Alkmaardermeer
52°33'39"N 004°44'38"E
runway - N/A - water
Naval Air Support Unit Alkmaardermeer (Dutch: Marinesteunpunt Alkmaardermeer, also known as Marinesteunpunt Akersloot) was a small Naval Aviation detachment of 3 aircraft at the Alkmaardermeer in Akersloot, south of Alkmaar.
In an attempt to disperse their aircraft to avoid destruction the Marineluchtvaartdienst (MLD) in 1938 decided to set up a Naval Support Station on the banks of the Alkmaardermeer.
It was set up at the Akersloot marina.
The site was in use between 1939 and the German invasion in May of 1940.
It was tasked with patrolling the Dutch coastal waters between IJmuiden and the island of Rottum.
52°33'39"N 004°44'38"E
runway - N/A - water
Naval Air Support Unit Alkmaardermeer (Dutch: Marinesteunpunt Alkmaardermeer, also known as Marinesteunpunt Akersloot) was a small Naval Aviation detachment of 3 aircraft at the Alkmaardermeer in Akersloot, south of Alkmaar.
In an attempt to disperse their aircraft to avoid destruction the Marineluchtvaartdienst (MLD) in 1938 decided to set up a Naval Support Station on the banks of the Alkmaardermeer.
It was set up at the Akersloot marina.
The site was in use between 1939 and the German invasion in May of 1940.
It was tasked with patrolling the Dutch coastal waters between IJmuiden and the island of Rottum.
On 10 May 1940 the unit had 10 Fokker C-XIV-w aircraft available, one of which engaged 3 Bf-109s near Bergen, downing one.
by 13 May 1940, three days after the invasion began, the commander of the station was ordered to fly his aircraft to France in an attempt to fight from either there or from Great Britain.
Eventually they ended up at Pembroke Dock, where they formed the RAF's 320 Squadron.
One of very few pictures of Naval Air Support Unit Alkmaardermeer. It shows Navy personnel posing with local girls, in the background the tail of a Fokker C-XIVw is visible. This photo was found at the turn of the century during renovation work on a home in Amsterdam (stelling-amsterdam.nl).
by 13 May 1940, three days after the invasion began, the commander of the station was ordered to fly his aircraft to France in an attempt to fight from either there or from Great Britain.
Eventually they ended up at Pembroke Dock, where they formed the RAF's 320 Squadron.
One of very few pictures of Naval Air Support Unit Alkmaardermeer. It shows Navy personnel posing with local girls, in the background the tail of a Fokker C-XIVw is visible. This photo was found at the turn of the century during renovation work on a home in Amsterdam (stelling-amsterdam.nl).
heavy Fokker C-VIII W reconnaissance floatplanes, including G-2, in the Akersloot marina
(collection Nederlands Instituut voor Militaire Historie). After the war, the station was no longer used for aviation activities. There is nothing that reminds of the old Naval Station. |