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Stag Lane Aerodrome

Stag Lane Aerodrome
Summary
Airport typeCivil
Operatorde Havilland
LocationEdgware, London
In use1915–1933
Elevation AMSL170 ft / 52 m
Coordinates51°35′49″N 000°16′26″W / 51.59694°N 0.27389°W / 51.59694; -0.27389
Map
Stag Lane Aerodrome is located in Greater London
Stag Lane Aerodrome
Stag Lane Aerodrome
Location in London
Map

Stag Lane Aerodrome was a private aerodrome between 1915 and 1933 in Edgware, north London, UK.

History

The land for an aerodrome was purchased by the London & Provincial Aviation Company (Warren and Smiles – Michael Geoffrey Smiles of Bonnington died in 1921) in October 1915. The company used the aerodrome for flying training during the First World War. London & Provincial ceased flying in July 1919 after a dispute with Department of Civil Aviation (see United Kingdom Civil Aviation Authority), which refused them a licence.

Stag Lane became the main base of The de Havilland Aircraft Company Limited in 1920 and they purchased the freehold in 1922. Former wartime aircraft were refurbished in the early years, and the company designed and built large numbers of aircraft at Stag Lane in the 1920s and early 1930s. In 1934 the company moved to a larger factory and airfield at Hatfield Aerodrome, Hatfield, Hertfordshire.

Stag Lane Aerodrome was sold for housing development in 1933, though a small 15-acre (61,000 m2) site was retained as a factory and offices for the de Havilland Engine Company Limited. The last flight from the airfield was by a de Havilland DH.87 Hornet Moth, G -ACTA in July 1934, by which time the company factory had been relocated to Hatfield, Hertfordshire.

British Telecom

In 1976 the GPO (later British Telecom) opened the world's largest international exchange on the site, due to the hold ups in the construction of their new Mondial House, with the "De Havilland" Plessey TXK2 and "Mollison" Ericsson TXK5.[1] The exchange closed in 1988, as most of the analogue technology was out of date.

Aircraft built at Stag Lane

References

  1. ^ "BT History 1976". Archived from the original on 2 October 2018. Retrieved 25 October 2017.
  • Smith, Ron (2002). British Built Aircraft – Greater London. Stroud: Tempus Publishing. ISBN 0-7524-2770-9.