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Our History

Lyddair TrislanderWhen Wing Commander Taffy Powel set up Silver City, (named after a silver mine in Broken Hill, Australia), he opened a fascinating and innovative new chapter in British aviation.

A keen and impatient traveller, Powell realised that by converting a Lancaster bomber, he could fly passengers, and their cars, to Europe. This would allow holiday-makers to avoid a lengthy wait for the ferry. On the 7th of July, 1948, Powel made the first civilian British flight with a car, from Lympne to Le Touquet.

The service was a resounding success. However it soon became apparent that another, more suitable location would have to be found. Silver City relocated to Lydd, where the first new post-war airport in the UK was built, in under six months, for £400,000. The Duke of Edinburgh officially opened the airport on the 5th April, 1956, and few know that on his outward journey to Le Touquet he exported two cars!

For the very reasonable amount of £25 for a car, and £4 for each passenger, one could fly to the continent between seven thirty in the morning and eleven at night. Between 1953 and 1957 one hundred and thirty seven cars and half a million passengers flew with Silver City out of Lydd. In 1962, however, Silver City was taken over by British United Airways. The last Bristol freighter flew from Lydd in 1970, and the last car in 1971.

But interest and enthusiasm in Silver City and Lydd has not waned. Lydd starred in the James Bond film ‘Goldfinger’, and a multitude of celebrities have graced the tarmac: from the Queen Mother to Diana Dors, from King Faisal of Iraq to Humphrey Bogart. We have also played host to a variety of animals, flowers and even a mini-submarine!

Lydd Airport – 50th birthday celebrations

Date: 13 July, 2004 12:18:01

It is over fifty years since on 13th July 1954, first flight took off from Lydd Airport bound for Le Touquet.

The original Bristol freighter aircraft was re-named the fourteenth of July to commemorate both the opening of the airport and also in recognition of Bastille day, a day the French enthusiastically celebrate as their great national holiday.

LibertéLiberté

As a modern homage to these historic events, Ms Heather Gordon, daughter of the owner of LyddAir, came up with the idea (as a law student she was researching the basis of international law and the three principles of the French revolution (1789)) of renaming the LyddAir fleet of aircraft to Liberté, Egalité and Fraternité.

Egalité Egalité

LyddAir operates scheduled services to the French resort town of Le Touquet.
Fares are just £89.62 return, inclusive of all airport and security charges.

Fraternité Fraternité