A large public park in East London contains probably the richest collection of WW2 concrete fortifications still existing within London within one small area. This is a former military airfield that was landscaped into a country park for the locals in the 1980s, but retained a lot of heavy concrete fortifications to discover.

The airfield, RAF Hornchurch was opened during WW1, when it was known as Sutton’s Farm, for the protection of London, and although it closed after the war, it was reopened just a few years later as a much larger airfield for the RAF. The airfield was ideally to cover both London and the Thames corridor from German air attacks. It was a key air force installation between both wars and into the jet age, closing in 1962.

After it closed, most of the land was used for gravel extraction, and as a dump, until it was landscaped in the 1980s into Hornchurch Country Park, which is open to the public.

It’s a huge space, bordered on one side by the River Ingrebourne, and housing on the other, but within are good hills to climb, plenty of woodlands to wander around, and a lot of bits of WW2 military fortifications to explore.

Fortunately, there’s a walking trail if you’re here looking for WW2 concrete to explore, with a lot of pill boxes around the old military site to protect it if the Germans had invaded the country. What’s really nice is that the display boards close to them also show how large they are underground — as many are quite a lot larger than people might otherwise suspect. A few are large enough to walk inside, if you don’t mind risking the occasional spider’s web or dodgy graffiti inside.

The southern end is also higher, and there’s a good trig-point style stone pyramid at the summit of the hill that gives some good views across this part of East London and right over to central London. The hill is largely grasses, and it’s not until you get down into the valley that shade, and in places streams cool the air down.

The paths are a mix of gravel or tarmac, but in one place the paths aren’t from the country park clean-up in the 1980s, but are the airfield perimeter roads that would have been patrolled by armed soldiers during the war.

Depending on how you get here, there’s a visitor centre on the northern end of the park, or as I did, start at the southern end close to Rainham Hall. There’s a rather awkard-looking carving of a fighter plane next to the visitor centre at the northern end that looks less terrifying to the enemy than rather cuddly. And as you’re in the area, there’s the recently opened RAF Hornchurch museum, which is excellent.

As a country park, it’s a lovely place to wander around, although the southern half is more baren and on a hot day quite unforgiving with the lack of shade, but what makes it worth a visit from afar is the WW2 walking trail, as it’s got a lot to see as you walk along ticking off each concrete fortification as you find them.

It’s a short walk from either Rainham station on the C2C line, or Hornchurch station on the District/H&C lines.

This article was published on ianVisits

SUPPORT THIS WEBSITE

This website has been running now for just over a decade, and while advertising revenue contributes to funding the website, but doesn’t cover the costs. That is why I have set up a facility with DonorBox where you can contribute to the costs of the website and time invested in writing and research for the news articles.

It’s very similar to the way The Guardian and many smaller websites are now seeking to generate an income in the face of rising costs and declining advertising.

Whether its a one-off donation or a regular giver, every additional support goes a long way to covering the running costs of this website, and keeping you regularly topped up doses of Londony news and facts.

If you like what your read on here, then please support the website here.

Thank you