During the Second World War and the Cold War Years that followed RAF Defford was one of the most secret places in the country. For it was at Defford that Airborne Radar was developed, tested and proven. Various communal and domestic sites, including the Station Sick Quarters (now restored and used to house the RAF Defford Museum), were built in Croome Park and around Croome Court, the ancestral home of the Earls of Coventry. The Museum tells the story of Defford Airfield, especially the work of the Telecommunications Flying Unit and its role in the development of airborne radar during WWII and the Cold War that followed. Exhibits include the cockpit and forward fuselage of Canberra WD956, a ground training simulator and an exhibition telling the story of Defford’s role during the Cold War years. The museum is located within Croome Park, now owned by the National Trust. There is no additional charge for admission to the Museum for visitors to Croome (free to members of the National Trust, charges apply for non-members).…Read more
Address: Croome Park (National Trust), near High Green, Worcester, Worcestershire, WR8 9DW
Phone: 01905 371006 (National Trust, Croome)
Email: croome@nationaltrust.org.uk
www.nationaltrust.org.uk/croome/features/raf-defford