
It was immediately closed as an operational RAF
airfield. The land was subsequently returned to
its original use of farming, apart from a few areas. The 93rd
Bomb Group Museum stands on private land owned by
the Woodrow family.
Before WWII the owners of the land
on which the museum now stands were Charles and Naomi Catchpole. When
approached as to whether they wanted the land back, they declined. When
their land was requisitioned they had found another farm, in
Topcroft where the land was more fertile, and were pleased
with it.
Meanwhile, in Blofield to the east
of Norwich, a young man called David Woodrow* had
just been demobbed from the RAF (652
Air Observation Squadron, Royal Air Force) and was seeking
an income in farming. His brother told him to look to
south Norfolk. That was how David found Hardwick Airfield near
Topcroft.
As David was from farming stock
he was aware the Hardwick site would not be easy to cultivate
but he had something else in mind — using the USAAF buidings
for chickens. David bought the farm, filled the redundant
American buildings with poultry and never looked back.
In the early 1950s Americans who
had been based at Hardwick came back to visit and David found
himslf a reluctant tour guide. He was himself ex-RAF
so that reluctance soon turned to enthusiasm. When the
Americans wanted to erect a memorial on the site he readily
agreed. More and more airmen, ground crew and their families
continued to visit the memorial and airfield.
David made a temporary home in the
officers' quarters and later built homes for himself and his
son nearby.
In 19nn David
was approached by Paul Thrower** who
asked if he could use the remaining Nissen / Quonset huts
on David's land to house a USAAF museum and David agreed.
Footnotes:
- * David
Woodrow - David served in the RAF and took part in
the Normandy
landings in France (June 1944). His role there,
with others, was to establish and protect airstrips for
the RAF in France.
- ** Paul
Thrower -

David Woodrow on his
way to Normandy in June 2019. The
75th commemoration of the D-Day landings.


Paul Thrower outside
Hut 1 at the Hardwick Museum.
For more information, see the Wikipedia
article on RAF
Hardwick.