Home Defence, 1916-18*: Channel & North Sea, 1939-43*: Norway 1940: Baltic, Invasion Ports, 1940: 1940-43: France & Low Countries, 1940: Biscay Ports, 1940-44: German Ports, 1940-45*: Ruhr, 1940-45*: Berlin, 1940-44*: Fortress Europe, 1940-44*: Normandy, 1944*: France & Germany, 1944-45*: Walcheren: Rhine: Honours marked with an asterisk are those emblazoned on the Squadron Standard
Insignia
Squadron badge heraldry
A sword in bend severing a mantle palewise. This unit formed at Dover and adopted a mantle being severed by a sword to show its connection with that town, the arms of which include St. Martin and the beggar with whom he divided his cloak. The mantle is also indicative of the protection given to this country by the Royal Air Force.
No. 50 Squadron reformed at RAF Waddington on 3 May 1937, equipped with Hawker Hindbiplane light bombers. It started to convert to the Handley Page Hampdenmonoplane medium bomber in December 1938, discarding its last Hinds in January 1939.[2] It was still equipped with Hampdens when the Second World War broke out, forming part of 5 Group, Bomber Command. It flew its first bombing raid on 19 March 1940 against the seaplane base at Hörnum on the island of Sylt.[2][4]
On 12 April 1940, in an attempt to attack German warships off Kristiansand returning from the German invasion of Norway, 50 Squadron took part in what was the largest British air raid of the war so far, with a total of 83 RAF bombers attempting to attack the German fleet. When 12 Hampdens of 50 and 44 Squadron spotted a German warship and attempted to attack, they lost 6 of their number to beam attacks by German fighters,[10][11] with 13 officers and men from 50 Squadron dead or missing.[12] After these losses, daylight attacks with Hampdens were abandoned.[11]
No. 50 Squadron continued operations by night, taking part in the RAF's strategic bombing offensive against the Germans through the remainder of 1940 and 1941. It re-equipped with Avro Manchesters from April 1942.[2] The Manchester was disappointing, however, with unreliable engines and had a lower ceiling than the Hampden it replaced.[13] Despite these problems, the squadron continued in operations, contributing 17 Manchesters to Operation Milliennium the "1,000 aircraft" raid against Cologne on 30/31 May 1942. It lost two aircraft that night,[14] one of which piloted by Flying OfficerLeslie Thomas Manser who was posthumously awarded the Victoria Cross for pressing on with the attack after his aircraft was heavily damaged, and when a crash became inevitable, sacrificing his own life by remaining at the controls to allow the rest of his crew to parachute to safety.[15][16]
The squadron soon re-equipped with the four-engined Avro Lancaster, which it used for the rest of the war against German targets,[2] flying its last mission of the war against an Oil Refinery at Vallø in Norway on 25/26 April 1945.[6] The squadron flew 7,135 sorties during the war with a loss of 176 aircraft.[17] It replaced its Lancasters with Avro Lincolns in 1946, disbanding at Waddington on 31 January 1951.[2]
The squadron reformed again at RAF Waddington on 1 August 1962 equipped with the Avro VulcanV bomber, using ex-617 Squadron aircraft made surplus after 617 Squadron re-equipped with Vulcan B.2s.[2][18] It received Vulcan B.2s in December 1966,[2] and was still operating them when the Falklands War broke out in April 1982, with two Vulcan crews from 50 Squadron selected for Operation Black Buck missions.[19]
The Falklands War, and the continuing need to maintain supply flights to the South Atlantic after the end of the war, resulted in a shortage of air-to-air refuelling tankers, and it was decided to convert six Vulcans to single point tankers, the first conversion flying on 18 June 1982 and entering service on 23 June.[20] No. 50 Squadron was selected as the operator of the tankers, serving as the last unit to operate the Vulcan until disbanding on 31 March 1984.[4][21]
Halley, James J. (1980). The Squadrons of the Royal Air Force. Tonbridge, Kent: Air Britain (Historians). ISBN0-85130-083-9.
Hastings, Max (1999). Bomber Command. London: Pan. ISBN0-330-39204-2.
Jefford, C G (1988). RAF Squadrons. A comprehensive record of the movement and equipment of all RAF squadrons and their antecedents since 1912. Shrewsbury: Airlife. ISBN1-85310-053-6.