Army Bombing Decoy Site at Oswaldtwistle Moor
It was both a QF site and a QL site .
QF means it used small fires to indicate strikes from incendiary bombs in the hope of fooling the German airmen to drop their bombs on the moor . QF was useful against aircraft following the lead aircaft .
QL refers to the use of lighting to try and decieve the bombers . This would be used prior to bombs being dropped once the lead aircraft had dropped their load more use of the QF would be made .
The shelter that remains has two areas within it . One large, one smaller with an escape hatch . The smaller one probaly contained a generator for the lights and the escape hatch may have doubled as an observation point for the controlling crew to remotely fire the various devices of subterfuge whilst remaining in a sort of safety ..... a sort of because a direct hit would no doubt kill all occupants therein .
It seems a dangerous job to invite aircraft to bomb your location .
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view from the outside , with modern day wind turbines on the horizon |
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The ladder for the escape hatch can be seen along with an asbestos lined vent and access for the generator |
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View toward the entrance of the Army decoy site shelter |
This was a Civil Bombing Decoy Site . The two sites were combined and run as one later in the war .
Nothing now remains of the Starfish site ...we took photos of the area and a few enigmatic red bricks which are atypically found at dismantled Starfish sites .
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Red bricks perhaps once of the command structure |
It is very definately an Army Bombing Decoy site. Varified in Colin Dobinson's excellent book Fields of Deception produced by English Heritage .
Suprisingly EH website Pastscape does not have the ABD site on thier pages but does have the Starfish site which is but a short distance away .