place

RAF Ringstead

1942 establishments in England1974 disestablishments in EnglandBuildings and structures completed in 1942Grade II listed buildings in DorsetJurassic Coast
Radar stationsRoyal Air Force stations in DorsetUse British English from August 2021
Chain Home, Ringstead Bay geograph.org.uk 2446447
Chain Home, Ringstead Bay geograph.org.uk 2446447

RAF Ringstead is a former Royal Air Force radar station at Ringstead Bay, Dorset, England. It is notable for having served three separate functions: first as a Chain Home early-warning radar station during WWII and then, during the Cold War, as a Rotor station and then, finally, as a USAF Tropospheric scatter station. The first of these functions commenced in 1942; the last of the functions ceased in 1974. The structural remains were Grade II listed in 2020.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article RAF Ringstead (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

RAF Ringstead
Fishers Place,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: RAF RingsteadContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 50.634353 ° E -2.3435399 °
placeShow on map

Address

RAF Ringstead Radar defence

Fishers Place
DT2 8NG , Owermoigne
England, United Kingdom
mapOpen on Google Maps

Chain Home, Ringstead Bay geograph.org.uk 2446447
Chain Home, Ringstead Bay geograph.org.uk 2446447
Share experience

Nearby Places

West Ringstead
West Ringstead

West Ringstead is a deserted medieval village located on the coast in Dorset, southern England. The village lies on the Jurassic Coast and is located west of the modern village of Ringstead. This medieval village with a church is located in a field to the west of the current Ringstead settlement. It is mentioned in the Domesday Book. It was most likely abandoned after the arrival of the Black Death at Weymouth in 1348. All that can be seen now are variations in the ground level. The site is listed on the National Heritage List for England as a Scheduled Monument (no. 1019393), listed on 15 January 1960.What remains of the village church now forms part of Glebe Cottage, immediately north of the main village site. It has walls consisting of local rubble and the roof covered with modern tiles. Only the chancel and its arch survive from the original medieval church building. The village site is in the parish of Osmington. There was a separate parish of Ringstead until at least the late 15th century. There are four different Ringsteads listed in the Domesday Book, each apparently a separate settlement. One was later given the name "West Ringstead". Another, later known as "Up Ringstead", may have been at the site of the present Upton House to the east above Ringstead Bay towards White Nothe. The location of "Middle Ringstead" is not known. The name of "East Ringstead" survived as a field name on an 1829 Tithe Map in the east of the parish. The location of West Ringstead is just inland from the South West Coast Path. To the east are Ringstead Bay and the headland of White Nothe. To the west are Bran Point and the village of Osmington Mills.