- No. 79 Squadron RAF
-
No. 79 Squadron Active 1 August 1917 (RFC) to 1919
1937-1945
1951-1961
1967-1992Motto Nil nobis obstare potest - Nothing can stand against us Insignia Identification
symbolA salamander salient. No. 79 Squadron was a squadron of the Royal Air Force.
Contents
History
World War I
It was first formed at Gosport on 1 August 1917 as a squadron of the Royal Flying Corps. It was equipped with Sopwith Dolphin fighter aircraft in December that year, moving to France in February 1918. It specialised in low-level ground-attack operations, mainly in support of the British Second Army. Despite its lack of emphasis on air to air combat, by the time of the Armistice, the squadron had claimed 64 enemy aircraft and nine kite balloons.[1] Five aces had served in it: Francis W. Gillet, future Air Commodore Ronald Bannerman, Frederic Ives Lord, John McNeaney, and Edgar Taylor.[2]
After the end of the war, it formed part of the British Army of Occupation, before being disbanded at Bickendorf on 15 July 1919.[1]
Post WWI through 1942
It was reformed on 22 March 1937 by splitting off "B" Flight of No. 32 Squadron at RAF Biggin Hill, equipped with Gloster Gauntlet biplane fighters.[3] It received more modern Hawker Hurricane fighters in November 1938, retaining these aircraft when the Second World War began. It claimed its first success on 21 November 1939,when it shot down a Dornier Do 17 over the English Channel. As the Battle of France heated up,it was deployed to Merville,operating over France for ten days, claiming 25 German aircraft.[1] During the Battle of Britain the squadron operated from Biggin Hill and RAF Hawkinge in July, being moved to RAF Acklington in Northumberland for a rest before returning to Biggin in August.[1]
Far Eastern service
In 1942, it was sent to the Far East, arriving in India in May, where the squadron flew primarily ground attack missions, first with later mark cannon armed Hurricanes, later with P-47 Thunderbolts under SEAC command. It disbanded at Meiktila in Burma on 30 December 1945.[3]
Korean War era onwards
It reformed again on 15 November 1951 as a fighter-reconnaissance squadron, flying Gloster Meteor FR.9s, being re-equipped with Swift FR.5s in 1956. It was renumbered as 4 Squadron on 1 January 1961.[3] It was reformed as part of No. 229 Operational Conversion Unit on 2 January 1967, training Pilots to fly the Hawker Hunter until disbanded on 2 September 1974, when it was reformed as one of the component squadrons of No.1 Tactical Weapons Unit, flying first Hunters and then the BAe Hawk T.1 until finally disbanded at RAF Brawdy on 31 August 1992.[4]
See also
- Jimmy Davies, first American-born airman killed in combat.
References
- ^ a b c d Rawlings 1960, p.425.
- ^ http://www.theaerodrome.com/services/gbritain/rfc/79.php Retrieved 19 February 2010.
- ^ a b c Royal Air Force History: History of No. 79 Squadron. Royal Air Force. 22 January 2009. Retrieved 25 December 2009.
- ^ Air of Authority: No 76 - 80 Squadron Histories. Air of Authority - A History of RAF Organisation. 23 March 2008. Retrieved 25 December 2009.
- Rawlings, J.D.R. "Squadron Histories:79 Squadron". Air Pictorial, December 1960, Vol. 22 No. 12. pp. 425–426.
- Royal Air Force History: History of No. 79 Squadron
- Air of Authority: No 76 - 80 Squadron Histories
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Australian Flying Corps (AFC) units attached
to the RAF during the First World WarCommonwealth air force units attached to
the RAF during the Second World War.Squadrons formed from non-Commonwealth
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- Military units and formations established in 1917
- 1917 establishments in the United Kingdom
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