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No. 3 Group RAF

No. 3 Group RAF (3 Gp) of the Royal Air Force was an RAF group first active in 1918, again between 1923 and 1926, then as part of RAF Bomber Command from 1936 to 1967, and recently part of RAF Strike Command from 2000 until it disbanded on 1 April 2006.

No. 3 Group
Active10 May 1918 - 31 August 1921
1 April 1923 - 12 April 1926
1 May 1936 - 1 November 1967
1 April 2000 - 1 April 2006
Country United Kingdom
Branch Royal Air Force
TypeRoyal Air Force group
RoleStrategic and tactical bombing
Part ofRAF Bomber Command
RAF Strike Command
BaseRAF Mildenhall (1936–1938)
Motto(s)Dutch: Niet zonder arbyt
("Nothing without Labour")[1]
Royal Air Force Ensign
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Air Chief Marshal Sir Ralph Alexander Cochrane
Insignia
Group badgeThree swords in pile, the points upwards, and each enfiled by an astral crown[2][a]

First World War edit

No. 3 Group was first formed on 10 May 1918 as part of South-Eastern Area. No. 13 Group RAF was merged into No. 3 Group on 18 October 1919. Group Captain U J D Bourke took command on 30 November 1919. The Group was disbanded on 31 August 1921.

1920s edit

Reformed in 1923, 3 Group was disbanded on 12 April 1926 at RAF Spitalgate by renumbering it No. 23 (Training) Group.

The 1930s and the Second World War edit

The Group was reformed at Andover, Wiltshire on 1 May 1936, under Air Vice-Marshal Patrick Playfair.[4] Ten months later Group HQ moved to RAF Mildenhall in Suffolk, a direct result of the Air Ministry's decision to form two new bomber groups and reorganise its existing groups. No. 3 Group was initially equipped with the ungainly Vickers Virginia and Handley Page Heyford, which was the RAF's last biplane heavy bomber.

With the arrival of the then revolutionary twin engined Vickers Wellington it was decided that No. 3 Group would be tasked with introducing the type into front line service. The first squadron in Bomber Command to be equipped was No. 99 Squadron RAF based at Mildenhall, on 10 October 1938. Air Commodore A A B Thomson, Playfair's successor, was killed on 8 August 1939 while viewing the bombing up of a Vickers Wellington of No. 115 Squadron RAF.[5] While under the fuselage, he slipped and was struck on the head by the rotating airscrew. Air Vice-Marshal J E A Baldwin took over the Group on 29 August 1939. By September 1939 the entire group (totalling six front line squadrons and two reserve squadrons) was fully equipped with an all-Wellington force totalling over 100 aircraft located at five East Anglian airfields. 3 Group continued to be primarily based in East Anglia for the rest of WWII. 3 Group's first wartime operations were attacks against German warships at Wilhelmshaven and Brunsbüttel.

Group HQ moved to Harraton House, Exning, Suffolk, in March 1940. On 2 April 1940, two squadrons were temporarily transferred to RAF Coastal Command and advanced bases in Northern Scotland, and they had hardly settled in before the Germans invaded Denmark and Norway.[6] The squadrons went into action immediately and on 11/12 April one of them (115 Sqn) became the first RAF unit to bomb deliberately a mainland target (Stavanger Airport, Sola) during the Second World War. In September 1940 3 Group Bomber Command assumed administrative control of No. 419 Flight, the first of the Royal Air Force Special Duties Service units. The group provided administrative support for all the Special Duties squadrons til the end of the war.[7]

In 1942 the Group’s strength was almost halved when 7, 156, and 109 Squadrons were transferred to the newly created No. 8 Group – the Pathfinder Force.


3 Group Headquarters – Harraton House, Exning, Suffolk.

No. 3 Group controlled the following bases at various times between March 1943 and November 1944:

[9]
No. 31 Base No. 32 Base No. 33 Base
RAF Stradishall (HQ), Suffolk RAF Mildenhall (HQ) RAF Waterbeach (HQ)
RAF Chedburgh, Suffolk RAF Birch, Essex RAF Mepal
RAF Feltwell, Norfolk RAF East Wretham, Norfolk RAF Waterbeach
RAF Waterbeach, Cambridgeshire RAF Gosfield RAF Witchford
RAF Wratting Common RAF Lakenheath, Suffolk
RAF Shepherds Grove RAF Methwold, Norfolk
RAF Birch RAF Newmarket
RAF Gosfield RAF Tuddenham
RAF Matching


After the invasion of Normandy, Bomber Command joined in the campaign against German oil targets. Although daylight bombing against targets within Germany itself still incurred too many casualties closer targets could be attacked by day with fighter escorts. 3 Group carried out blind bombing techniques by day using Gee-H.[10]


3 Group, April 1945[11]
15 Sqn RAF Bourn Avro Lancaster Mks. I and III
75 Sqn RAF Mepal Lancaster Mks. I and III
90 Sqn RAF Tuddenham, Lancaster Mks. I and III
115 Sqn RAF Witchford Lancaster Mks. I and III
138 (Special Duties) Squadron[c] RAF Tuddenham Lancaster Mks. I and III
149 Sqn RAF Methwold Lancaster Mks. I and III
186 Sqn RAF Stradishall Lancaster Mks. I and III
195 Sqn RAF Wratting Common Lancaster Mks. I and III
218 Sqn RAF Chedburgh Lancaster Mks. I and III
514 Sqn RAF Waterbeach Lancaster Mks. I, II and III
622 Sqn RAF Mildenhall Lancaster Mks. I and III
Training units, e.g. No. 1688 Flight RAF Feltwell
Headquarters Exning

Post war edit

The Group HQ moved back to Mildenhall in January 1947. In June 1948, No.3 Group consisted of 35, 115, 149, and 207 Squadrons operating Lancasters from RAF Stradishall, Nos 7, 49, 148, and 214 Squadrons operating Lancasters from RAF Upwood, and 15, 44, 90, 138 Squadrons operating Lincolns from RAF Wyton.[12] For a period in the early 1950s several squadrons flew Boeing Washingtons, the British name for Boeing B-29 Superfortresses lent to the UK until the English Electric Canberra could enter service. Most of the Vickers Valiant and Handley Page Victor, squadrons, made operational in the late 1950s, formed part of No. 3 Group. During the Suez Crisis of 1956 Valiants of 138, 148, 207 and 214 Squadrons were deployed to RAF Luqa in Malta and the first Valiant attacks against Egyptian airfields began on 31 October 1956, with limited results due to the lack of experience operating the Valiant.

No. 3 Group was also responsible for the Thor ballistic missile between 1 September 1958 and August 1963, with ten squadrons, including Nos:-

each with three missiles, being equipped with the weapon.[13]

During April 1962 the group also controlled:[14]

On 1 November 1967 the Group was absorbed by No. 1 (Bomber) Group RAF.

The Group was reformed on 1 April 2000 to control Joint Force Harrier and maritime aircraft transferred from the former No. 11/18 Group RAF. It came under a Royal Navy officer, the Flag Officer Maritime Aviation. Rear Admiral Iain Henderson was the first occupant of the post, who also had the NATO roles of COMAIREASTLANT and COMMARAIRNORTH. AOC 3 Group/FOMA had two RAF subordinates, Air Commodore Harrier (for all the RAF Harriers and FAA Sea Harriers) and Air Commodore Maritime (for the Nimrods and SAR helicopters).[15] After a further reorganisation in 2003-4, the group became known as the Battle Management Group and controlled the Airborne Early Warning aircraft, ground-based radar installations, maritime reconnaissance aircraft and the search and rescue helicopters in the UK. The group was based alongside Strike Command at RAF High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire.

In 2006 the Group consisted of:

3 Gp Headquarters – RAF High Wycombe

As from 1 April 2006, the stations and squadrons which were under the command of 3 Group RAF were brought under the command of No. 2 Group RAF.

Commanders edit

1919 to 1921

1923 to 1926

1936 to 1967

2000 to present

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The crowns represent the three Royal Abbessess of Ely, the three daughters of the Anglo-saxon King Anna of East Anglia of Exning; as most of the group's airfields were located around Ely, this was appropriate. The three swords represent the fighting spirit of the group and the Dutch motto is from the house of Cornelius Vermuyden, who drained the fens around Ely.[3]
  2. ^ a b Special Duties squadrons flew supply and transport missions to enemy occupied Europe
  3. ^ re-equipped with Lancaster replacing Halifax and reassigned to 3 Group in March 1945

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Pine, L.G. (1983). A dictionary of mottoes (1 ed.). London: Routledge & Kegan Paul. p. 149. ISBN 0-7100-9339-X.
  2. ^ Moyes 1976, p. 334.
  3. ^ Delve, Ken (2005). Bomber Command 1939-1945 : a reference to the men - aircraft & operational history. Barnsley: Pen & Sword Aviation. p. 156. ISBN 1-84415-183-2.
  4. ^ An Introduction to Bomber Command No. 3 Group, accessed 30 May 2008 6 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ An Introduction to Bomber Command No. 3 Group. Retrieved 1 June 2008. 6 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ Philip Moyes, 'Bomber Squadrons of the Royal Air Force,' MacDonald, London, 1964, p. 334, via Royal Air Force, Bomber Command 60th Anniversary: No. 3 Group 17 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 1 June 2008.
  7. ^ Verity 1978, p. 38.
  8. ^ Bomber Command Order of Battle March 1943
  9. ^ Sturtivant & Hamlin 2007, p. 77.
  10. ^ Levine, Alan J. (1992). The strategic bombing or Germany 1940–1945. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 147. ISBN 978-0-275-94319-6. Retrieved 7 April 2009.
  11. ^ Bomber Command Order of Battle, April 1945
  12. ^ John D. Rawlings et al., 'The History of the Royal Air Force,' Temple Press Aerospace, 1984, p.187
  13. ^ Martin Powell, "The Douglas Thor in Royal Air Force Service" 20 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine, Rossendale Aviation Society – Article. Retrieved 2 June 2008.
  14. ^ Delve 1994, p. 88.
  15. ^ Richard Cobbold, 'My Jobs: Joint Force Harrier Commander,' RUSI Journal, Vol. 145, No.3, June 2000, pp.21–27

Bibliography edit

  • Delve, K. (1994). The Source Book of the RAF. Shrewsbury, UK: Airlife Publishing. ISBN 1-85310-451-5.
  • Moyes, Philip J.R. Bomber Squadrons of the RAF and their Aircraft. London: Macdonald and Jane's (Publishers) Ltd., 2nd edition 1976. ISBN 0-354-01027-1.
  • Sturtivant, R.; Hamlin, J. (2007). Royal Air Force flying training and support units since 1912. UK: Air-Britain (Historians). ISBN 978-0851-3036-59.
  • Verity, Hugh (1978). We Landed by Moonlight: Secret RAF Landings in France, 1940–1944. Sheperton, Surrey: Ian Allan. ISBN 978-0-7110-0886-1.
  • Ward, Chris. 3 Group Bomber Command: An Operational Record. Barnsley, UK: Pen and Sword Books Ltd.,2008. ISBN 978-1-84415-796-9.
  • Webster, Charles and Noble Frankland, The Strategic Air Offensive Against Germany, 1939–1945 (HMSO, 1961 & facsimile reprinted by Naval & Military Press, 2006), 4 vols. ISBN 978-184574-437-3.

External links edit

  • Air of Authority – A History of RAF Organisation – Group No's 1 – 9
  • Story of No 3 Group

group, royal, force, group, first, active, 1918, again, between, 1923, 1926, then, part, bomber, command, from, 1936, 1967, recently, part, strike, command, from, 2000, until, disbanded, april, 2006, groupno, group, badgeactive10, 1918, august, 1921, april, 19. No 3 Group RAF 3 Gp of the Royal Air Force was an RAF group first active in 1918 again between 1923 and 1926 then as part of RAF Bomber Command from 1936 to 1967 and recently part of RAF Strike Command from 2000 until it disbanded on 1 April 2006 No 3 GroupNo 3 Group badgeActive10 May 1918 31 August 1921 1 April 1923 12 April 19261 May 1936 1 November 19671 April 2000 1 April 2006Country United KingdomBranch Royal Air ForceTypeRoyal Air Force groupRoleStrategic and tactical bombingPart ofRAF Bomber Command RAF Strike CommandBaseRAF Mildenhall 1936 1938 Motto s Dutch Niet zonder arbyt Nothing without Labour 1 Royal Air Force EnsignCommandersNotablecommandersAir Chief Marshal Sir Ralph Alexander CochraneInsigniaGroup badgeThree swords in pile the points upwards and each enfiled by an astral crown 2 a Contents 1 First World War 2 1920s 3 The 1930s and the Second World War 4 Post war 5 Commanders 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 8 1 Citations 8 2 Bibliography 9 External linksFirst World War editNo 3 Group was first formed on 10 May 1918 as part of South Eastern Area No 13 Group RAF was merged into No 3 Group on 18 October 1919 Group Captain U J D Bourke took command on 30 November 1919 The Group was disbanded on 31 August 1921 1920s editReformed in 1923 3 Group was disbanded on 12 April 1926 at RAF Spitalgate by renumbering it No 23 Training Group The 1930s and the Second World War editThe Group was reformed at Andover Wiltshire on 1 May 1936 under Air Vice Marshal Patrick Playfair 4 Ten months later Group HQ moved to RAF Mildenhall in Suffolk a direct result of the Air Ministry s decision to form two new bomber groups and reorganise its existing groups No 3 Group was initially equipped with the ungainly Vickers Virginia and Handley Page Heyford which was the RAF s last biplane heavy bomber With the arrival of the then revolutionary twin engined Vickers Wellington it was decided that No 3 Group would be tasked with introducing the type into front line service The first squadron in Bomber Command to be equipped was No 99 Squadron RAF based at Mildenhall on 10 October 1938 Air Commodore A A B Thomson Playfair s successor was killed on 8 August 1939 while viewing the bombing up of a Vickers Wellington of No 115 Squadron RAF 5 While under the fuselage he slipped and was struck on the head by the rotating airscrew Air Vice Marshal J E A Baldwin took over the Group on 29 August 1939 By September 1939 the entire group totalling six front line squadrons and two reserve squadrons was fully equipped with an all Wellington force totalling over 100 aircraft located at five East Anglian airfields 3 Group continued to be primarily based in East Anglia for the rest of WWII 3 Group s first wartime operations were attacks against German warships at Wilhelmshaven and Brunsbuttel Group HQ moved to Harraton House Exning Suffolk in March 1940 On 2 April 1940 two squadrons were temporarily transferred to RAF Coastal Command and advanced bases in Northern Scotland and they had hardly settled in before the Germans invaded Denmark and Norway 6 The squadrons went into action immediately and on 11 12 April one of them 115 Sqn became the first RAF unit to bomb deliberately a mainland target Stavanger Airport Sola during the Second World War In September 1940 3 Group Bomber Command assumed administrative control of No 419 Flight the first of the Royal Air Force Special Duties Service units The group provided administrative support for all the Special Duties squadrons til the end of the war 7 In 1942 the Group s strength was almost halved when 7 156 and 109 Squadrons were transferred to the newly created No 8 Group the Pathfinder Force 3 Group Headquarters Harraton House Exning Suffolk March 1943 3 Group 8 Squadron Station Aircraft 15 Sqn RAF Bourn Short Stirling 75 Sqn RAF Newmarket Stirling 90 Sqn RAF Ridgewell Stirling 115 Sqn RAF East Wretham Wellington Lancaster 138 Special Duties Squadron b RAF Tempsford Bedfordshore Halifax 149 Sqn RAF Lakenheath Suffolk Stirling 199 Sqn RAF Lakenheath Stirling 161 Special Duties Squadron b RAF Tempsford Westland Lysander Halifax Lockheed Hudson Douglas Havoc Armstrong Whitworth Albemarle Hudson Cygnet 192 Special Duties Squadron RAF Gransden Lodge Halifax Wellington Mk X de havilland Mosquito Wellington Mk IC 214 Sqn RAF Chedburgh Stirling 218 Sqn RAF Downham Market Norfolk Stirling No 3 Group controlled the following bases at various times between March 1943 and November 1944 9 No 31 Base No 32 Base No 33 Base RAF Stradishall HQ Suffolk RAF Mildenhall HQ RAF Waterbeach HQ RAF Chedburgh Suffolk RAF Birch Essex RAF Mepal RAF Feltwell Norfolk RAF East Wretham Norfolk RAF Waterbeach RAF Waterbeach Cambridgeshire RAF Gosfield RAF Witchford RAF Wratting Common RAF Lakenheath Suffolk RAF Shepherds Grove RAF Methwold Norfolk RAF Birch RAF Newmarket RAF Gosfield RAF Tuddenham RAF Matching After the invasion of Normandy Bomber Command joined in the campaign against German oil targets Although daylight bombing against targets within Germany itself still incurred too many casualties closer targets could be attacked by day with fighter escorts 3 Group carried out blind bombing techniques by day using Gee H 10 3 Group April 1945 11 15 Sqn RAF Bourn Avro Lancaster Mks I and III 75 Sqn RAF Mepal Lancaster Mks I and III 90 Sqn RAF Tuddenham Lancaster Mks I and III 115 Sqn RAF Witchford Lancaster Mks I and III 138 Special Duties Squadron c RAF Tuddenham Lancaster Mks I and III 149 Sqn RAF Methwold Lancaster Mks I and III 186 Sqn RAF Stradishall Lancaster Mks I and III 195 Sqn RAF Wratting Common Lancaster Mks I and III 218 Sqn RAF Chedburgh Lancaster Mks I and III 514 Sqn RAF Waterbeach Lancaster Mks I II and III 622 Sqn RAF Mildenhall Lancaster Mks I and III Training units e g No 1688 Flight RAF Feltwell Headquarters ExningPost war editThe Group HQ moved back to Mildenhall in January 1947 In June 1948 No 3 Group consisted of 35 115 149 and 207 Squadrons operating Lancasters from RAF Stradishall Nos 7 49 148 and 214 Squadrons operating Lancasters from RAF Upwood and 15 44 90 138 Squadrons operating Lincolns from RAF Wyton 12 For a period in the early 1950s several squadrons flew Boeing Washingtons the British name for Boeing B 29 Superfortresses lent to the UK until the English Electric Canberra could enter service Most of the Vickers Valiant and Handley Page Victor squadrons made operational in the late 1950s formed part of No 3 Group During the Suez Crisis of 1956 Valiants of 138 148 207 and 214 Squadrons were deployed to RAF Luqa in Malta and the first Valiant attacks against Egyptian airfields began on 31 October 1956 with limited results due to the lack of experience operating the Valiant No 3 Group was also responsible for the Thor ballistic missile between 1 September 1958 and August 1963 with ten squadrons including Nos 77 Headquartered at RAF Feltwell 82 Headquartered at RAF Shepherds Grove 107 Headquartered at RAF Tuddenham 113 Headquartered at RAF Mepal 130 Headquartered at RAF Polebrook 144 Headquartered at RAF North Luffenham 218 Headquartered at RAF Harrington 220 Headquartered at RAF North Pickenham 223 Headquartered at RAF Folkingham 254 Headquartered at RAF Melton Mowbray each with three missiles being equipped with the weapon 13 During April 1962 the group also controlled 14 RAF Mildenhall No 3 Group Communications Flight with Avro Anson multi role aircraft and de Havilland Chipmunk primary trainer aircraft RAF Cottesmore 10 Sqn with Handley Page Victor strategic bomber 15 Sqn with Handley Page Victor strategic bomber RAF Gaydon No 232 Operational Conversion Unit RAF Valiant amp Canberra Radar Reconnaissance Flight RAF with Handley Page Victor strategic bomber RAF Honington 55 Sqn with Handley Page Victor strategic bomber 57 Sqn with Handley Page Victor strategic bomber 90 Sqn Valiant RAF Marham 49 Sqn Valiant 148 Sqn Valiant 207 Sqn Valiant 214 Sqn Valiant RAF Wittering 7 Sqn Valiant 138 Sqn Valiant 139 Sqn with Handley Page Victor strategic bomber RAF Wyton 58 Sqn Canberra 543 Sqn Valiant On 1 November 1967 the Group was absorbed by No 1 Bomber Group RAF The Group was reformed on 1 April 2000 to control Joint Force Harrier and maritime aircraft transferred from the former No 11 18 Group RAF It came under a Royal Navy officer the Flag Officer Maritime Aviation Rear Admiral Iain Henderson was the first occupant of the post who also had the NATO roles of COMAIREASTLANT and COMMARAIRNORTH AOC 3 Group FOMA had two RAF subordinates Air Commodore Harrier for all the RAF Harriers and FAA Sea Harriers and Air Commodore Maritime for the Nimrods and SAR helicopters 15 After a further reorganisation in 2003 4 the group became known as the Battle Management Group and controlled the Airborne Early Warning aircraft ground based radar installations maritime reconnaissance aircraft and the search and rescue helicopters in the UK The group was based alongside Strike Command at RAF High Wycombe Buckinghamshire In 2006 the Group consisted of 3 Gp Headquarters RAF High Wycombe RAF Bentley Priory RAF Boulmer RAF Fylingdales RAF Neatishead 5 Sqn RAF Waddington 8 Sqn RAF Waddington 22 Sqn A Flight amp HQ RMB Chivenor 22 Sqn B Flt RAF Wattisham 22 Sqn C Flt RAF Valley 23 Sqn RAF Waddington 42 R Sqn Squadron RAF Kinloss 51 Sqn RAF Waddington 120 Sqn Squadron RAF Kinloss 201 Sqn Squadron RAF Kinloss 202 Sqn A Flt amp HQ RAF Boulmer 202 Sqn D Flt RAF Lossiemouth 202 Sqn E Flt RAF Leconfield SARF 203 R Sqn Squadron RAF St Mawgan disbanded from April 2009 As from 1 April 2006 the stations and squadrons which were under the command of 3 Group RAF were brought under the command of No 2 Group RAF Commanders edit1919 to 1921 30 November 1919 Group Captain U J D Bourke 23 November 1920 Group Captain Arthur Longmore 1923 to 1926 16 April 1923 Air Commodore Tom Webb Bowen 7 March 1924 Air Commodore Lionel Charlton 2 January 1925 Air Commodore Robert Gordon 1 October 1925 Air Commodore Ian Bonham Carter 1936 to 1967 1 May 1936 Air Vice Marshal Patrick Playfair 14 February 1938 Air Commodore A A B Thomson killed on duty 8 August 1939 29 August 1939 Air Vice Marshal Jack Baldwin 14 September 1942 Air Vice Marshal The Hon Ralph Cochrane 27 February 1943 Air Vice Marshal R Harrison 28 February 1946 Air Vice Marshal A C Collier Post vacant 9 July 1946 Air Vice Marshal Robert Foster 18 March 1947 Air Vice Marshal Lawrence Darvall 14 December 1948 Air Vice Marshal Allan Hesketh 15 September 1951 Air Vice Marshal William Brook 1 September 1953 Air Vice Marshal Edmund Hudleston 2 February 1956 Air Vice Marshal Kenneth Cross 4 May 1959 Air Vice Marshal M H Dwyer 9 October 1961 Air Vice Marshal Brian Burnett 5 August 1964 Air Vice Marshal Denis Spotswood 26 November 1965 Air Vice Marshal Denis Smallwood 2000 to present 1 April 2000 Rear Admiral Iain R Henderson Royal Navy Fleet Air Arm 24 July 2001 Rear Admiral Scott Lidbetter Royal Navy Fleet Air Arm 7 October 2003 Air Vice Marshal A D WhiteSee also editList of Royal Air Force groupsNotes edit The crowns represent the three Royal Abbessess of Ely the three daughters of the Anglo saxon King Anna of East Anglia of Exning as most of the group s airfields were located around Ely this was appropriate The three swords represent the fighting spirit of the group and the Dutch motto is from the house of Cornelius Vermuyden who drained the fens around Ely 3 a b Special Duties squadrons flew supply and transport missions to enemy occupied Europe re equipped with Lancaster replacing Halifax and reassigned to 3 Group in March 1945References editCitations edit Pine L G 1983 A dictionary of mottoes 1 ed London Routledge amp Kegan Paul p 149 ISBN 0 7100 9339 X Moyes 1976 p 334 Delve Ken 2005 Bomber Command 1939 1945 a reference to the men aircraft amp operational history Barnsley Pen amp Sword Aviation p 156 ISBN 1 84415 183 2 An Introduction to Bomber Command No 3 Group accessed 30 May 2008 Archived 6 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine An Introduction to Bomber Command No 3 Group Retrieved 1 June 2008 Archived 6 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine Philip Moyes Bomber Squadrons of the Royal Air Force MacDonald London 1964 p 334 via Royal Air Force Bomber Command 60th Anniversary No 3 Group Archived 17 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 1 June 2008 Verity 1978 p 38 Bomber Command Order of Battle March 1943 Sturtivant amp Hamlin 2007 p 77 Levine Alan J 1992 The strategic bombing or Germany 1940 1945 Greenwood Publishing Group p 147 ISBN 978 0 275 94319 6 Retrieved 7 April 2009 Bomber Command Order of Battle April 1945 John D Rawlings et al The History of the Royal Air Force Temple Press Aerospace 1984 p 187 Martin Powell The Douglas Thor in Royal Air Force Service Archived 20 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine Rossendale Aviation Society Article Retrieved 2 June 2008 Delve 1994 p 88 Richard Cobbold My Jobs Joint Force Harrier Commander RUSI Journal Vol 145 No 3 June 2000 pp 21 27 Bibliography edit Delve K 1994 The Source Book of the RAF Shrewsbury UK Airlife Publishing ISBN 1 85310 451 5 Moyes Philip J R Bomber Squadrons of the RAF and their Aircraft London Macdonald and Jane s Publishers Ltd 2nd edition 1976 ISBN 0 354 01027 1 Sturtivant R Hamlin J 2007 Royal Air Force flying training and support units since 1912 UK Air Britain Historians ISBN 978 0851 3036 59 Verity Hugh 1978 We Landed by Moonlight Secret RAF Landings in France 1940 1944 Sheperton Surrey Ian Allan ISBN 978 0 7110 0886 1 Ward Chris 3 Group Bomber Command An Operational Record Barnsley UK Pen and Sword Books Ltd 2008 ISBN 978 1 84415 796 9 Webster Charles and Noble Frankland The Strategic Air Offensive Against Germany 1939 1945 HMSO 1961 amp facsimile reprinted by Naval amp Military Press 2006 4 vols ISBN 978 184574 437 3 External links editAir of Authority A History of RAF Organisation Group No s 1 9 Story of No 3 Group Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title No 3 Group RAF amp oldid 1213078917, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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