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RAF Daws Hill

RAF Daws Hill
USAAF Station 1101
Air Force Ensign of the United Kingdom.svg Eighth Air Force - Emblem (World War II).png
Located Near High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire
RAF Daws Hill is located in Buckinghamshire
RAF Daws Hill
RAF Daws Hill
Shown within Buckinghamshire
Coordinates 51°37′08″N 000°44′45″W / 51.61889°N 0.74583°W / 51.61889; -0.74583Coordinates: 51°37′08″N 000°44′45″W / 51.61889°N 0.74583°W / 51.61889; -0.74583
Type Military maintenance, accommodation and storage
Site information
Controlled by Royal Air Force
United States Army Air Forces
Condition Undergoing redevelopment
Site history
Built 1942
In use 1944-2007
Battles/wars European Theatre of World War II
Air Offensive, Europe July 1942 - May 1945

RAF Daws Hill was a Ministry of Defence site, located near High Wycombe and Flackwell Heath, in Buckinghamshire, England, close to the M40 motorway.

The station was established in 1942 on land owned by Wycombe Abbey School, for use by the United States military. Initially used by the United States Army Air Forces, RAF Daws Hill was used in its later years by the United States Navy. It became an important part of US defence in the United Kingdom during the 1980s, housing a nuclear bunker with a control centre for the direction of nuclear bombers and cruise missiles. As a result of this and the wider presence of US nuclear weapons on British soil during the 1980s and 1990s, the site became home to a peace camp between 1982 and 1985.

Following a review of Ministry of Defence properties in the south-east of England, the station closed in 2007 and the site was sold to a property developer in 2011. The station's nuclear bunker received Grade II* listed status from English Heritage in October 2013, and much of the remaining site was cleared for redevelopment as housing during 2015.

American military forces were first stationed at High Wycombe in 1942, shortly after the United States' formal entrance into the Second World War. So urgent was the action that Wycombe Abbey School, situated on the land that would become the station, was given three weeks to find new facilities; failure in this effort led to the school's closing, until the independent girls' school was returned by the US in 1945. An underground bunker, which later became a nuclear-reinforced bunker was built within the grounds of the school and was codenamed "Pinetree".


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