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> Units
and Formations
Flying Squadrons
5 Sqn
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9 Sqn
10 Sqn
11 Sqn
12 Sqn
15 Sqn
18 Sqn
21 Sqn
22 Sqn
23 Sqn
25 Sqn
27 Sqn
29 Sqn
33 Sqn
35 Sqn
39 Sqn
41 Sqn
43 Sqn
44 Sqn
46 Sqn
49 Sqn
50 Sqn
51 Sqn
54 Sqn
56 Sqn
57 Sqn
61 Sqn
64 Sqn
65 Sqn
68 Sqn
69 Sqn
70 Sqn
71 Sqn
73 Sqn
75 Sqn
81 Sqn
83 Sqn
85 Sqn
88 Sqn
90 Sqn
92 Sqn
97 Sqn
100 Sqn
101 Sqn
103 Sqn
104 Sqn
106 Sqn
109 Sqn
110 Sqn
111 Sqn
112 Sqn
113 Sqn
116 Sqn
121 Sqn
133 Sqn
136 Sqn
139 Sqn
141 Sqn
142 Sqn
143 Sqn
144 Sqn
148 Sqn
149 Sqn
150 Sqn
151 Sqn
153 Sqn
154 Sqn
166 Sqn
170 Sqn
189 Sqn
198 Sqn
199 Sqn
203 Sqn
206 Sqn
207 Sqn
209 Sqn
210 Sqn
211 Sqn
214 Sqn
222 Sqn
227 Sqn
228 Sqn
229 Sqn
235 Sqn
236 Sqn
248 Sqn
249 Sqn
251 Sqn
253 Sqn
254 Sqn
255 Sqn
256 Sqn
264 Sqn
266 Sqn
280 Sqn
288 Sqn
300 Sqn
301 Sqn
302 Sqn
303 Sqn
305 Sqn
307 Sqn
309 Sqn
310 Sqn
349 Sqn
350 Sqn
401 Sqn
402 Sqn
404 Sqn
407 Sqn
409 Sqn
410 Sqn
411 Sqn
412 Sqn
415 Sqn
416 Sqn
420 Sqn
421 Sqn
430 Sqn
438 Sqn
439 Sqn
441 Sqn
442 Sqn
443 Sqn
452 Sqn
455 Sqn
460 Sqn
463 Sqn
467 Sqn
486 Sqn
503 Sqn
504 Sqn
527 Sqn
528 Sqn
532 Sqn
538 Sqn
542 Sqn
550 Sqn
576 Sqn
601 Sqn
609 Sqn
613 Sqn
616 Sqn
617 Sqn
619 Sqn
625 Sqn
626 Sqn
627 Sqn
630 Sqn
Heavy
Conversion Units
1654
HCU
1656 HCU
1660 HCU
1661 HCU
1662 HCU
1665 HCU
1667 HCU
1668 HCU
21 HGCU
Advanced
Flying Schools
201
AFS
Advanced
Flying Units
12
AFU
15 AFU
Flying
Training Schools
1 FTS
2 FTS
3 FTS
6 FTS
7
FTS
12 FTS
1 Lancaster Finishing School
Central Flying School
Operational
Training/
Conversion Units (Fighter)
6
OTU
53 OTU
56 OTU
(Bomber)
228 OCU
230 OCU
Air
Armament Schools
1
AAS
2 AAS
Empire Central AS
Other
schools
1 Gp Aircrew School
1 Ground Defence School
1 Air Observers School
Central
Gunnery School
5 Gp Anti Air School
Other units
Bomber Command
Coastal Command
Fighter Command
HQ No 5 Group
HQ No 23 Group
1485
Gunnery Flight
2782
Defence Sqn
178 Support Unit
399 Signals Unit
Nationality
based Sqns Updated:
18 Jan 05 |
The Great War
During the Great War, air power was required to patrol
the coast and provide aerial defences against the Zeppelin and Gotha
bomber threat. However the aircraft were slow and had limited fuel capacity.
Therefore, in addition to their home bases the squadrons could call
on emergency
landing
strips
which were created at Anwick, Braceby, Bucknall, Cockthorne, Cuxwold (nr
Grimsby), Grimsthorpe Park, Kelstern, Market
Deeping, Moorby, New Holland, Swinstead,
and Winterton. The network of emergency
landing grounds was the best available solution to keeping the fighters
airborne as long as possible to engage enemy aircraft and dirigibles.
These night landing fields or emergency landing grounds
consisted of a grass strip runway, a shed housing a couple of mechanics,
fuel and some flares to aid emergency landings in poor visibility.
Emergency Landing Groundswere no more than fields,
cleared of obstacles such as hedges and ditches, marked on being suitable
for landing aircraft on.
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> RAF history in Lincolnshire
The early years up to 1918
Early days in Saint
Omer
The Inter-war years
World War TwoRAF
Cold War to the present
> The command structure
Bomber Command
Fighter Command
Coastal Command
Training Command
Balloon Command
> Airfield information
Generic airfield layout
Emergency landing grounds
Hangar types
FIDO fog dispersal
Airfield defences
Airfield call signs
Pundit codes
ICAO Codes
> Decoy airfields
and deception
Q Sites
K sites
Starfish sites
> Other historical pages
Key dates of bomber
offensives
Mission types
The secret, electronic war
Aircraft manufacturers in Lincolnshire
The US Air Forces in Lincolnshire
Selected books about Lincolnshire
aviation history
The 'RAFwaffe'
History
of the RNAS on the Fleet Air Arm Archive
The
Architectural context -
> Sources
Official Records
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