In front of a trident and sword in saltire, a star of eight points.[1]
Squadron codes
EY (Apr 1939 – Sep 1939) ZS (Sep 1939 – Jul 1942) 5T (Mar 1944 – Dec 1948) [2][3][4]
Military unit
No. 233 Squadron RAF was a Royal Air Forcesquadron that operated from 1918–1919, 1937–1945, 1952–1957 and 1960–1964.[1] The squadron was formed from several Royal Naval Air Service (RNAS) flights and took part in the tail end of the First World War before being disbanded. The squadron was reformed with the advent of World War II. At first No. 233 Squadron flew general reconnaissance patrols before being tasked with transportation duties just prior to D-Day. Shortly after the Second World War the squadron was again disbanded, to be reformed once more in 1960. No. 233 Squadron was finally disbanded in 1964.[1]
History
First World War
The squadron was established at Dover on 31 August 1918, using flights from former RNAS stations at Dover and Walmer that had been absorbed by the RAF on 1 April 1918. Flights Nos. 407 and 491 flew anti-submarine patrols over the Strait of Dover, and No. 471 Flight at Walmer flew Sopwith Camels and was used to engage enemy fighters based in Belgium. In January 1919 Flight 491 was relocated to RAF Walmer flying DH9s and in early spring 233 Squadron was relocated to Walmer. No. 233 Squadron was disbanded on 15 May 1919.[1]
Inter-war years
No. 233 Squadron was reformed on 18 May 1937 at RAF Tangmere as part of Coastal Command. It first used Avro Ansons for general reconnaissance until August 1938 when it was moved to Scotland and began converting to Lockheed Hudsons. Patrols were at first carried out by both Ansons and Hudsons, until the last flight by Ansons on 10 October 1939. By the end of October a flight of Bristol Blenheims had been added to the squadron, undertaking patrols until January 1940.[1]
Second World War
Throughout 1940 No. 233 was one of five RAF squadrons equipped with Hudsons: Nos. 224, 233 and 269 operated over the North Sea along the Norwegian and Danish coasts, and Nos. 206 and 220 operated from the Netherlands to Denmark.[5] When Denmark and Norway were invaded by Germany in April, Nos. 220, 224 and 233 Squadron flew attacks upon shipping and land targets, such as airfields, virtually every day.[6] In August several detachments from Hudson squadrons began operating out of RAF Aldergrove in Northern Ireland. On 25 October 1940 three Hudsons from No. 233 engaged U-46, off the coast of Norway, seriously damaging the U-boat and forcing it to return to port.[7] By December, No. 233 Squadron had completed its move to Aldergrove.[5]
In May 1941 a Hudson from the squadron engaged and shot down a Heinkel He 111 bomber.[7] Later in June the squadron damaged two U-boats, and on 23 July an aircraft from No. 233 Squadron shot down a Focke-Wulf Fw 200 Condor long-range reconnaissance bomber which was attacking a British convoy.[7] No. 233 Squadron was moved to RAF St Eval in Cornwall in August 1941 in order to fly patrols over the Bay of Biscay.[1][7] Within the first few weeks of operations out of St Eval, the squadron damaged an enemy ship and attacked four U-boats, suffering the loss of a Hudson.[7]
Operations out of Gibraltar
A detachment from No. 233 Squadron was sent to Gibraltar in December 1941, and gradually the rest of the unit followed (though another detachment was left at RAF Thorney Island).[7] It was not until July 1942 that the squadron fully assembled in Gibraltar, where it remained until February 1944.[1]
No. 233 was one of three Hudson squadrons in Gibraltar newly arrived from the UK.; it immediately took up anti-submarine operations.[1] The squadron gained its first U-boat kill on 1 May 1942, when P/O Camacho attacked U-573, but did not seem to inflict any damage on the submarine.[7] Later the same day, the U-boat was spotted by another Hudson, and an attack forced it to submerge, but it immediately re-surfaced and signalled its surrender. The U-boat sank later from damage that had been received in the first attack.[7] No. 233 Squadron took part in Operation Torch, providing cover, before the Allied landings in French North Africa.[7][8]
By 1943 there were four Hudson squadrons flying out of Gibraltar and Algeria: Nos. 48, 233, 500 and 608.[8] In the early part of the year No. 233 was used in anti-submarine duties though as 1943 wore on the pace of operations began to slacken, and the units were mainly involved in escorting convoys, either by day or night,[8] and large part of their duties were meteorological flights.[7]
In March the squadron engaged no less than six enemy U-boats. On 28 March 1943 a Hudson from No. 48 Squadron engaged and damaged U-77 before radioing for assistance.[7] A Hudson from No. 233 then arrived and attacked the U-boat, which returned fire with anti-aircraft guns.[7] A depth-charge attack upon the U-boat from the No. 233 aircraft destroyed the German submarine and the kill was accredited to both No. 48 and No. 233 Squadron.[7] On 5 April 1940 another Hudson from No. 233 Squadron attacked and damaged U-167 off the Canary Islands.[7] It is likely that this was the same U-boat that was sunk later that day by another aircraft from the squadron. Two days later, on 7 April, U-447 was sunk by the squadron.[7]
During the summer of 1943, No. 233 Squadron shot down at least two FW-200 Condors.[7] Around this time the squadron's Hudsons were mounted with rockets which gave them greater firepower when engaging U-boats that remained surfaced to fight off the attacking aircraft.[7] In December a Hudson from the squadron used its rockets to sink U-667, which had been spotted by a Vickers Wellington from No. 179 Squadron and captured in the Wellington's Leigh Light.[7]
From October 1943 to February 1944 a detachment from No. 233 was based in the Azores until the squadron was recalled to the UK.[1] The reduction of U-boat activity in the area, following Allied successes on land, led to Nos. 48 and 233 Squadrons returning to the UK in early 1944, to become transportation units.[8]
Transport Command
On its return to the UK No. 233 Squadron was equipped with Douglas Dakotas for use with airborne forces, as part of RAF Transport Command. A company of paratroops from the 1st Canadian Parachute Battalion was attached to the squadron to aid in its few months of training,[7] On D-Day there were thirty Dakotas from No. 233, and a few Ansons.[7] Of the Dakotas on the first lift, six were used to tow gliders, the remainder carried troops from the 3rd Parachute Brigade.[7] Later in the day the squadron flew twenty-one supply flights, losing four aircraft. After flying evacuation missions from the beachhead, No. 233 flew thirty-seven sorties during the Arnhem airlift during its first few days. Thirty-five re-supply sorties followed in which the squadron lost three aircraft.[1]
The squadron then flew general transport flights between the UK and occupied Europe until twenty-four Dakotas were used for the last major offensive over the Rhine in March 1945. In August No. 233 began to move to India, though the Japanese surrendered before the squadron had fully assembled there. After flying general transport sorties in South East Asia the squadron was merged with No. 215 Squadron RAF in December 1945.[1]
A Canadian, Everett Large Baudoux became a pilot officer on probation in November 1939,[13] and was confirmed in that rank in March 1940.[14] He was promoted to flying officer on 5 November 1940,[15] and was with 233 Squadron when he was awarded the DFC on 17 January 1941.[16] In November that year he was promoted to flight lieutenant.[17] Baudoux was an acting squadron leader (still with 233 Squadron) when he was awarded the Distinguished Service Order (DSO) on 20 April 1943.[18] He transferred to the Royal Canadian Air Force on 3 May 1945.[19]
John William Barling also started in the ranks, being a flight sergeant when he was commissioned as a pilot officer on 1 May 1942.[20] He was awarded the DFC with 233 Squadron on 16 February 1943,[21] having been promoted to flying officer in November 1942.[22] He was promoted to flight lieutenant in May 1944.[23] In 1945, by then with No. 224 Squadron RAF, Barling was awarded the DSO.[24] After the war he took a permanent commission as a flying officer,[25] and was promoted to substantive flight lieutenant in 1946.[26] Promoted to squadron leader in 1951,[27] he retired in that rank in 1963,[28] but took a reserve commission as a flying officer in the Training Branch in 1965.[29][30] He resigned this commission in 1971.[31]
This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (June 2013)
Squadron was reformed in 1953 as an OCU Operational Conversion Squadron training pilots to convert from prop aircraft to Jet aircraft. Based in South Wales at RAF Pembrey Carmarthenshire.
1952 – 1957 flying De Havilland Vampire Jets
No. 233 Squadron was reformed once more on 1 September 1960 when the Vickers Valetta flight of No. 84 Squadron RAF was detached to form No. 233 at Khormaksar. The squadron was then used to provide general transport for the British Army in the Aden Protectorate. During November/December 1961 the Squadron took part in the Juba River flood relief effort in Somalia, with Valettas flying the supply drops.[citation needed]
^Lake, Alan (1999). Flying units of the RAF : the ancestry, formation and disbandment of all flying units from 1912. Shrewsbury: Airlife. p. 245. ISBN1-84037-086-6.
Bibliography
Bowyer, Michael J.F and John D.R. Rawlings. Squadron Codes, 1937–56. Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, UK: Patrick Stephens Ltd., 1979. ISBN0-85059-364-6.
Edwards, Goronwy 'Gron', DFC. Flying to Norway, Grounded in Burma: A Hudson Pilot in World War II. Barnsley, South Yorkshire, UK: Pen & Sword Aviation, 2008. ISBN1-84415-809-8.
Edwards, Goronwy 'Gron', DFC. Head in the Clouds: A Young RAF Pilot's Life in the Late '30s. Shrewsbury, Shropshire, UK: Airlife, 1996. ISBN1-85310-590-2.
Flintham, Vic and Andrew Thomas. Combat Codes: A Full Explanation and Listing of British, Commonwealth and Allied Air Force Unit Codes Since 1938. Shrewsbury, Shropshire, UK: Airlif Publishing Ltd., 2003. ISBN1-84037-281-8.
Halley, James J. The Squadrons of the Royal Air Force & Commonwealth, 1918–1988. Tonbridge, Kent, UK: Air-Britain (Historians) Ltd., 1988. ISBN0-85130-164-9.
Jefford, C.G. RAF Squadrons, a Comprehensive Record of the Movement and Equipment of all RAF Squadrons and their Antecedents since 1912. Shrewsbury: Airlife Publishing, 2001. ISBN1-84037-141-2.
Rawlings, John D.R. Coastal, Support and Special Squadrons of the RAF and their Aircraft. London: Jane's Publishing Company Ltd., 1982. ISBN0-7106-0187-5.