
Outside the wartime control tower at North Witham airfield, a tour group learns about the history of the airfield and the US Airborne Pathfinders who trained and flew from there.
Follow in the footsteps of heroes
In 1944, Lincolnshire and South Kesteven played a pivotal role in the preparation and execution of two of the most daring Allied Airborne operations: D-Day (Operation NEPTUNE) and Operation MARKET GARDEN.
The region served as a strategic hub for Airborne forces from the United Kingdom, the United States and Poland, offering vital infrastructure, training areas and departure airfields.

Men of ‘B’ Company, 2nd Parachute Battalion, at Saltby airfield on Sunday, 17 September 1944.
They are preparing their kit and parachutes prior to boarding USAAF C-47s of the 314th Troop Carrier Group for the flight to Arnhem. (Via Bob Hilton, still from a film by Sgt CM Lewis, British Army Film and Photographic Unit)
Airborne Locations in South Kesteven
Click the button to see at a glance the locations where Allied Airborne Forces were based in South Kesteven during World War II.

Saltby airfield memorial stones. (Brian Riley)
Memorials
Discover the memorials to Allied Airborne Forces in South Kesteven and nearby.

Museums

The C-47 Dakota at Metheringham Airfield Visitor Centre.
Metheringham Airfield Visitor Centre
A C-47 troop-carrier aircraft - like those based in the area during World War II - is on permanent display and visitors can climb on board and sit in its cockpit and paratrooper seats.

Arnhem in Lincolnshire displays at Thorpe Camp. (Thorpe Camp)
Thorpe Camp, Tattershall Thorpe
Airfields

American forces treated local childten
RAF Barkston Heath

C-47 Skytrains and Horsa gliders line up at Bottesford for take off on a practice mission in 1944. The C-47s belong to either the 436th or 440th Troop Carrier Group. (American Air Museum in Britain, FRE3358)
RAF Bottesford

C-47 tug aircraft and Waco CG-4a gliders lined up at RAF Folkingham, ready for operation MARKET GARDEN in September 1944. (US Army)
RAF Folkingham

Paratroopers of the 82nd Airborne Division with a C-47 Skytrain of the 95th Troop Carrier Squadron, 440th Troop Carrier Group, at Fulbeck in September 1944, before Operation MARKET GARDEN. (American Air Museum in Britain, FRE3364)
RAF Fulbeck

Pathfinder aircrew with Pathfinders of the 507th Parachute Infantry Regiment, US 82nd Airborne Division, at North Witham airfield on 5 June 1944, just hours before flying to Normandy. Kneeling at the far right of the front row is the pilot, Lieutenant David Hamilton, who was the last surviving Airborne Pathfinder pilot from World War II until he passed away in January 2025, aged 102. (US Army)
RAF North Witham
Men of ‘B’ Company, 2nd Parachute Battalion, at Saltby airfield on Sunday, 17 September 1944.
They are preparing their kit and parachutes prior to boarding USAAF C-47s of the 314th Troop Carrier Group for the flight to Arnhem. (Via Bob Hilton, still from a film by Sgt CM Lewis, British Army Film and Photographic Unit)
RAF Saltby
Landmarks

Easton Hall in the 1890s. (Easton Walled Gardens)
Easton Hall Estate

Fulbeck Hall
Within the 1st Airborne Division, the Headquarters of the Royal Army Ordnance Corps and Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers were housed in Fulbeck Manor during 1944-45.
Fulbeck Manor

Grimsthorpe Castle
Grimsthorpe Castle

Harlaxton Manor. (Mike Frankel/photos4you)
Harlaxton Manor

Historic Marston Hall
Marston Hall

Rock House, Stamford. (South Kesteven District Council)
Rock House
Walk in the footsteps of heroes across Ropsley Heath... (Brian Riley)
Ropsley Heath
St Vincent's Hall, Grantham.
St Vincent's Hall, Grantham
St Vincent's Church is a shrine to Airborne forces
St Vincent's Church, Caythorpe
Lieutenant General (Retd) Andrew Harrison, former Colonel Commandant of the Parachute Regiment, in front of Stoke Rochford Hall, where the 2nd Parachute Battalion's assault on the Arnhem bridges was planned
Stoke Rochford Hall

Where to Stay
South Kesteven has many wonderful places to visit and stay. During World War II, troops were billeted at every significant property across the district, from stately homes to castles and manor houses.
Some, echoing with history, are still welcoming visitors today, many remarkably unchanged from what Airborne forces would have called their temporary homes in 1944.

All Places of Interest (alphabetical order)

Harlaxton Manor. (Mike Frankel/photos4you)
- Landmark
- Memorials

Historic Marston Hall
- Landmark
Douglas C-47A-25-DK inside the dedicated hangar at Metheringham Airfield Visitor Centre.
- Landmark
- Museums

Men of the 1st Parachute Battalion enjoy a cuppa before the flight to Arnhem, 17 September 1944. Sadly, Lance Corporal Walter Lewis (kneeling) was killed in action later that day, and three others were killed during the Arnhem battle or shortly afterwards. (Paradata/Airborne Assault Museum)
- Airfield
- Memorials

Aerial photograph of Bottesford airfield looking east, the technical site with seven T2 hangars, control tower and airfield code are top left, 30 May 1945. Photograph taken by No. 544 Squadron, sortie number RAF/106G/LA/203. (English Heritage [RAF Photography], via American Air Museum in Britain).
- Airfield

C-47 Skytrains of the 313th Troop Carrier Group line up for take off at Folkingham in September 1944. (American Air Museum in Britain/IWM FRE 3392)
- Airfield

A C-47 of the 442nd Troop Carrier Group at Fulbeck. (assumed USAAF, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons)
- Airfield

North Witham, 5 June 1944: Pathfinders of the 2nd Battalion, 505th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 82nd Airborne Division, and aircrew of the C-47 that would fly them to Normandy just hours later. (US Army photo, public domain)
- Airfield
Men of ‘B’ Company, 2nd Parachute Battalion, at Saltby airfield on Sunday, 17 September 1944.
They are preparing their kit and parachutes prior to boarding USAAF C-47s of the 314th Troop Carrier Group for the flight to Arnhem. (Via Bob Hilton, still from a film by Sgt CM Lewis, British Army Film and Photographic Unit)
- Airfield
- Memorials
Other Resources

Men of the 1st Parachute Battalion at Barkston Heath, 17 September 1944. (Paradata/Airborne Assault Museum)
Airborne History on the Internet

Pathfinders of the 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 101st Airborne Division, on 5 June 1944. (US Army photo)