Presented by
Rob Giles
and
Dr Harry Bennett
from the University's School of Society and Culture, this interactive exhibit showcased the authentic infrastructure and daily operations of this historic site. The audience was invited to take this opportunity to step into the past and experience history first-hand.
The emergency civil engineering programme to build Britain's wartime airfields like Harrowbeer was one of the biggest engineering projects in British history. The extent of that project has all but been forgotten as most of those airfields have been returned to civilian use, redeveloped, returned to nature or fallen into dereliction. RAF Harrowbeer was one of those wartime airfields, and many people in South West Devon are familiar with the landscape there today. The model offers them a chance to understand what that landscape was like 80 years ago, and to understand Harrowbeer's place in the Second World War.
Together and with the assistance of Michael Hayes, Archivist at the RAF Harrowbeer Archives, Education and Heritage Centre, Rob and Harry have created the basis for an ever increasing interactive application that potentially could engage, intrigue and educate a new generation of budding historians bringing a new visual perception to one of Plymouth’s lost historic sites of interest.
This event showcased a digital third person scaled representation RAF Harrowbeer. There was a 40 minute talk by Rob and Harry about the airfield, its day-to-day tasks and the events that occurred particularly in its most active year of 1943 (Battle of Britain). We were joined by Michael for a further Q&A session after the main talk.
- A short video on RAF Harrowbeer 1943 by Time-Lock Productions is available to view on Vimeo.
Email rob.giles@plymouth.ac.uk or harry.bennett@plymouth.ac.uk for further information.