Neha Patil (Editor)

Cawdor Barracks

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Type
  
Barracks

Controlled by
  
14th Signal Regiment

00/00
  
Concrete

Year built
  
1944

Operator
  
British Army

In use
  
1944-1992 1992-present

Elevation
  
112 m

Owner
  
Ministry of Defence

Cawdor Barracks

Battles/wars
  
Second World War Cold War

Address
  
Brawdy, Haverfordwest SA62 6NN, United Kingdom

Cawdor Barracks is a military installation located 6.3 miles (10.1 km) east of St Davids, Pembrokeshire and 9.8 miles (15.8 km) south west of Fishguard, Pembrokeshire, Wales.

Contents

It was an operational airbase between 1944 and 1992 being used by both the Royal Air Force and the Royal Navy before the site was turned over to the British Army and renamed Cawdor Barracks.

History

The Pembrokeshire base was officially opened on 2 February 1944 as a satellite station for the nearby RAF St Davids with No. 517 Squadron RAF moving in a day before with the Handley Page Halifax Mk V before changing to the Mk III in March 1945. The squadron moved to RAF Chivenor on 30 November 1945. The next squadron to move in was 521 Squadron from December 1944 until May 1945 as a detachment operating the Boeing Fortress II. Between 2 February 1944 and 27 April 1946 595 Squadron aircraft may have been based here with a variety of aircraft as a detachment.

Fleet Air Arm use

On 1 January 1946 the station was handed over to the Fleet Air Arm of the Royal Navy and was initially used as a Relief Landing Ground for RNAS Dale. It was commissioned as HMS Goldcrest on 4 September 1952 and in March 1953 the first Hawker Sea Hawk entered service with 806 Naval Air Squadron at RNAS Brawdy. From 1963 till 1971 Fairey Gannets and Hawker Hunters were based at Brawdy in 849 NAS and 738/759 NAS respectively. The Gannets were primarily used in Airborne Early Warning (AEW) and the Hunters for advanced flying training including low-level navigation, ground attack and air-to-air weapons training. The Royal Navy left in 1971 and the base was allocated to the Department of the Environment.

The following squadrons were also here at some point:

  • 727 Naval Air Squadron
  • 736 Naval Air Squadron
  • 751 Naval Air Squadron
  • 767 Naval Air Squadron
  • 773 Naval Air Squadron
  • 784 Naval Air Squadron
  • 800 Naval Air Squadron
  • 801 Naval Air Squadron
  • 802 Naval Air Squadron
  • 804 Naval Air Squadron
  • 807 Naval Air Squadron
  • 811 Naval Air Squadron
  • 813 Naval Air Squadron
  • 824 Naval Air Squadron
  • 831 Naval Air Squadron
  • 891 Naval Air Squadron
  • 892 Naval Air Squadron
  • 893 Naval Air Squadron
  • 895 Naval Air Squadron
  • 897 Naval Air Squadron
  • 898 Naval Air Squadron
  • 1831 Naval Air Squadron
  • RAF Brawdy

    In February 1974 the Royal Air Force returned to RAF Brawdy with D Flight of 22 Squadron taking up residence with their Westland Whirlwind HAR.10 search and rescue helicopters. In September of the same year No. 229 Operational Conversion Unit, later the Tactical Weapons Unit (TWU), joined D Flt 22 Sqn having been forced to relocate after the closure of RAF Chivenor.

    The station was home to Hawker Hunter aircraft of the TWU. The gate guardian at the base was initially a Supermarine Spitfire, but this was replaced in the early 80s by Hawker Hunter FGA.9 (XE624). This airframe was subsequently sold to Steve Petch, a private collector.

    Between 1 September 1976 and July 1978 a detachment of 202 Sqn flying Whirlwind HAR.10s used the airfield.

    By the late 1970s TWU operated BAE Systems Hawk T.1As of 234 Sqn and 79 Sqn Squadron. The RAF withdrew in 1992, the airbase was transferred to the Army and renamed Cawdor Barracks.

    Army Barracks

    The barracks were established, on the site of the former RAF Brawdy airfield, in 1995. They took their name from the local earls of Cawdor (who owned the Stackpole Estate) and the site became the main electronic warfare base of the British Army. As such the barracks became home to the 14th Signal Regiment ("14 Signals"), the British Army's electronic warfare unit. The Regiment remains on site and has a HQ squadron and five signal squadrons, one of which is based at RAF Digby:

  • 14th Signal Regiment (Electronic Warfare)
  • Operations Support Squadron
  • 223 Signal Squadron (Electronic Warfare)
  • 226 Signal Squadron (Electronic Warfare)
  • 237 Signal Squadron (Electronic Warfare)
  • 245 Signal Squadron (Electronic Warfare)
  • In November 2016 the Ministry of Defence announced that the site would close in 2024.

    References

    Cawdor Barracks Wikipedia