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Goetsenhoven Military Airfield

Goetsenhoven Military Airfield
Roundel of Belgium.svg
Summary
Airport type Military
Operator Belgian Defence (MRC&I) / Federal Police
Location Tienen, Belgium
Elevation AMSL 246 ft / 75 m
Coordinates 50°46′54″N 004°57′28″E / 50.78167°N 4.95778°E / 50.78167; 4.95778Coordinates: 50°46′54″N 004°57′28″E / 50.78167°N 4.95778°E / 50.78167; 4.95778
Map
EBTN is located in Belgium
EBTN
EBTN
Location in Belgium
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
17/35 779 2,556 Asphalt
06/24 655 2,149 Asphalt
Sources: Belgian AIP

Goetsenhoven Military Airfield (ICAO: EBTN) is a Belgian Air Component base, located 2 miles (3.2 km) south of Tienen (Brabant Provincie), approximately 26 miles (42 km) east-southeast of Brussels (Bruxelles).

The airfield is used as a training facility for Belgian Air Cadets, equipped with six Piper L21B Super Cubs, and several Schleicher K 8B Gliders.

Goetsenhoven Airfield was one of the first airfields of Belgian military aviation. It was built in 1922 as a grass airfield by the Belgian Air Force (Aéronautique Militaire Belge). Its early use was that of observation aircraft of II Group, consisting of 10 Ansaldo A.300 or DH.9 Biplanes.

On 1 November 1939, as part of the wartime buildup, three squadrons of British built Fairey Fox III fighter/bombers with Nos. 3 (II Group), 5 (III Group) and 7 (IV Group) squadrons were assigned to the airfield as part of the 2e Régiment d'Aéronautique (2nd Air Regiment-Air Combat) In addition to the combat units, Goetsenhoven was also a was a Basic Flight School (Ecole de Pilotage Elémentaire) for the Belgian Air Force, equipped with Stampe SV.4s.

On 10 May 1940, Goetsenhoven was attacked by the Luftwaffe as part of the initial German attack on Belgium, killing several personnel and destroying some aircraft, and was seized by the Wehrmacht within a few days later. The Goetsenhoven squadrons hastily retreated to other airfields with the remaining planes. They were eventually evacuated to France. During the occupation of Belgium, the airfield was used by the Luftwaffe as a reserve airfield; no Luftwaffe units were stationed there.

In late October 1944, the airfield was attacked by USAAF Ninth Air Force B-26 Marauder medium bombers and P-47 Thunderbolts with 500-pound General-Purpose bombs, unguided rockets, and .50 caliber machine gun sweeps to insure that any German forces at the base were neutralized. Allied ground forces moved into the Tienen area around 20 October and the first American combat engineer units arrived at the airfield shortly afterward.


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