Our Canada

My Hometown

A little-known airfield in Ontario aided the Allies in WWII

- By Don Martin, London, Ont.

While I was attending a community improvemen­t meeting in Lambeth, part of the Westminste­r neighbourh­ood of London, Ont., I noticed the Westminste­r Township Historical Society (WTHS) had a booth promoting their organizati­on.

I’d recently been discussing the long-gone Lambeth airport with my friend, a retired air controller, so I asked the historical society if they knew anything about it. With their help, I discovered some of the remarkable history of London’s first airport.

The site not only helped put London on the aviation map, it also contribute­d to Allied e€orts during the Second World War.

In the 1920s, a group of businesspe­ople wanted to see an airport in London, and Lambeth met the specificat­ions of the Civil Aviation Branch of the Department of National Defence.

The Lambeth airport was operated by The London Flying Club and opened o‹cially on August 24, 1928, grabbing the front page of The London Free Press the next day. Airmail service through the Lambeth airport began the following year.

Lambeth was one of the first flying fields in Canada. Three-hundred private and commercial pilots trained there, in addition to the Royal Canadian Air Force pilots who trained for the Second World War on Tiger Moths and Fleet Finches.

A “listening station” was establishe­d beside the air strip during the Second World War. It was a building set up to secretly intercept communicat­ions between German submarines in the Gulf of St. Lawrence. It connected with other listening stations on Canada’s east coast that were also tracking enemy submarine activity as Canadian convoys set sail for Europe.

On a humorous note, the airport was involved in a bank robbery when the thief chartered a plane at the airport. The pilot had no idea his passenger had just robbed a bank, and within minutes of landing the plane in Hamilton, the robber had disappeare­d.

On another occasion, because

of a low ceiling, a pilot couldn’t see the landing strip, so the ground crew built a bonfire, enabling him to see the runway and land the aircraft without incident.

The Lambeth airfield was sold as farmland on June 11, 1949, in part because larger planes needed a longer runway.

When I have spoken to locals about this airport’s legacy, they have been very excited to learn about its location and rich history. I am diligently working with the WTHS and the site’s developer to have a monument erected at the corner of Wonderland Rd. and Wharncli€e Rd., formerly known as Airport Rd., which is very close to where the airport was located.

To me personally, it is especially important to recognize Lambeth airport because my dad was in the RCAF, and many of these pilots fought and died for our freedom.

 ??  ?? The first air mail arriving at the Lambeth airport in 1929.
The first air mail arriving at the Lambeth airport in 1929.

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