Lippitts Hill

Lippitts Hill

Lippitts Hill is a hill located at High Beach, Epping Forest, Essex, south east England. The Lippitts Hill camp has played several historic roles in the defence of London, and is currently home to the National Police Air Service which took control of the operations from Metropolitan Police Air Support Unit on 31st March 2015.

The hill was the site of a gun emplacement in the First World War and used as an anti-aircraft site in the Second World War.[1] The United States's 184th anti-aircraft artillery installed their own guns in 1941, and added an underground control room and block houses to the site.[1] A prisoner of war camp was established at Lippitts Hill by the British after the camp was abandoned by the Americans in 1944.[1] Relics from the Second World War at the camp include a memorial to the American forces that served there, and a concrete sculpture of a man, left by a German prisoner of war, Rudi Webber.[1] The local branch of the Peace Pledge Union, a pacifist organisation, would invite local prisoners of war from the camp to their homes on Christmas Day.[2]

The Lippitts Hill camp was used for civil defence purposes after the war and by the police.[1] The Metropolitan Police Firearms Training Unit was based at Lippitts Hill, and it was the site of the Metropolitan Police's first firearms training course.[3][4] A new centre (MPSTC) is now operation at Gravesend. The hill was the location of the bodies in the Babes in the Wood murders in 1970.[5]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Michael Foley (30 October 2013). Essex At War From Old Photographs. Amberley Publishing Limited. pp. 147–. ISBN 978-1-4456-2818-9.
  2. Pamela Howe Taylor (2003). The Germans We Trusted: Stories of Friendship Resulting from the Second World War. James Clarke & Co. pp. 165–. ISBN 978-0-7188-3034-2.
  3. Marcia Moody (13 March 2014). Harry: A Biography. Michael O'Mara Books. pp. 52–. ISBN 978-1-78243-042-1.
  4. Maurice Punch (November 2010). Shoot to Kill: Police Accountability, Firearms and Fatal Force. Policy Press. pp. 140–. ISBN 978-1-84742-472-3.
  5. "UK | Violent past of Babes' killer". BBC News Online. September 5, 2014. Retrieved June 11, 2014.

Coordinates: 51°39′16″N 0°01′04″E / 51.6545°N 0.0177°E / 51.6545; 0.0177

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