No. 218 Squadron — Gold Coast
- Group
- No. 3 Group
- Command
- Bomber Command
- Home station
- RAF Methwold
In the database: 10 aircraft · 1 service member.
History
No. 218 Squadron took the name “Gold Coast” after the West African colony (now Ghana) whose people adopted it. It went to war flying the Fairey Battle and was savaged in the fighting in France in 1940; after re-forming at home it flew the Bristol Blenheim, then the Vickers Wellington, and from the end of 1941 the Short Stirling, before finally taking the Avro Lancaster at RAF Methwold in 1944. It served in No. 3 Group, with a long spell at RAF Downham Market.
The squadron’s name is forever linked with Flight Sergeant Arthur Aaron, who on the night of 12/13 August 1943 — though his Stirling was wrecked and he was mortally wounded — helped bring the aircraft down at Bone in North Africa to save his crew, and was awarded a posthumous Victoria Cross.
