The Google map was showing this somewhere on our left, a blotch on a green patch on the phone screen. We left Kharagpur some time back and were driving straight towards Lodhashuli on the NH-6 to our final destination, Jhargram. I was concentrating on the road as there were several bad sections due to the ongoing widening work. The traffic was thrown out of gear, and I was constantly dodging the trucks that kept hurtling at me from the opposite direction. Amitabha sat beside me, hunched over the phone, as he was tinkering with the Google map, trying to locate the forgotten airfield hidden somewhere in the vast expanse of a landscape entwined with thick vegetation and red barren land.
Yes, it was Dudhkundi airfield we
were looking for, situated somewhere 15 km southeast of Jhargram town. This was
one of the many army airfields that were set up in Bengal during World War II.
Dudhkundi airfield was first commissioned in 1943, and July 1944 was the time
when the United States Air Force 444 Bombardment Group was stationed here.
Dudhkundi played an important role in the “Operation Matterhorn” of the US Air
Force, which targeted strategic bombing of the Japanese army stationed at
various bases in China and Southeast Asia. In order to reach Japanese-occupied
soil, the operations were staged from Kwanghan airfield, a forward base close
to the southwest of Chendu in south-central China.
In 1943, when Dudhkundi airfield
was built, the army envisaged the landing of light fighter aircraft, but
certainly not huge bomber aircraft like B-29 Superfortress. When under project
Matterhorn, the 444 Bombardment squadrons decided to move in, facilities were
upgraded as a top priority, with men working around the clock. Dudhkundi was
ready to welcome the B-29 Superfortress by July 1944. In fact, it was one of
four B-29 bases established by the Americans in India.
The B-29s were carrying the
supply from India as well as launching attacks from Kwanghan base. To launch
one combat flight, the aircraft needed to make six round-trips with supplies.
This operation was logistically complicated, expensive, and time-consuming. The
aircrafts needed to fly almost 1200 miles from India, carrying heavy loads of
fuel, bombs, spares, and other supplies, crossing over the ‘HUMP', as the
Eastern Himalayas were popularly referred to by the American pilots. For
today’s modern jets, this would have been a cakewalk, but in those times, for a
propeller-driven heavy aircraft, the climb to the required altitude with full
load enabling it to fly over the Himalayas was considered dangerous and required
a high degree of dexterity from the pilots. To carry the supply, the B-29s were
stripped of almost all combat equipment, and in addition, they required seven
tons of fuel to complete the six-hour flight.
Around late 1944 it was becoming
apparent that the B-29 operations based out of Chendu were not making much
sense in terms of cost and logistics. Moreover, the Japanese offensive in South
China was mounting at a steady pace, making it difficult for the US Air Force
to hold onto the forward bases. B-29s flying from India continued to bomb
around Japanese strongholds in Thailand and Singapore. In December 1944,
decision was made to pull out the squadron and shift them to the new base at
Marianas in the Central Pacific.
After the 444th moved out with
their B-29s, the airfield was handed over to Tenth Air Force, and the airfield
remained as the maintenance and disposition center for surplus aircrafts of the
allied forces.
Post this, the airfield has seen
80th Fighter Group moving in on May 24th, 1945, from their previous base in
Myanmar. Various fighter aircraft, including P-38 Lightnings, A-36 Apaches, and
P-40 Warhawks, flew from here.
The 80th Fighter group returned
to the US in October 1945, giving way to the 7th Bombardment group, moving in
with their B-24 Liberator planes. Later, this unit also made its exit from here,
and the airfield was used to fly the US personnel back home. Finally, in
January 1946, after the last of the Americans left, the airfield was
deactivated and handed over to the British colonial government.
Today, there is nothing left of
this short but illustrious history of the airfield. The map showed a left turn,
and I swung my car left from the highway, taking a bumpy trail past a smoke-spewing
stone chips factory. I kept following the trail, leaving a wake of deep red
dust. The trail led to a vast expanse of land, covered by low shrubs and often
dotted by few trees. The landscape stretched to horizons, and everything around
us suddenly felt quiet. No longer could I hear the usual noises from the
highway. Not a soul was in sight. As I shut the engine off, complete silence
fell. Ahead of me I could see a long & broad concrete pathway, the surface
scarred and rough, an obvious sign of bearing the brunt of time. Probably this
was the runway of the airfield where the mighty B-29s took off and landed,
engines howling. That day, as I stood, It was difficult to imagine this place
as a thriving airfield. The desolate and almost eerie look of the place makes
you believe that you are part of some horror movie set. Even in broad daylight,
we felt uneasy. Tall brick structures broke through the forest at random
places, probably remains of what must have been offices and go-downs of the
airfield. However, from the remains, it was difficult to gauge what these
structures originally looked like and what purpose they served. We walked
around, and I felt an aerial view would have revealed more of what is left of
the airfield, its runway, and taxiways. It was so vast and open that at one
point I lost all sense of direction. I followed a narrow trail inside the
forest, took a few turns, and then I realized I was lost. The forest around me
looked all the same, and I couldn’t identify the direction I came from or where
I had parked the car. I found my way back, but not without those few moments of
panic.
A place with interesting history,
though practically there is nothing much left to see today except for enjoying
few minutes of complete solitude. Photographs, though I had taken some,
wouldn’t reveal much. Maybe I need to come back with a drone to take some aerial
shots, which will help in understanding the layout of this airfield.



Wonderful write up. ❤️
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