No. 617 Squadron — Dambusters

Après moi le déluge

Group
No. 5 Group
Command
Bomber Command
Home station
RAF Woodhall Spa

In the database: 31 aircraft · 148 service members · 28 sorties.

History

No. 617 Squadron is the most famous unit in the history of Bomber Command — the “Dam Busters”. It was formed in great secrecy at RAF Scampton in March 1943, under the 24-year-old Wing Commander Guy Gibson, for a single extraordinary task: to breach the great dams of the Ruhr. On the night of 16/17 May 1943, nineteen specially modified Avro Lancasters carried out Operation Chastise, releasing Barnes Wallis’s cylindrical “bouncing bomb” against the Möhne, Eder and Sorpe dams; the Möhne and Eder were broken, at a cost of eight aircraft and fifty-three men.

Rather than disband, the squadron became Bomber Command’s specialist precision unit. Later commanded by Leonard Cheshire, it developed low-level marking and carried the enormous Tallboy and Grand Slam earthquake bombs against targets too hard for ordinary attack — among them the battleship Tirpitz, U-boat pens and key bridges and viaducts. Flying latterly from RAF Woodhall Spa, it took as its motto Après moi le déluge — “after me, the flood”.

Photographs

Operations flown