British Belvederes
Bloodhound ground to air defence missles on the base
Officers and airmen of No. 389 Maintenance Unit on parade in 1965
Seletar Base Country Club
Most of its servicemen were the airmen from Britan, and also a few handful of locals as well, who maintained and stationed at the base from 1947 (after WWI) till 1971, when the British withdrew their forces from Singapore.
For the British, they were either housed at the camp site itself, or for the officers or permanent residents, at the "black and white" bungalows in an area informally known as "Little England" located within the camp, and their streets held names such as "Hyde Park Gate" and "Duke Street" . They also had the convience of the the local food stores and shophouses which were outside the camp. Also, there was the Seletar Country Club also within the camp, with allowed the officers and servicemen to engage in recreational activities while off duies during the weekends.
RAF Seletar Marine Craft unit close to the Yacht Club and Sunderland Hangar on the waterfront.
Seletar Pier.Notice a mounted Oerlikon Gun on the marine craft to be used in case of contact with the enemy. It was 1965 and during the height of confrontation with Indonesia.
Bloodhound ground to air defence missles on the base
Officers and airmen of No. 389 Maintenance Unit on parade in 1965
Seletar Base Country Club
Road leading to the camp.
Seletar was one of the many airbases that the Royal Air Force had here in Singapore. Their plans in 1921 was to build an airbase, a naval and flying boat base here, with the first planes arriving in 1928, a few years after completion. It was the largest airbase outside of Britan since it was contructed.
Seletar was one of the many airbases that the Royal Air Force had here in Singapore. Their plans in 1921 was to build an airbase, a naval and flying boat base here, with the first planes arriving in 1928, a few years after completion. It was the largest airbase outside of Britan since it was contructed.
The RAF base in Seletar also served as a civil airport from 1930 and onwards.
It was during the 1960s that the airbase was home to squadrons of a variety of planes and helicopters, mostly to help cope with the troops stationed in North Borneo during the "Confrontation" with Indonesia.
Most of its servicemen were the airmen from Britan, and also a few handful of locals as well, who maintained and stationed at the base from 1947 (after WWI) till 1971, when the British withdrew their forces from Singapore.
For the British, they were either housed at the camp site itself, or for the officers or permanent residents, at the "black and white" bungalows in an area informally known as "Little England" located within the camp, and their streets held names such as "Hyde Park Gate" and "Duke Street" . They also had the convience of the the local food stores and shophouses which were outside the camp. Also, there was the Seletar Country Club also within the camp, with allowed the officers and servicemen to engage in recreational activities while off duies during the weekends.
The airbase was along the West side of the Seletar Camp. The living quaters at the airbase was divided into the "Married" quaters and the "Singles" quaters. There were also ample facilities for the servicemen to use while serving at the airbase.
References and Photos courtesy of John Deyer 389 MU, RAF Seletar
By Benjamin Low 3E3
Comments
I hope this puts the record straight!
John Dyer
ex 389 MU, RAF Seletar
John Dyer
Ex 389 MU, RAF Seletar
Thank you for the comments. We will get the details corrected. Thank you for your help. We will also ensure that the proper credits are provided.
Thanks once again.
3E3 Team
Thank you for correcting the captions on the photos. I can only claim credit for the top 6 photos (the black and white ones)starting with the Belvederes. The lower four colour photos (Seletar Base country club onwards) are not mine!
Best wishes
John Dyer
I recently bought a pewter tankard at a local auction in Hamilton, Scotland, It is Selangor Pewter, not yet Royal Selangor!
I used to live in singapore, so when i seen raf seletar engraved on it, there was an obvious attraction. The full inscription reads-
PRESENTED TO
W. RICHARDSON
BY
THE STAFF OF
9X SITE 389 MU
R.A.F. SELETAR
1968
It would be great if you could help me shed some light on this tankard, why it would have been given, was this a common thing? And also on W. Richardson. I've tried to photograph the tankard but the inscription does not come out well in the pic, I'll try again and send you on a pic if i'm successful.
Hope you can help, and thank you,
Martin Toy martinltoy@aol.com
I'll think you will find the 2 photo's indicating "Seletar country club" are in fact the golf course (foreground and left) and the RAF junior school(background and right)on the two photo's.
David Lloyd
RAF Seletar Association
Had a speed boat for ski-ing and loved the size of the pool, once you were passed the monkeys in the swamp.
I most certainly respect these mugs as a representation of the two men who devoted themselves to flying for their Country.
If any of you old farts like me happen upon this email and can shed some light on these mugs, please get back to me at whitiartist@gmail.com
I have lots of photos from Seleta and Changi including cine film clips that i have transferred to DVD. One of the clips is a five minute movie of a flying boat stopping off for refuelling before being handed over to the New Zealand air force
Thank you for writing. We would love to have a copy of the photos you mentioned and the film clips. Could you send us the link to these photos and film clip?
Our email is jalankayutrail@gmail.com
Best Regards,
Admin Jalan Kayu Trail