No. 12 Squadron

No. 12 Squadron badge
ⓘ licence & creditRoyal Air Force (Public domain), via Wikimedia Commons
Group
No. 1 Group
Command
Bomber Command
Home station
RAF Wickenby

In the database: 5 aircraft · 21 service members · 3 sorties.

History

No. 12 Squadron went to war in 1939 flying the Fairey Battle light bomber as part of the Advanced Air Striking Force sent to France. It was there, in the desperate fighting of May 1940, that the squadron won an enduring place in RAF history. On 12 May a handful of its Battles were sent against the heavily defended bridges over the Albert Canal near Maastricht, across which German forces were pouring; in the face of intense fire the attack was driven home but most of the aircraft were lost.

The pilot of the leading aircraft, Flying Officer Donald Garland, and his navigator, Sergeant Thomas Gray, were each awarded the Victoria Cross — the first to airmen of the Royal Air Force in the Second World War. After the fall of France the squadron returned to England, to RAF Finningley and then RAF Binbrook, re-equipped with the Vickers Wellington, and went on to serve through Bomber Command’s main offensive in No. 1 Group.

Photographs

Operations flown