AIRFIELD CONSTRUCTION AT COMILLA AND DUM DUM, INDIA, ON THE BURMA FRONT (4/9/1944)

This film is held by the Imperial War Museum (ID: ABY 20).

Synopsis

Documentary scenes showing the process of airfield construction in forward areas.

Various stages in the construction of an airfield, starting with a landscape shot with aircraft parked in the background and local labourers with engineering plant in the midground. Two RAF officers operating a theodolite. Bulldozer clearing loose earth and locals using tools to clear turf as a twin-engined Avro Anson takes off very close by. Coolies unload stones from a lorry. Other workers busy breaking bricks, and a riddle is used to sort these. Baskets of stones are laid down and tar poured over them. A number of labourers pull a roller. Shot of a bullock cart, while in the background an Anson taxis past a Buddhist temple. A cement mixer, tar engine and steamroller. Bricks are laid in an alternating diagonal 'herringbone' pattern. One labourer mixing cement with his feet. Cement poured over brickwork and tamped flat. RAF Douglas Dakota aircraft taxiing before departing the airfield.

Notes

For other film showing the use of bitumenised hessian sheeting ('bithess') to lay airfields more quickly, see related items. The importance of landing strips to the Burma campaign made the rapid construction of airstrips an important task.

Anson aircraft is EG-676.

Comilla now in Bangladesh, Dum Dum in India.

No slates, date from dopesheet.

 

Titles

  • AIRFIELD CONSTRUCTION AT COMILLA AND DUM DUM, INDIA, ON THE BURMA FRONT (4/9/1944) (Allocated)
Series Title:
ROYAL AIR FORCE OPERATIONS IN SOUTH EAST ASIA DURING THE SECOND WORLD WAR
 

Technical Data

Year:
1944
Running Time:
6 minutes
Film Gauge (Format):
35mm
Colour:
B&W
Sound:
Silent
Footage:
530 ft
 

Production Credits

Production Countries:
GB
Sponsor
Air Ministry Directorate of Public Relations
cameraman
Goozee, S (Sergeant)
Production company
Royal Air Force Film Production Unit
 

Countries

 

Production Organisations