Stanley Park Aerodrome was
an airfield located in the Stanley Park area of Blackpool
, Lancashire
England which was in use for civil and military
flying from 1929 until 1947. The site is now used by Blackpool Zoo
.
Early history
Despite
the existence of the Squires Gate site, now Blackpool
Airport
, which had been used intermittently for flying
since October 1909, Blackpool Corporation decided in 1928 to build
a new airfield close to Stanley Park
. The aerodrome was located east south east
of
North Pier at an elevation
of above sea level.
It occupied of a site acquired by the Corporation for aviation and
sports use under the Blackpool Improvement Act 1928. The aerodrome
was licensed and opened for use in August 1929. After the erection
in early 1931 of a hangar and a clubhouse and offices with an
observation/control tower on top, the aerodrome was officially
opened on 2 June 1931 by the Prime Minister
Ramsay MacDonald. The all-grass airfield's
surface was small with the longest landing run available (NW/SE)
being in length.
Early operations

Spartan Mailplane
Blackpool
before its flight from Stanley Park Aerodrome to Karachi
For the first few years the airfield was used aircraft owned by
private individuals and flying clubs.
These were housed in
an art deco hangar and terminal building,
parts of which still survive in use within Blackpool Zoo
. On 15 June 1932,
T. Neville Stack
departed from the aerodrome at the controls of Spartan Mailplane G-ABLI on the first leg of
a flight to Karachi
, India
, carrying
two passengers. After being named
Blackpool, the
aircraft was given a civic send-off and reached Drigh Road
aerodrome 5 days 23 hours 50 minutes later.
A public Air Pageant was held at Stanley Park on 26 June 1932.
Another public event was held on 7 September 1935 during which
Alan Cobhams National Aviation Day
Circus performed. Pleasure flights were available to the public,
but tragedy ensued when an
Avro 504 biplane
of Air Travel Ltd collided over the outskirts of Blackpool, with
Cobham's
Westland Wessex monoplane. The
pilot and two sisters from Blackpool were killed in the Avro, but
the pilot of the Wessex skillfully brought his aircraft and four
passengers to a non-fatal crash-landing.
Inter-war airline operations
The first
scheduled air services from Stanley Park Aerodrome were operated by
the short-lived United Airways to Isle of Man Airport
during the summer of 1935 using eight-seat de Havilland Dragons. During
summer 1935, United Airways flew an ex Imperial Airways
Armstrong Whitworth Argosy
G-AACJ on pleasure flights from the airfield. This was a
large three-engined 20-seat biplane airliner, which had been built
in 1929.
Railway Air Services (RAS) had
operated schedules from Squires Gate from April 1935, but their
flights moved to Stanley Park Aerodrome on 1 June 1937. From 26
September 1937, RAS operations from Blackpool were transferred to
Isle of Man Air Services
(IoMAS) and these continued until the outbreak of
World War II, again operated by Dragon Rapides.
Some
RAS/IoMAS scheduled flights from Ronaldsway Airport, Isle of Man
continued from Stanley Park Aerodrome to Speke Airport,
Liverpool
and Manchester's Barton Aerodrome
.
The scheduled services through Stanley Park Aerodrome were not
resumed after the war, the now larger Squires Gate airfield again
being used.
Operations in World War II
The airfield was requisitioned at the start of the war and was
initially used by the
Royal Air
Force No.3 School of Technical Training, which used various
types of grounded aircraft, including
Armstrong Whitworth Whitleys,
which were dispersed around the airfield boundary.
Vickers-Armstrongs (VA)
established a major aircraft factory at Squires Gate in 1940 for
the production of large numbers of
Vickers Wellington Medium bombers. VA took over much of the
existing facilites at Stanley Park Aerodrome and used them, and
five newly erected temporary hangars, to house a secondary assembly
line. Because of the airfield's short grass runways, the
Wellingtons landed at the larger Squires Gate facility after their
maiden flights. A total of 2,584 Wellingtons were completed at the
two Blackpool aerodromes between September 1940 and summer
1945.
Lancashire Aircraft Corporation (LAC) established an aircraft
repair line at Stanley Park Aerodrome which overhauled
Bristol Beaufighters for return to
service with the RAF. Later, some
Hawker Hurricanes were flown in and reduced
to scrap metal. No.181 Gliding School RAF used Kirby Cadet gliders
at Stanley Park Aerodrome between 1943 and 1947 to train air
cadets.
Postwar activities
A limited amount of
charter flying
was performed from Stanley Park Aerodrome during early 1946 by LAC
using
de Havilland Dragon
Rapide biplane airliners. However, the airline transferred to
the better facilities at Squires Gate and flying from Stanley Park
Aerodrome ceased in 1947.
Until 1970, the site was used to stage the Royal Lancashire
Agricultural Show.
In that year, the site was acquired for the
construction of Blackpool
Zoo
, which opened to the public in 1972. Several
extra large buildings were erected, with the prewar aerodrome
terminal building and hangar and three wartime hangars also being
utilised by the zoo.
References
- Jackson, 1974, p. 188
- Jackson, 1973, p. 404
Bibliography