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No. 311 Squadron RAF

No. 311 (Czechoslovak) Squadron RAF was a Czechoslovak-manned bomber squadron of the Royal Air Force in the Second World War. It was the RAF's only Czechoslovak-manned medium and heavy bomber squadron. It suffered the heaviest losses of any Czechoslovak formation in the RAF. In the Second World War 511 Czechoslovaks serving in Allied air forces were killed. Of these 273 (53%) died while serving with 311 Squadron.[3]

No. 311 (Czechoslovak) Squadron RAF
Badge of № 311 Squadron RAF
Active29 July 1940 – 15 February 1946
Country United Kingdom
Allegiance Czechoslovak National Liberation Committee
Branch Royal Air Force
RoleBomber, maritime patrol, transport
Nickname(s)Czechoslovak
Motto(s)(Czech): Na množství nehleďte
("Never regard their numbers", Hussite battle cry)
Insignia
Squadron badgeA thresher and a morning star in saltire, the halves fracted.
Squadron codesKX (July 1940 – April 1942)[1]
PP (1945 – February 1946)[2]
Aircraft flown
BomberVickers Wellington
Consolidated Liberator

After the end of the war, 311 Squadron was disbanded as an RAF unit and became the 6 letecká divize ("6th Air Division") of the reformed Czechoslovak Air Force.

History edit

Bomber Command edit

 
Three 311 Squadron Wellington Mk IC medium bombers over Norfolk in March 1941

The squadron was formed at RAF Honington in Suffolk on 29 July 1940,[4][5] although RAF records give the official date as 2 August.[6] It was crewed mostly by Czechoslovaks who had escaped from German-occupied Europe. Some were airmen who had trained with the Czechoslovak Air Force, escaped to France, served in the French Air Force in the Battle of France and then been evacuated to the UK.[7] Others were soldiers who had served in Czechoslovak Army units in the Battle of France, been evacuated to the UK and then volunteered to transfer to the RAF Volunteer Reserve in order to serve in 311 Squadron.[8]

The squadron was equipped initially with Wellington Mark I medium bombers, which were soon succeeded by Wellingtons of Marks IA and IC.[5]

From 16 September 1940 the squadron was based at RAF East Wretham in Norfolk as part of Bomber Command's No. 3 Group,[9] whose commanding officer was Air Vice-Marshal John Baldwin. He said 311 Squadron "put up a wonderful show" and had "the finest navigators in Bomber Command".[10]

On 18 January 1941 HM King George VI and his consort Queen Elizabeth visited the squadron at East Wretham.[11]

 
Wellington Mk IC L7842 after being captured in 1941. Its RAF roundels had been replaced with German crosses, but at this stage it still carried its RAF number and call sign.

On 6 February 1941 six of the squadron's Wellington Mk IC aircraft took part in a raid on Boulogne-sur-Mer in German-occupied France. On the return flight one aircraft, L7842/T, suffered navigation problems. Then it ran low on fuel, its commander Plt Off František Cigoš mistakenly judged that they were over England and he landed at Flers in northern France. Both the aircraft and its crew were captured.[12][13] The Luftwaffe repainted KX-T in German markings and transferred it to its Erprobungsstelle (experimental and test facility) at Rechlin–Lärz Airfield in Mecklenburg.[14]

On 20 June 1941 the squadron gave a dinner for the President of the Czechoslovak government-in-exile, Edvard Beneš. Other guests included Foreign Minister Jan Masaryk and Defence Minister, General Antonín Hasal-Nižborský.[15]

 
A 311 Squadron flight crew with their Wellington bomber at RAF East Wretham in Norfolk

311 Squadron was with Bomber Command for 19 months. In that time it flew 1,029 sorties, attacked 77 targets, dropped 2,492,600 lb (1,130,600 kg) of explosive bombs and 95,438 incendiary bombs.[16] It attacked targets in Germany, Italy, and occupied Belgium, France and the Netherlands. Its most frequent targets were Cologne, Hamburg and Kiel in Germany and Dunkirk, Brest and Boulogne in France.[17]

The squadron deployed 318 airmen formed into 53 aircrew. 94 were killed on operations and 34 were captured: a loss rate of more than 40%.[16] Unlike crews derived from England or the Commonwealth nations, there were no Czechoslovakian replacement crews arriving to fill the ranks of the lost. To keep the squadron functional, it would have to be put to a different use.

Coastal Command edit

At the end of April 1942 the squadron was transferred from Bomber Command to Coastal Command to undertake maritime patrols.[18] It moved to RAF Aldergrove in Northern Ireland on 28 April and began maritime patrol training on 1 May.[19] The squadron was made part of No. 19 Group RAF, moved to RAF Talbenny in Wales on 12 June and undertook its first anti-submarine patrol on 30 June.[20] Its Wellingtons lacked air to surface vessel (ASV) radar,[19] but despite this between June 1942 and April 1943 the squadron achieved the highest success rate of any Coastal Command squadron.[21]

Throughout July and August the squadron's Wellingtons remained in Bomber Command's Temperate Land Scheme camouflage: dark green and dark earth above, and black below. This was unsuitable for maritime patrols, but not until September 1942 were the aircraft repainted in Coastal Command's Temperate Sea Scheme: dark slate grey and extra dark sea grey above, and white below.[22]

In April 1943 the squadron was partly re-equipped with five Wellington Mark X aircraft.[23] This could carry two torpedoes or 3,999 lb (1,814 kg) of bombs,[24] but it was primarily a Bomber Command variant, not designed for maritime patrol work. Air Vice-Marshal Karel Janoušek, Inspector-General of the Czechoslovak Air Force, eventually convinced the UK Air Ministry to re-equip the squadron with Consolidated Liberator heavy bombers, as these had radar and a longer range, both of which made them more suitable for maritime patrols.[21] Retraining flights began on 25 May[21] and continued until August.[25]

On 26 May 1943 the squadron moved to RAF Beaulieu in Hampshire. On 4 August it celebrated its third anniversary. Guests again included President Beneš and Foreign Minister Masaryk. They included also General Sergej Ingr, who had succeeded General Hasal-Nižborský as Defence Minister, and the head of Coastal Command, Air Marshal John Slessor.[25]

 
The German blockade runner Alsterufer burning after being attacked by Plt Off Oldřich Doležal's Liberator V

On 21 August 1943 the squadron began maritime patrols with Consolidated Liberator GR Mk V[5][25] aircraft and continued anti-submarine work, but now over the Bay of Biscay. On 10 November Liberator BZ774/D, led by Flt Sgt Otto Žanta, attacked German submarine U-966 with rocket projectiles (RP's) off the Galician coast. The submarine ran aground and her crew abandoned her.[26]

On 27 December 1943 Liberator BZ796/H, led by Plt Off Oldřich Doležal, attacked the German blockade runner Alsterufer in the Bay of Biscay. Doležal's crew set the cargo ship on fire with five RP's and a 500 lb (230 kg) bomb, and she sank the next day.[27]

 
The crew of a Liberator IIIA, LV343, at RAF Beaulieu in Hampshire in July 1943

In February 1944 the squadron was re-equipped with nine Liberator C Mk VI aircraft.[5][28] On 23 February it moved to RAF Predannack in Cornwall. On 24 June Liberator FL961/O led by Fg Off Jan Vella, along with the Tribal-class destroyers HMS Eskimo and HMCS Haida, attacked and sank U-971 just west of the English Channel.[29][30]

On 7 August 1944 the squadron transferred to RAF Tain in Scotland[31] and its area of operations changed from the Bay of Biscay and Western Approaches to the North Sea. In September its rôle was changed from day to night anti-submarine patrols.[32] On 27 October Fleet Air Arm aircraft from HMS Implacable damaged U-1060, forcing her to run aground on the coast of German-occupied Norway. Two days later two 311 Squadron Liberators, FL949/Y led by Fg Off Josef Pavelka and BZ723/H led by Sqn Ldr Alois Šedivý, damaged the grounded submarine with salvos of RP's.[33] Later two Halifax heavy bombers of No. 502 Squadron RAF finished off U-1060 with depth charges.[33]

In February 1945 the squadron was re-equipped, again with Liberator C Mk VI aircraft but now equipped with anti-submarine Leigh Lights.[34] In March the entire squadron took part in the "Chilli-II" and "Chilli-III" raids on German submarine training areas in the Baltic.[35]

 
Grave of Sgt Rudolf Scholz in St John's parish churchyard, Stoke Row, Oxfordshire. Sholz was the flight engineer of Liberator IV EV995 when it crashed on the beach at Tain, Ross-shire, Scotland, on 10 April 1945.[36] Six of its crew were killed and three injured.[35]

311 Squadron was with Coastal Command for 38 months, in which time it flew 2,111 sorties.[37] By the end of the war 247 of its men had been killed, either in combat or in accidents.[38] 33 of its members were released from German prisoner-of-war camps. One PoW, Plt Off Arnošt Valenta, was murdered by the Gestapo in March 1944 for taking part in the Great Escape from Stalag Luft III.[39]

Peacetime transport edit

After the End of World War II in Europe, on 26 May 1945 the Czechoslovak government-in-exile formed the Letecká dopravní skupina ("Air Transport Group"), and recruited most of its personnel from 311 Squadron. Its initial aircraft were two Avro Anson C XII aircraft bought from the RAF. On 12 June 1945 the unit began flights to Ruzyně Airport, Prague.[40] By October the Letecká dopravní skupina had also acquired a number of Siebel Si 204D aircraft seized from Germany as war reparations.[41]

On 25 June 1945 the remainder of 311 Squadron was transferred to RAF Transport Command's No. 301 Wing. It too flew transport flights to Ruzyně Airport, the first being on 30 July from RAF Manston in Kent,[40] where the squadron was based from 3 August.[42] On 21 August the squadron relocated to Ruzynĕ.[43] The squadron first transferred military equipment and personnel from the UK to Czechoslovakia. It then repatriated Czechoslovak civilians.[44]

Czechoslovak runways were found to be unsuitable for Liberators. Therefore, in December 1945 all those of 311 squadron were returned to the UK, landing at RAF Valley in Wales.[45]

311 Squadron was officially disbanded as an RAF unit at RAF Milltown in Moray, Scotland on 15 February 1946.[5][46][47] Most of its personnel had transferred to the Czechoslovak Air Force in August 1945, and in Czechoslovakia the unit was officially disbanded on 15 January 1946, but its personnel were not officially discharged from the RAF until 30 June 1946.[47]

On 15 January 1946 311 Squadron became the Czechoslovak 6 letecká divize ("6th Air Division") at Havlíčkův Brod in southeastern Bohemia. In May it was divided into Letecký pluk 24 and Letecký pluk 25 ("24th and 25th Air Regiments"). Letecký pluk 24 was given the name Biskajsky ("Biscay") and initially equipped with Mosquito FB Mk VI fighter-bombers. Letecký pluk 25 was given the name Atlantický ("Atlantic") and equipped with Petlyakov Pe-2FT aircraft.[47]

Squadron codes edit

This squadron displayed the squadron code letters "KX" and later "PP" on its Wellingtons and "PP" on its Liberators.[5][48]

Commanding officers edit

 
Karel Toman-Mareš as a young Czechoslovak Air Force officer in 1929. He commanded 311 Squadron from July 1940 until March 1941.
From To Name
July 1940 November 1940 W/Cdr John Griffiths, DFC[49]
July 1940 March 1941 W/Cdr Karel Toman-Mareš
1941 1941 Sqn Ldr Percy Charles Pickard, DFC[50]
March 1941 July 1941 W/Cdr Josef Schejbal
July 1941 April 1942 W/Cdr Josef Ocelka, DFC
April 1942 January 1943 W/Cdr Josef Šnajdr, DFC
January 1943 August 1943 W/Cdr Jindřich Breitcetl, DFC
August 1943 January 1944 W/Cdr Vladimír Nedvěd, MBE, DFC
January 1944 August 1944 W/Cdr Josef Šejbl, DFC
August 1944 February 1946 W/Cdr Jan Kostohryz, DSO

Squadron bases edit

Period Name
29 July 1940 – 16 September 1940 RAF Honington
16 September 1940 – 28 April 1942 RAF East Wretham
28 April 1942 – 12 June 1942 RAF Aldergrove
12 June 1942 – 26 May 1943 RAF Talbenny
26 May 1943 – 23 February 1944 RAF Beaulieu
23 February 1944 – 7 August 1944 RAF Predannack
7 August 1944 – 6 August 1945 RAF Tain
6 August 1945 – 21 August 1945 RAF Manston
21 August 1945 – 15 February 1946 Ruzyně Airport, Prague

Aircraft operated edit

Dates Aircraft Variant Notes
1940–43 Vickers Wellington I
IA
IC
X
Twin-engined medium bomber
1943
1943–45
1945–46
Consolidated B-24 Liberator IIIA
V
VI
Four-engined heavy bomber

Notable incidents edit

1942 Wellington crash edit

 
A Vickers Wellington IC. This is the same version of Wellington as the one from 311 Squadron that crashed at South Ruislip in 1942.

On 18 October 1942 Wellington 1C aircraft of 311 Squadron crashed and burst into flames at South Ruislip, Middlesex, on approach to RAF Northolt. The aircraft was en route to a debriefing and was carrying nine passengers as well as its usual crew of six. Everyone aboard was killed, along with four children and two mothers on the ground.[52][53][54]

1945 Liberator crash edit

On 8 October 1945 a Liberator B-24 GR.VI aircraft of 311 Squadron suffered an engine fire, crashed and burst into flames[41] in a field at Elvetham, near Hartley Wintney, Hampshire. Five minutes earlier it had taken off from RAF Blackbushe on a flight to Ruzyně Airport, Prague. All 23 people aboard were killed: five crew, 17 passengers and one stowaway. The passengers included nine women and five young children,[45] the latter ranging from 18 months to three years old.[55][56]

Legacy edit

 
A Consolidated B-24 Liberator GR.VI of No. 200 Squadron RAF. This is the same version of B-24 as the one from 311 Squadron that crashed at Elvetham in 1945.

In 1964, 311 Squadron veteran Richard Husmann, writing as Filip Jánský, published his novel Nebeští jezdci, portraying the lives of Czech and Polish airmen in the wartime RAF. In 1968 a film based on the book was released, having been made the previous year around Klecany military airfield north of Prague.[57] In 1969 Hodder & Stoughton published an English translation of the book as Riders in the Sky.

In 1999 the Air Café commemorating No. 311 Squadron RAF opened in Brno, South Moravia. It is in the early 17th-century Dietrichstein Palace, which also houses the Moravian Museum.[58] The café exhibits a small collection of memorabilia connected with the Czechoslovak-manned squadron.[59]

In February 2016 the 438th Air Expeditionary Advisory Squadron, 438th Air Expeditionary Advisory Group, USAF, Kabul, Afghanistan, was renamed 311th Air Expeditionary Advisory Squadron, to follow in the traditions of the squadron, under Czech Air Force command.[60] This 311 Squadron was disbanded in February 2019.[61]

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Bowyer & Rawlings 1979, p. 64.
  2. ^ Bowyer & Rawlings 1979, p. 83.
  3. ^ Ludikar, Marcel (18 September 2014). "A short history of the Czechoslovak Air Force in WW2 and the Post-War Period". Free Czechoslovak Air Force. Retrieved 12 October 2017.
  4. ^ Halley 1988, p. 362.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Lewis 1968, p. 96.
  6. ^ Vančata 2013, p. 4.
  7. ^ Vančata 2013, p. 3.
  8. ^ Vančata 2013, p. 5.
  9. ^ "311 Squadron". History RAF Formations. Ministry of Defence.
  10. ^ Janoušek 1942, p. 12.
  11. ^ Vančata 2013, pp. 15–16.
  12. ^ "Arnost Valenta – One of the Fifty". Free Czechoslovak Air Force. 24 March 2014. Retrieved 14 February 2018.
  13. ^ Vančata 2013, p. 16.
  14. ^ Vančata 2013, pp. 18–19.
  15. ^ Vančata 2013, p. 20.
  16. ^ a b Vančata 2013, p. 41.
  17. ^ Vančata 2013, p. 94.
  18. ^ Vančata 2013, pp. 41–42.
  19. ^ a b Vančata 2013, p. 43.
  20. ^ Vančata 2013, p. 44.
  21. ^ a b c Vančata 2013, p. 57.
  22. ^ Vančata 2013, p. 47.
  23. ^ Vančata 2013, p. 54.
  24. ^ Vančata 2013, p. 95.
  25. ^ a b c Vančata 2013, p. 59.
  26. ^ Vančata 2013, p. 63.
  27. ^ Vančata 2013, p. 64.
  28. ^ Vančata 2013, p. 65.
  29. ^ Vančata 2013, p. 68.
  30. ^ Helgason, Guðmundur. "U-971". uboat.net. Retrieved 8 March 2016.
  31. ^ Vančata 2013, p. 90.
  32. ^ Vančata 2013, p. 77.
  33. ^ a b Vančata 2013, pp. 69–70.
  34. ^ Vančata 2013, p. 73.
  35. ^ a b Vančata 2013, p. 74.
  36. ^ "Not Forgotten – Southern England". Free Czechoslovak Air Force Association. 24 February 2016. Retrieved 23 October 2018.
  37. ^ Vančata 2013, p. 92.
  38. ^ Vančata 2013, p. 87.
  39. ^ Vančata 2013, p. 99.
  40. ^ a b Vančata 2013, p. 80.
  41. ^ a b Vančata 2013, pp. 82–83.
  42. ^ Vančata 2013, p. 81.
  43. ^ Rijnhout & Rennison 1980, p. 92.
  44. ^ Vančata 2013, p. 82.
  45. ^ a b Vančata 2013, p. 83.
  46. ^ Rawlings 1982, p. 199.
  47. ^ a b c Vančata 2013, p. 84.
  48. ^ "No 311 (Czechoslovak) Squadron". Air of Authority – A History of RAF Organisation.
  49. ^ Hurt 2004[page needed]
  50. ^ Short 2004[page needed]
  51. ^ Jefford 2001, p. 85.
  52. ^ Vančata 2013, p. 51.
  53. ^ "ASN Wikibase Occurrence # 66571". Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved 30 December 2013.
  54. ^ Street (24 January 2006). "Wellington Crash October 1942". WW2 People's War. BBC Online. Retrieved 1 November 2017.
  55. ^ "Crash in Hampshire". The Times. No. 50267. London. 8 October 1945. p. 4.
  56. ^ "Mystery of 23rd body in blazing 'plane wreck". The Scotsman. 8 October 1945.
  57. ^ Kucera, Pawel (September 2001). "Recreating a Wimpy". Aeroplane Monthly: 72–75.
  58. ^ Moravian Museum
  59. ^ Air Café
  60. ^ "Air unit in Afghanistan renamed to follow in the tradition of 311th Czechoslovak Bomber Squadron RAF". Czech Ministry of Defence & Armed Forces. 18 February 2016. Retrieved 25 February 2019.
  61. ^ "311 Squadron recognised for their work in Afghanistan". RAF News. Royal Air Force. 13 February 2019. Retrieved 25 February 2019.

Bibliography edit

  • Bowyer, Michael JF; Rawlings, John DR (1979). Squadron Codes 1937–56. Bar Hill: Patrick Stephens Ltd. ISBN 0-85059-364-6.
  • Čapka, Jo; MacDonald, Kendall (1958). Red Sky at Night, the Story of Jo Čapka, DFM. London: Anthony Blond.
  • Halley, James J (1988). The Squadrons of the Royal Air Force & Commonwealth, 1918–1988. Tonbridge: Air-Britain (Historians) Ltd. ISBN 0-85130-164-9.
  • Hurt, Zdeněk (2004). In Focus: Czechs in the RAF. Walton-on-Thames: Red Kite. ISBN 0-9538061-9-7.
  • Janoušek, Karel (1942). The Czechoslovak Air Force. London: Inspectorate-General of the Czechoslovak Air Force.
  • Jefford, Wg Cdr CG (2001) [1998]. RAF Squadrons, A Comprehensive Record of the Movement and Equipment of all RAF Squadrons and their Antecedents since 1912 (second ed.). Shrewsbury: Airlife Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84037-141-3.
  • Lewis, Peter (1968) [1959]. Squadron Histories, RFC, RNAS and RAF, Since 1912. London: Putnam. SBN 370-00022-6.
  • Moyes, Philip JR (1976) [1964]. Bomber Squadrons of the RAF and their Aircraft (new ed.). London: Macdonald and Jane's (Publishers) Ltd. ISBN 0-354-01027-1.
  • Rawlings, John DR (1982). Coastal Support and Special Squadrons of the RAF and their Aircraft (new ed.). London: Macdonald and Jane's (Publishers) Ltd. ISBN 0-354-01028-X.
  • Rijnhout, Bart M (1979). Het mysterie van de L 7788. Oud-bemanning even terug op plek des onheils... (in Dutch). Leidschendam: House Printing Unit HTM.
  • Rijnhout, Bart M; Rennison, John P (1980). The Sky is our Ocean. De rol van het 311 (Tsjechisch) R.A.F.-squadron tijdens de tweede wereldoorlog (in Dutch). Rotterdam: Wyt Uitgeverij. ISBN 90-6007-141-7.
  • Short, K.R.M. (2004). "Pickard, Percy Charles (1915-1944)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/62384. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Vančata, Pavel (2013). 311 Squadron. Sandomierz: Stratus, for Mushroom Model Publications. ISBN 978-83-61421-43-6.

External links edit

  • "No. 311 (Czechoslovak) Squadron RAF". RAF Bomber Command 1939 – 1945. RAF Commands. 2013. – movement and equipment history with Bomber Command
  • "No. 311 (Czechoslovak) Squadron RAF". RAF Coastal Command 1939 – 1945. RAF Commands. 2013. – movement and equipment history with Coastal Command
  • Air Cafe in Brno, a cafe to commemorate the Czech manned squadron with a small exhibition of memorabilia

squadron, czechoslovak, squadron, czechoslovak, manned, bomber, squadron, royal, force, second, world, only, czechoslovak, manned, medium, heavy, bomber, squadron, suffered, heaviest, losses, czechoslovak, formation, second, world, czechoslovaks, serving, alli. No 311 Czechoslovak Squadron RAF was a Czechoslovak manned bomber squadron of the Royal Air Force in the Second World War It was the RAF s only Czechoslovak manned medium and heavy bomber squadron It suffered the heaviest losses of any Czechoslovak formation in the RAF In the Second World War 511 Czechoslovaks serving in Allied air forces were killed Of these 273 53 died while serving with 311 Squadron 3 No 311 Czechoslovak Squadron RAFBadge of 311 Squadron RAFActive29 July 1940 15 February 1946CountryUnited KingdomAllegianceCzechoslovak National Liberation CommitteeBranchRoyal Air ForceRoleBomber maritime patrol transportNickname s CzechoslovakMotto s Czech Na mnozstvi nehledte Never regard their numbers Hussite battle cry InsigniaSquadron badgeA thresher and a morning star in saltire the halves fracted Squadron codesKX July 1940 April 1942 1 PP 1945 February 1946 2 Aircraft flownBomberVickers WellingtonConsolidated Liberator After the end of the war 311 Squadron was disbanded as an RAF unit and became the 6 letecka divize 6th Air Division of the reformed Czechoslovak Air Force Contents 1 History 1 1 Bomber Command 1 2 Coastal Command 1 3 Peacetime transport 2 Squadron codes 3 Commanding officers 4 Squadron bases 5 Aircraft operated 6 Notable incidents 6 1 1942 Wellington crash 6 2 1945 Liberator crash 7 Legacy 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Notes 9 2 Bibliography 10 External linksHistory editBomber Command edit nbsp Three 311 Squadron Wellington Mk IC medium bombers over Norfolk in March 1941The squadron was formed at RAF Honington in Suffolk on 29 July 1940 4 5 although RAF records give the official date as 2 August 6 It was crewed mostly by Czechoslovaks who had escaped from German occupied Europe Some were airmen who had trained with the Czechoslovak Air Force escaped to France served in the French Air Force in the Battle of France and then been evacuated to the UK 7 Others were soldiers who had served in Czechoslovak Army units in the Battle of France been evacuated to the UK and then volunteered to transfer to the RAF Volunteer Reserve in order to serve in 311 Squadron 8 The squadron was equipped initially with Wellington Mark I medium bombers which were soon succeeded by Wellingtons of Marks IA and IC 5 From 16 September 1940 the squadron was based at RAF East Wretham in Norfolk as part of Bomber Command s No 3 Group 9 whose commanding officer was Air Vice Marshal John Baldwin He said 311 Squadron put up a wonderful show and had the finest navigators in Bomber Command 10 On 18 January 1941 HM King George VI and his consort Queen Elizabeth visited the squadron at East Wretham 11 nbsp Wellington Mk IC L7842 after being captured in 1941 Its RAF roundels had been replaced with German crosses but at this stage it still carried its RAF number and call sign On 6 February 1941 six of the squadron s Wellington Mk IC aircraft took part in a raid on Boulogne sur Mer in German occupied France On the return flight one aircraft L7842 T suffered navigation problems Then it ran low on fuel its commander Plt Off Frantisek Cigos mistakenly judged that they were over England and he landed at Flers in northern France Both the aircraft and its crew were captured 12 13 The Luftwaffe repainted KX T in German markings and transferred it to its Erprobungsstelle experimental and test facility at Rechlin Larz Airfield in Mecklenburg 14 On 20 June 1941 the squadron gave a dinner for the President of the Czechoslovak government in exile Edvard Benes Other guests included Foreign Minister Jan Masaryk and Defence Minister General Antonin Hasal Nizborsky 15 nbsp A 311 Squadron flight crew with their Wellington bomber at RAF East Wretham in Norfolk311 Squadron was with Bomber Command for 19 months In that time it flew 1 029 sorties attacked 77 targets dropped 2 492 600 lb 1 130 600 kg of explosive bombs and 95 438 incendiary bombs 16 It attacked targets in Germany Italy and occupied Belgium France and the Netherlands Its most frequent targets were Cologne Hamburg and Kiel in Germany and Dunkirk Brest and Boulogne in France 17 The squadron deployed 318 airmen formed into 53 aircrew 94 were killed on operations and 34 were captured a loss rate of more than 40 16 Unlike crews derived from England or the Commonwealth nations there were no Czechoslovakian replacement crews arriving to fill the ranks of the lost To keep the squadron functional it would have to be put to a different use Coastal Command edit At the end of April 1942 the squadron was transferred from Bomber Command to Coastal Command to undertake maritime patrols 18 It moved to RAF Aldergrove in Northern Ireland on 28 April and began maritime patrol training on 1 May 19 The squadron was made part of No 19 Group RAF moved to RAF Talbenny in Wales on 12 June and undertook its first anti submarine patrol on 30 June 20 Its Wellingtons lacked air to surface vessel ASV radar 19 but despite this between June 1942 and April 1943 the squadron achieved the highest success rate of any Coastal Command squadron 21 Throughout July and August the squadron s Wellingtons remained in Bomber Command s Temperate Land Scheme camouflage dark green and dark earth above and black below This was unsuitable for maritime patrols but not until September 1942 were the aircraft repainted in Coastal Command s Temperate Sea Scheme dark slate grey and extra dark sea grey above and white below 22 In April 1943 the squadron was partly re equipped with five Wellington Mark X aircraft 23 This could carry two torpedoes or 3 999 lb 1 814 kg of bombs 24 but it was primarily a Bomber Command variant not designed for maritime patrol work Air Vice Marshal Karel Janousek Inspector General of the Czechoslovak Air Force eventually convinced the UK Air Ministry to re equip the squadron with Consolidated Liberator heavy bombers as these had radar and a longer range both of which made them more suitable for maritime patrols 21 Retraining flights began on 25 May 21 and continued until August 25 On 26 May 1943 the squadron moved to RAF Beaulieu in Hampshire On 4 August it celebrated its third anniversary Guests again included President Benes and Foreign Minister Masaryk They included also General Sergej Ingr who had succeeded General Hasal Nizborsky as Defence Minister and the head of Coastal Command Air Marshal John Slessor 25 nbsp The German blockade runner Alsterufer burning after being attacked by Plt Off Oldrich Dolezal s Liberator VOn 21 August 1943 the squadron began maritime patrols with Consolidated Liberator GR Mk V 5 25 aircraft and continued anti submarine work but now over the Bay of Biscay On 10 November Liberator BZ774 D led by Flt Sgt Otto Zanta attacked German submarine U 966 with rocket projectiles RP s off the Galician coast The submarine ran aground and her crew abandoned her 26 On 27 December 1943 Liberator BZ796 H led by Plt Off Oldrich Dolezal attacked the German blockade runner Alsterufer in the Bay of Biscay Dolezal s crew set the cargo ship on fire with five RP s and a 500 lb 230 kg bomb and she sank the next day 27 nbsp The crew of a Liberator IIIA LV343 at RAF Beaulieu in Hampshire in July 1943In February 1944 the squadron was re equipped with nine Liberator C Mk VI aircraft 5 28 On 23 February it moved to RAF Predannack in Cornwall On 24 June Liberator FL961 O led by Fg Off Jan Vella along with the Tribal class destroyers HMS Eskimo and HMCS Haida attacked and sank U 971 just west of the English Channel 29 30 On 7 August 1944 the squadron transferred to RAF Tain in Scotland 31 and its area of operations changed from the Bay of Biscay and Western Approaches to the North Sea In September its role was changed from day to night anti submarine patrols 32 On 27 October Fleet Air Arm aircraft from HMS Implacable damaged U 1060 forcing her to run aground on the coast of German occupied Norway Two days later two 311 Squadron Liberators FL949 Y led by Fg Off Josef Pavelka and BZ723 H led by Sqn Ldr Alois Sedivy damaged the grounded submarine with salvos of RP s 33 Later two Halifax heavy bombers of No 502 Squadron RAF finished off U 1060 with depth charges 33 In February 1945 the squadron was re equipped again with Liberator C Mk VI aircraft but now equipped with anti submarine Leigh Lights 34 In March the entire squadron took part in the Chilli II and Chilli III raids on German submarine training areas in the Baltic 35 nbsp Grave of Sgt Rudolf Scholz in St John s parish churchyard Stoke Row Oxfordshire Sholz was the flight engineer of Liberator IV EV995 when it crashed on the beach at Tain Ross shire Scotland on 10 April 1945 36 Six of its crew were killed and three injured 35 311 Squadron was with Coastal Command for 38 months in which time it flew 2 111 sorties 37 By the end of the war 247 of its men had been killed either in combat or in accidents 38 33 of its members were released from German prisoner of war camps One PoW Plt Off Arnost Valenta was murdered by the Gestapo in March 1944 for taking part in the Great Escape from Stalag Luft III 39 Peacetime transport edit After the End of World War II in Europe on 26 May 1945 the Czechoslovak government in exile formed the Letecka dopravni skupina Air Transport Group and recruited most of its personnel from 311 Squadron Its initial aircraft were two Avro Anson C XII aircraft bought from the RAF On 12 June 1945 the unit began flights to Ruzyne Airport Prague 40 By October the Letecka dopravni skupina had also acquired a number of Siebel Si 204D aircraft seized from Germany as war reparations 41 On 25 June 1945 the remainder of 311 Squadron was transferred to RAF Transport Command s No 301 Wing It too flew transport flights to Ruzyne Airport the first being on 30 July from RAF Manston in Kent 40 where the squadron was based from 3 August 42 On 21 August the squadron relocated to Ruzynĕ 43 The squadron first transferred military equipment and personnel from the UK to Czechoslovakia It then repatriated Czechoslovak civilians 44 Czechoslovak runways were found to be unsuitable for Liberators Therefore in December 1945 all those of 311 squadron were returned to the UK landing at RAF Valley in Wales 45 311 Squadron was officially disbanded as an RAF unit at RAF Milltown in Moray Scotland on 15 February 1946 5 46 47 Most of its personnel had transferred to the Czechoslovak Air Force in August 1945 and in Czechoslovakia the unit was officially disbanded on 15 January 1946 but its personnel were not officially discharged from the RAF until 30 June 1946 47 On 15 January 1946 311 Squadron became the Czechoslovak 6 letecka divize 6th Air Division at Havlickuv Brod in southeastern Bohemia In May it was divided into Letecky pluk 24 and Letecky pluk 25 24th and 25th Air Regiments Letecky pluk 24 was given the name Biskajsky Biscay and initially equipped with Mosquito FB Mk VI fighter bombers Letecky pluk 25 was given the name Atlanticky Atlantic and equipped with Petlyakov Pe 2FT aircraft 47 Squadron codes editThis squadron displayed the squadron code letters KX and later PP on its Wellingtons and PP on its Liberators 5 48 Commanding officers edit nbsp Karel Toman Mares as a young Czechoslovak Air Force officer in 1929 He commanded 311 Squadron from July 1940 until March 1941 From To NameJuly 1940 November 1940 W Cdr John Griffiths DFC 49 July 1940 March 1941 W Cdr Karel Toman Mares1941 1941 Sqn Ldr Percy Charles Pickard DFC 50 March 1941 July 1941 W Cdr Josef SchejbalJuly 1941 April 1942 W Cdr Josef Ocelka DFCApril 1942 January 1943 W Cdr Josef Snajdr DFCJanuary 1943 August 1943 W Cdr Jindrich Breitcetl DFCAugust 1943 January 1944 W Cdr Vladimir Nedved MBE DFCJanuary 1944 August 1944 W Cdr Josef Sejbl DFCAugust 1944 February 1946 W Cdr Jan Kostohryz DSOSquadron bases editPeriod Name29 July 1940 16 September 1940 RAF Honington16 September 1940 28 April 1942 RAF East Wretham28 April 1942 12 June 1942 RAF Aldergrove12 June 1942 26 May 1943 RAF Talbenny26 May 1943 23 February 1944 RAF Beaulieu23 February 1944 7 August 1944 RAF Predannack7 August 1944 6 August 1945 RAF Tain6 August 1945 21 August 1945 RAF Manston21 August 1945 15 February 1946 Ruzyne Airport PragueAircraft operated editDates Aircraft Variant Notes1940 43 Vickers Wellington IIAICX Twin engined medium bomber19431943 451945 46 Consolidated B 24 Liberator IIIAVVI Four engined heavy bomberNotable incidents edit1942 Wellington crash edit Main article 1942 Ruislip Wellington accident nbsp A Vickers Wellington IC This is the same version of Wellington as the one from 311 Squadron that crashed at South Ruislip in 1942 On 18 October 1942 Wellington 1C aircraft of 311 Squadron crashed and burst into flames at South Ruislip Middlesex on approach to RAF Northolt The aircraft was en route to a debriefing and was carrying nine passengers as well as its usual crew of six Everyone aboard was killed along with four children and two mothers on the ground 52 53 54 1945 Liberator crash edit Main article Elvetham air crash On 8 October 1945 a Liberator B 24 GR VI aircraft of 311 Squadron suffered an engine fire crashed and burst into flames 41 in a field at Elvetham near Hartley Wintney Hampshire Five minutes earlier it had taken off from RAF Blackbushe on a flight to Ruzyne Airport Prague All 23 people aboard were killed five crew 17 passengers and one stowaway The passengers included nine women and five young children 45 the latter ranging from 18 months to three years old 55 56 Legacy edit nbsp A Consolidated B 24 Liberator GR VI of No 200 Squadron RAF This is the same version of B 24 as the one from 311 Squadron that crashed at Elvetham in 1945 In 1964 311 Squadron veteran Richard Husmann writing as Filip Jansky published his novel Nebesti jezdci portraying the lives of Czech and Polish airmen in the wartime RAF In 1968 a film based on the book was released having been made the previous year around Klecany military airfield north of Prague 57 In 1969 Hodder amp Stoughton published an English translation of the book as Riders in the Sky In 1999 the Air Cafe commemorating No 311 Squadron RAF opened in Brno South Moravia It is in the early 17th century Dietrichstein Palace which also houses the Moravian Museum 58 The cafe exhibits a small collection of memorabilia connected with the Czechoslovak manned squadron 59 In February 2016 the 438th Air Expeditionary Advisory Squadron 438th Air Expeditionary Advisory Group USAF Kabul Afghanistan was renamed 311th Air Expeditionary Advisory Squadron to follow in the traditions of the squadron under Czech Air Force command 60 This 311 Squadron was disbanded in February 2019 61 See also edit1942 Ruislip Wellington accident Elvetham air crash Charles Pickard Jindrich Svoboda Arnost Valenta Tomas Lom List of Royal Air Force aircraft squadronsReferences editNotes edit Bowyer amp Rawlings 1979 p 64 Bowyer amp Rawlings 1979 p 83 Ludikar Marcel 18 September 2014 A short history of the Czechoslovak Air Force in WW2 and the Post War Period Free Czechoslovak Air Force Retrieved 12 October 2017 Halley 1988 p 362 a b c d e f Lewis 1968 p 96 Vancata 2013 p 4 Vancata 2013 p 3 Vancata 2013 p 5 311 Squadron History RAF Formations Ministry of Defence Janousek 1942 p 12 Vancata 2013 pp 15 16 Arnost Valenta One of the Fifty Free Czechoslovak Air Force 24 March 2014 Retrieved 14 February 2018 Vancata 2013 p 16 Vancata 2013 pp 18 19 Vancata 2013 p 20 a b Vancata 2013 p 41 Vancata 2013 p 94 Vancata 2013 pp 41 42 a b Vancata 2013 p 43 Vancata 2013 p 44 a b c Vancata 2013 p 57 Vancata 2013 p 47 Vancata 2013 p 54 Vancata 2013 p 95 a b c Vancata 2013 p 59 Vancata 2013 p 63 Vancata 2013 p 64 Vancata 2013 p 65 Vancata 2013 p 68 Helgason Gudmundur U 971 uboat net Retrieved 8 March 2016 Vancata 2013 p 90 Vancata 2013 p 77 a b Vancata 2013 pp 69 70 Vancata 2013 p 73 a b Vancata 2013 p 74 Not Forgotten Southern England Free Czechoslovak Air Force Association 24 February 2016 Retrieved 23 October 2018 Vancata 2013 p 92 Vancata 2013 p 87 Vancata 2013 p 99 a b Vancata 2013 p 80 a b Vancata 2013 pp 82 83 Vancata 2013 p 81 Rijnhout amp Rennison 1980 p 92 Vancata 2013 p 82 a b Vancata 2013 p 83 Rawlings 1982 p 199 a b c Vancata 2013 p 84 No 311 Czechoslovak Squadron Air of Authority A History of RAF Organisation Hurt 2004 page needed Short 2004 page needed Jefford 2001 p 85 Vancata 2013 p 51 ASN Wikibase Occurrence 66571 Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 30 December 2013 Street 24 January 2006 Wellington Crash October 1942 WW2 People s War BBC Online Retrieved 1 November 2017 Crash in Hampshire The Times No 50267 London 8 October 1945 p 4 Mystery of 23rd body in blazing plane wreck The Scotsman 8 October 1945 Kucera Pawel September 2001 Recreating a Wimpy Aeroplane Monthly 72 75 Moravian Museum Air Cafe Air unit in Afghanistan renamed to follow in the tradition of 311th Czechoslovak Bomber Squadron RAF Czech Ministry of Defence amp Armed Forces 18 February 2016 Retrieved 25 February 2019 311 Squadron recognised for their work in Afghanistan RAF News Royal Air Force 13 February 2019 Retrieved 25 February 2019 Bibliography edit Bowyer Michael JF Rawlings John DR 1979 Squadron Codes 1937 56 Bar Hill Patrick Stephens Ltd ISBN 0 85059 364 6 Capka Jo MacDonald Kendall 1958 Red Sky at Night the Story of Jo Capka DFM London Anthony Blond Halley James J 1988 The Squadrons of the Royal Air Force amp Commonwealth 1918 1988 Tonbridge Air Britain Historians Ltd ISBN 0 85130 164 9 Hurt Zdenek 2004 In Focus Czechs in the RAF Walton on Thames Red Kite ISBN 0 9538061 9 7 Janousek Karel 1942 The Czechoslovak Air Force London Inspectorate General of the Czechoslovak Air Force Jefford Wg Cdr CG 2001 1998 RAF Squadrons A Comprehensive Record of the Movement and Equipment of all RAF Squadrons and their Antecedents since 1912 second ed Shrewsbury Airlife Publishing ISBN 978 1 84037 141 3 Lewis Peter 1968 1959 Squadron Histories RFC RNAS and RAF Since 1912 London Putnam SBN 370 00022 6 Moyes Philip JR 1976 1964 Bomber Squadrons of the RAF and their Aircraft new ed London Macdonald and Jane s Publishers Ltd ISBN 0 354 01027 1 Rawlings John DR 1982 Coastal Support and Special Squadrons of the RAF and their Aircraft new ed London Macdonald and Jane s Publishers Ltd ISBN 0 354 01028 X Rijnhout Bart M 1979 Het mysterie van de L 7788 Oud bemanning even terug op plek des onheils in Dutch Leidschendam House Printing Unit HTM Rijnhout Bart M Rennison John P 1980 The Sky is our Ocean De rol van het 311 Tsjechisch R A F squadron tijdens de tweede wereldoorlog in Dutch Rotterdam Wyt Uitgeverij ISBN 90 6007 141 7 Short K R M 2004 Pickard Percy Charles 1915 1944 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 62384 Subscription or UK public library membership required Vancata Pavel 2013 311 Squadron Sandomierz Stratus for Mushroom Model Publications ISBN 978 83 61421 43 6 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to No 311 Czechoslovak Squadron RAF No 311 Czechoslovak Squadron RAF RAF Bomber Command 1939 1945 RAF Commands 2013 movement and equipment history with Bomber Command No 311 Czechoslovak Squadron RAF RAF Coastal Command 1939 1945 RAF Commands 2013 movement and equipment history with Coastal Command Air Cafe in Brno a cafe to commemorate the Czech manned squadron with a small exhibition of memorabilia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title No 311 Squadron RAF amp oldid 1187525427, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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