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No. 22 Group RAF

No. 22 Group Royal Air Force (22 Gp) is one of six groups currently active in the Royal Air Force (RAF), falling under the responsibility of Deputy Commander-in-Chief (Personnel) in Air Command. Its previous title up until 2018 was No. 22 (Training) Group. The group is responsible for RAF training policy and controlling the Royal Air Force College and the RAF's training stations. As such, it is the direct successor to Training Group. 22 Group provides training to all three service branches of the British Armed Forces; namely the Royal Air Force, the Royal Navy, and the British Army.[1]

No. 22 Group Royal Air Force
Active1 April 1918 – 30 May 1919
12 April – 1 May 1936
14 July 1936 – 23 June 1940
1 August 1943 – 31 January 1972
30 October 2006 – present
Country United Kingdom
AllegianceHM King Charles III
Branch Royal Air Force
TypeRoyal Air Force group
Rolemilitary training[1]
Sizepersonnel:
3,800 military, 1,900 civilian[1]
sites:
53[1]
aircraft:
420[1]
Part ofAir Command
HeadquartersRAF High Wycombe
Motto(s)Semper resurgens
Always rising again[2]
WebsiteNo. 22 Group RAF
Commanders
Current
commander
AVM Ian Townsend[1]

History edit

Although No. 22 Group was due to be formed on 1 April 1918, the same day as the Royal Air Force was established, it was not activated until 1 July 1918; 105 years ago (1918-07-01), in the RAF's North-Western Area. It was activated at RAF East Fortune, but moved its headquarters to the Station Hotel, Stirling.[3] The next month, on 8 August 1918, it received the designation 'Operations', or possibly 'Marine Operational', making its full title No. 22 (Operations) Group, or possibly No. 22 (Marine Operational) Group. It controlled No. 78 Wing RAF, and stations at Auldbar, Chathill (airship station), Dundee, East Fortune, Kirkwall / Orkney, Longside (airship station), Luce Bay, RAF Machrihanish, Peterhead, and Strathberg. With the post First World War Royal Air Force force reductions, No. 22 Group was disbanded on 30 May 1919; 104 years ago (1919-05-30).

The next creation of No. 22 Group came on 12 April 1926; 98 years ago (1926-04-12), when the group was re-formed from No 7 Group within Inland Area. The group's designation was No. 22 (Army Co-operation) Group, and its headquarters was at South Farnborough. On 17 February 1936, No. 22 Group was transferred from the control of Inland Area to that of the Air Defence of Great Britain. Later that same year, on 1 May, the group was raised to command status. However, only just over two months later, on 14 July, the newly created command was reduced back to group status,[3] becoming part of Fighter Command on the day of Fighter Command's creation. In 1938, the group comprised 26 Squadron at RAF Catterick; RAF Hawkinge with 2 Squadron; RAF Odiham and No. 50 (Army Cooperation) Wing, with 4, 13, and 53 Squadrons; RAF Old Sarum with the School of Army Co-operation and 16 and No. 59 Squadron RAFs; and group headquarters and No. 1 Anti-Aircraft Cooperation Unit at South Farnborough.[4]

On 24 June 1940, No. 22 Group was once again raised to command status and later that year, on 1 December, the new command was expanded to become RAF Army Cooperation Command.

On 1 August 1943, the group was re-established as No. 22 (Training) Group in Technical Training Command, responsible for all training in ground trades, from electronics to cooking. The group continued in its training function for nearly thirty years, until it was disbanded 31 January 1972.

Training Group Defence Agency edit

Training Group (TG) was formed on 1 April 1994 from the AOC Training Units with Personnel and Training Command its controlling formation. Prior to 1 April 2006 Training Group held British Government agency status, operating as the Training Group Defence Agency (TGDA). Upon the loss of its agency status, the formation became known simply as Training Group. The Group had seven areas of responsibility:

Current creation edit

The current creation of No. 22 Group was established on 30 October 2006, once again as No. 22 (Training) Group.[3] This creation was a renaming of Training Group which ceased to exist as No 22 Group was re-established.[1]

Organisation and responsibilities edit

22 Group is responsible for:[1]

  • Youth engagement across the UK;
  • Recruiting, selection and basic training;
  • Defence technical training – communications & engineering;
  • UK Military Flying Training System;
  • RAF Force Development, adventurous training, survival and specialist training;
  • RAF-wide training assurance;
  • Accreditation and resettlement;
  • All RAF sport.[1]

The areas of responsibility are:[1]

22 Group elements edit

Bases edit

The following military bases are directly controlled by No. 22 Group:[1]

Squadrons edit

The following aircraft squadrons are directly controlled by No. 22 Group:[1]

Commanders edit

As of May 2023, No. 22 Group is led by Air Vice-Marshal Ian Townsend,[1] who is Chief of Staff Training RAF and Air Officer Commanding No. 22 Group. Townsend is responsible to his superior commander, the Air Member for Personnel, who is also deputy commander-in-chief personnel in Air Command.

1918 to 1919 edit

1926 to 1940 edit

1943 to 1972 edit

  • 1 August 1943 Air Vice-Marshal C E V Porter
  • 1946 to 1948 Air Vice-Marshal Alick Stevens
  • 19 January 1948 Air Vice-Marshal P E Maitland
  • 15 June 1950 Air Vice-Marshal Brian Reynolds
  • 25 August 1952 Air Vice-Marshal Walter Merton
  • 1 December 1953 Air Vice-Marshal James Fuller-Good
  • 15 January 1957 Air Vice-Marshal Roy Faville
  • 12 September 1960 Air Vice-Marshal Bernard Chacksfield
  • 12 November 1962 Air Vice-Marshal A A Case
  • 15 January 1966 Air Vice-Marshal Bill Crawford-Crompton
  • 1 July 1968 Air Vice-Marshal G R Magill
  • 1 January 1970 Air Vice-Marshal E Plumtree

1992 to 2006 edit

2006 onwards edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "No 22 Group". RAF.MoD.uk. Royal Air Force. n.d. Retrieved 26 August 2023. Air Officer Commanding: Air Vice-Marshal Ian 'Cab' Townsend CBE MA RAF
  2. ^ Pine, L.G. (1983). A dictionary of mottoes (1 ed.). London, England: Routledge & Kegan Paul. p. 209. ISBN 0-7100-9339-X.
  3. ^ a b c "Groups 20-29". RAFWeb.org. Air of Authority - A History of RAF Organisation.
  4. ^ "Royal Air Force List 1938" (PDF). NLS.uk. p. 151.
  5. ^ "Senior Appointments 10th February 2020". RAF.MoD.uk. Royal Air Force. 10 February 2020. Retrieved 13 February 2020. Air Commodore R C Maddison OBE to be promoted Air Vice-Marshal and to be Air Officer Commanding No 22 Group in August 2020 in succession to Air Vice-Marshal W A W James CBE whose next appointment is yet to be announced.
  6. ^ "Senior Appointments 5 May 2023". RAF.MoD.uk. Royal Air Force. 5 May 2023. Retrieved 8 May 2023. Air Commodore I J Townsend CBE to be promoted Air Vice-Marshal and to be Air Officer Commanding No 22 Group in May 2023 in succession to Air Marshal R C Maddison OBE whose appointment as Deputy Commander Capability, Headquarters Air Command and Air Member for Personnel and Capability has previously been announced.

External links edit

  • Official website  
  • Royal Air Force No 22 (Training) Group
Preceded by 22 (Training) Group
2006–
Succeeded by
Group extant

group, group, royal, force, groups, currently, active, royal, force, falling, under, responsibility, deputy, commander, chief, personnel, command, previous, title, until, 2018, training, group, group, responsible, training, policy, controlling, royal, force, c. No 22 Group Royal Air Force 22 Gp is one of six groups currently active in the Royal Air Force RAF falling under the responsibility of Deputy Commander in Chief Personnel in Air Command Its previous title up until 2018 was No 22 Training Group The group is responsible for RAF training policy and controlling the Royal Air Force College and the RAF s training stations As such it is the direct successor to Training Group 22 Group provides training to all three service branches of the British Armed Forces namely the Royal Air Force the Royal Navy and the British Army 1 No 22 Group Royal Air ForceNo 22 Group badgeActive1 April 1918 30 May 191912 April 1 May 193614 July 1936 23 June 19401 August 1943 31 January 197230 October 2006 presentCountry United KingdomAllegianceHM King Charles IIIBranch Royal Air ForceTypeRoyal Air Force groupRolemilitary training 1 Sizepersonnel 3 800 military 1 900 civilian 1 sites 53 1 aircraft 420 1 Part ofAir CommandHeadquartersRAF High WycombeMotto s Semper resurgens Always rising again 2 WebsiteNo 22 Group RAFCommandersCurrentcommanderAVM Ian Townsend 1 Contents 1 History 1 1 Training Group Defence Agency 1 2 Current creation 2 Organisation and responsibilities 3 22 Group elements 3 1 Bases 3 2 Squadrons 4 Commanders 4 1 1918 to 1919 4 2 1926 to 1940 4 3 1943 to 1972 4 4 1992 to 2006 4 5 2006 onwards 5 References 6 External linksHistory editAlthough No 22 Group was due to be formed on 1 April 1918 the same day as the Royal Air Force was established it was not activated until 1 July 1918 105 years ago 1918 07 01 in the RAF s North Western Area It was activated at RAF East Fortune but moved its headquarters to the Station Hotel Stirling 3 The next month on 8 August 1918 it received the designation Operations or possibly Marine Operational making its full title No 22 Operations Group or possibly No 22 Marine Operational Group It controlled No 78 Wing RAF and stations at Auldbar Chathill airship station Dundee East Fortune Kirkwall Orkney Longside airship station Luce Bay RAF Machrihanish Peterhead and Strathberg With the post First World War Royal Air Force force reductions No 22 Group was disbanded on 30 May 1919 104 years ago 1919 05 30 The next creation of No 22 Group came on 12 April 1926 98 years ago 1926 04 12 when the group was re formed from No 7 Group within Inland Area The group s designation was No 22 Army Co operation Group and its headquarters was at South Farnborough On 17 February 1936 No 22 Group was transferred from the control of Inland Area to that of the Air Defence of Great Britain Later that same year on 1 May the group was raised to command status However only just over two months later on 14 July the newly created command was reduced back to group status 3 becoming part of Fighter Command on the day of Fighter Command s creation In 1938 the group comprised 26 Squadron at RAF Catterick RAF Hawkinge with 2 Squadron RAF Odiham and No 50 Army Cooperation Wing with 4 13 and 53 Squadrons RAF Old Sarum with the School of Army Co operation and 16 and No 59 Squadron RAFs and group headquarters and No 1 Anti Aircraft Cooperation Unit at South Farnborough 4 On 24 June 1940 No 22 Group was once again raised to command status and later that year on 1 December the new command was expanded to become RAF Army Cooperation Command On 1 August 1943 the group was re established as No 22 Training Group in Technical Training Command responsible for all training in ground trades from electronics to cooking The group continued in its training function for nearly thirty years until it was disbanded 31 January 1972 Training Group Defence Agency edit Training Group TG was formed on 1 April 1994 from the AOC Training Units with Personnel and Training Command its controlling formation Prior to 1 April 2006 Training Group held British Government agency status operating as the Training Group Defence Agency TGDA Upon the loss of its agency status the formation became known simply as Training Group The Group had seven areas of responsibility RAF College Cranwell and Directorate of Recruiting Directorate of Flying Training DFT Directorate of Joint Technical Training DJTT Air Cadets ACO Core HQ Defence College of Aeronautical Engineering DCAE Defence College of Communications and Information Systems DCCIS Current creation edit The current creation of No 22 Group was established on 30 October 2006 once again as No 22 Training Group 3 This creation was a renaming of Training Group which ceased to exist as No 22 Group was re established 1 Organisation and responsibilities edit22 Group is responsible for 1 Youth engagement across the UK Recruiting selection and basic training Defence technical training communications amp engineering UK Military Flying Training System RAF Force Development adventurous training survival and specialist training RAF wide training assurance Accreditation and resettlement All RAF sport 1 The areas of responsibility are 1 Royal Air Force Air Cadets RAFAC RAF College Cranwell and Directorate of Recruiting amp Individual Training The Directorate of Flying Training DFT The Directorate of Ground Training DGT The Defence College of Technical Training DCTT consisting of The Defence College of Aeronautical Engineering DSAE The Defence College of Communications and Information Systems DSCIS The Defence College of Electro Mechanical Engineering DSEME at MoD Lyneham The Defence School of Marine Engineering DSMarE at HMS Sultan Gosport The Directorate of RAF Sport DRS 22 Group elements editBases edit The following military bases are directly controlled by No 22 Group 1 RAF Cranwell RAF Cosford RAF Halton RAF Shawbury MOD St Athan RAF St Mawgan RAF Valley RAF Woodvale Squadrons edit The following aircraft squadrons are directly controlled by No 22 Group 1 IV Squadron operating the Hawk T2 at RAF Valley 16 Squadron operating the Tutor T1 at RAF Wittering XXV F Squadron operating the Hawk T2 at RAF Valley 45 Squadron operating the Phenom T1 at RAF Cranwell 57 Squadron operating the Prefect T1 at RAF Barkston Heath 60 Squadron operating the Juno HT1 at RAF Shawbury 72 Squadron operating the Texan T1 at RAF Valley 115 Squadron operating the Tutor T1 at RAF WitteringCommanders editAs of May 2023 update No 22 Group is led by Air Vice Marshal Ian Townsend 1 who is Chief of Staff Training RAF and Air Officer Commanding No 22 Group Townsend is responsible to his superior commander the Air Member for Personnel who is also deputy commander in chief personnel in Air Command 1918 to 1919 edit 1 July 1918 Colonel later Brigadier General Edward Masterman 1926 to 1940 edit 12 April 1926 Air Commodore Duncan Pitcher 9 April 1929 Air Commodore Norman MacEwen 14 September 1931 Air Commodore H LeM Brock 30 June 1936 Air Commodore later Air Vice Marshal Bertine Sutton 3 July 1939 Air Vice Marshal Charles Blount 15 September 1939 Air Vice Marshal Norman MacEwen 30 May 1940 Air Vice Marshal Charles Blount 23 October 1940 Not Known 20 November 1940 Air Marshal Sir Arthur Barratt 1943 to 1972 edit 1 August 1943 Air Vice Marshal C E V Porter 1946 to 1948 Air Vice Marshal Alick Stevens 19 January 1948 Air Vice Marshal P E Maitland 15 June 1950 Air Vice Marshal Brian Reynolds 25 August 1952 Air Vice Marshal Walter Merton 1 December 1953 Air Vice Marshal James Fuller Good 15 January 1957 Air Vice Marshal Roy Faville 12 September 1960 Air Vice Marshal Bernard Chacksfield 12 November 1962 Air Vice Marshal A A Case 15 January 1966 Air Vice Marshal Bill Crawford Crompton 1 July 1968 Air Vice Marshal G R Magill 1 January 1970 Air Vice Marshal E Plumtree 1992 to 2006 edit 1992 Air Vice Marshal Christopher C C Coville 1994 Air Vice Marshal John A G May 8 January 1997 Air Vice Marshal A J Stables 17 November 1999 Air Vice Marshal I S Corbitt 4 April 2002 Air Vice Marshal Graham A Miller 2003 Air Vice Marshal David A Walker 4 January 2005 Air Vice Marshal John M M Ponsonby 2006 onwards edit 30 October 2006 Air Vice Marshal John Ponsonby July 2007 Air Vice Marshal Richard Garwood 17 April 2009 Air Vice Marshal Barry North 23 February 2010 Air Vice Marshal M C Green 2011 Air Vice Marshal Michael Lloyd 18 July 2014 Air Vice Marshal Andrew Turner July 2017 Air Vice Marshall Warren James August 2020 Air Vice Marshal Richard Maddison 5 May 2023 Air Vice Marshal Ian Townsend 1 6 References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n No 22 Group RAF MoD uk Royal Air Force n d Retrieved 26 August 2023 Air Officer Commanding Air Vice Marshal Ian Cab Townsend CBE MA RAF Pine L G 1983 A dictionary of mottoes 1 ed London England Routledge amp Kegan Paul p 209 ISBN 0 7100 9339 X a b c Groups 20 29 RAFWeb org Air of Authority A History of RAF Organisation Royal Air Force List 1938 PDF NLS uk p 151 Senior Appointments 10th February 2020 RAF MoD uk Royal Air Force 10 February 2020 Retrieved 13 February 2020 Air Commodore R C Maddison OBE to be promoted Air Vice Marshal and to be Air Officer Commanding No 22 Group in August 2020 in succession to Air Vice Marshal W A W James CBE whose next appointment is yet to be announced Senior Appointments 5 May 2023 RAF MoD uk Royal Air Force 5 May 2023 Retrieved 8 May 2023 Air Commodore I J Townsend CBE to be promoted Air Vice Marshal and to be Air Officer Commanding No 22 Group in May 2023 in succession to Air Marshal R C Maddison OBE whose appointment as Deputy Commander Capability Headquarters Air Command and Air Member for Personnel and Capability has previously been announced External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to No 22 Group RAF Official website nbsp Royal Air Force No 22 Training Group Preceded byTraining Group 22 Training Group2006 Succeeded byGroup extant Portals nbsp United Kingdom nbsp Aviation nbsp History Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title No 22 Group RAF amp oldid 1211880969, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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