Here is a bit of history of Manston.
This page is intended to be a central location for facts and photos concerning the layout and buildings of Manston. Lots more updates to come! 29th May 1916 RNAS (Royal...
www.manstonhistory.org.uk
Fascinating, but very incomplete. I happen to know a bit about it because a close relative works there in a senior position, but he or she can't tell me anything that isn't in the public domain because the site has secret classification (but not top secret, which would make life easier for the people who work there). S/he visited me recently, and as always started the conversation by checking that I didn't have Alexa or any other listening devices, just in case s/he happened to mention where they worked (which I already knew).
It's very widely known, for example, that there are extensive underground buildings and a huge number of underground tunnels, dating back to its RAF days, but there are no plans of any of them and the tunnels have a nasty habit of collapsing, so nothing new can be built there.
It's currently owned and used by the Home Office, for short-term processing of people who arrive here by boat.
The quote below refers to my statement that, during the war, it was widely used for emergency landings because there were no other options. Allegedly, in the early days of the war, pilots were warned that if they landed anywhere except at their home base, they were at risk of courts martial, because they would get a few days off, away from the war, because both they and their aircraft would be in the wrong place.
"28th August 1942
Fifty six emergency landings on the night of 28th August 1942 left devastation that would lead to the approval for the new runway to be built. The Station Commander had already seen the increasing numbers of emergency landings increasing, with damaged aircraft of Bomber Command trying to make it to Manston in every kind on imaginable trouble. At the time, the airfield was comparatively limited for such landings, with many aircraft overshooting, adding to the damage to them, increasing casualties and also damaging the airfield and buildings. The undulating surface made matters worse, although Wing Commander Gleave had already pleaded for the construction of a really large runway with “lead in” lights, so far he had not been successful. The scene of carnage eventually led to the approval of the new runway.
https://www.manstonhistory.org.uk/on-this-day-28th-august-1942/"
We can only guess at how dangerous it must have been for those crews, with no lights, no navigational aids, aircraft either out of fuel or damaged, having to land there at night, and on grass. 56 emergency landings in a single night . . .