrow road called Sea Lane via the junction with the A52 at the Barley Mow at Friskney Eaudyke.
Weapons clearance
The site was cleared daily by the Explosive Ordnance Disposal team from RAF Coningsby.[8] Although the range has finally closed unrecovered ordnance and unexploded ordnance will remain for many years.
Halpenny, Bruce Barrymore. Action Stations 2: Wartime Military Airfields of Lincolnshire and the East Midlands. Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, UK: Patrick Stephen Publishing, 1981. ISBN0-85059-484-7.