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No. 312 (Czechoslovak) Squadron RAF

No. 312 Squadron RAF was a Czechoslovak-manned fighter squadron of the Royal Air Force in the Second World War.

No. 312 (Czechoslovak) Squadron RAF
Badge of № 312 (Czechoslovak) Squadron RAF
Active29 August 1940 – 15 February 1946
Country United Kingdom
Allegiance Czechoslovakia
Branch RAF Fighter Command
RoleFighter Squadron
Nickname(s)Czechoslovak
Motto(s)Latin: Non Multi Sed Multa
("Not many, but much")
EngagementsDieppe Raid
Normandy landings
Insignia
Squadron BadgeA stork volant
Squadron CodesDU (August 1940 – February 1946)
Armourers preparing belts of .303-inch ammunition for Hawker Hurricane Mk I DU-J

History

The squadron was formed at Duxford on 29 August 1940.[1] It was crewed mostly by escaped Czechoslovak pilots, but its first commander was the British Squadron Leader Frank Tyson.[2] On 12 September a Slovak fighter pilot, Ján Ambruš, was appointed as joint commander of the squadron.[3] The plan was for responsibility to be transferred gradually from Tyson to Ambruš.

Initially the squadron was equipped with Hawker Hurricane Mk I fighters. On 26 September the squadron moved to RAF Speke[4] to join the air defence of Merseyside. Its first victory was on 8 October 1940, when its Yellow Flight (Denys Gillam, Alois Vašátko and Josef Stehlík) shot down a Junkers Ju 88 medium bomber over Liverpool.[5]

On 13 October Ambruš led a flight of three Hurricane Mk I fighters on patrol. Over the Irish Sea Ambruš mistakenly led the flight to attack two Bristol Blenheim Mk IF light bombers of No. 29 Squadron RAF. One Blenheim, L6637, code letters RO-S, crashed into the sea off Point of Ayre on the Isle of Man and not far from the Morecambe Bay light ship. All three of its crew were killed. The other Blenheim, L7135, code letters RO-S, survived with minor damage and returned safely to RAF Ternhill in Shropshire with its crew unharmed.[6] Ambruš was relieved of his command, and on 12 December Sqn Ldr Evžen Čižek was appointed to succeed him.[3] On 17 December Ambruš was transferred to the Inspectorate-General of the Czechoslovak Air Force in London.

On 3 March 1941 the squadron moved to RAF Valley[7] on Anglesey and began flying convoy patrols over the Irish Sea.[8] On 24 April the squadron moved to RAF Jurby, Isle of Man. In May 1941 the squadron was re-equipped with the Hurricane Mk II. On 27 May Sqn Ldr Jan Klán succeeded Čižek as commanding officer,[3] and two days later the squadron moved to RAF Kenley[7] in Surrey. Klán's tenure was brief, as he was replaced on 5 June with Sqn Ldr Alois Vašátko.[3] On 20 July the squadron moved to RAF Martlesham Heath[7] in Suffolk. On 19 August it moved again to RAF Heathfield[7] in Ayrshire, Scotland.

The squadron was re-equipped with the Supermarine Spitfire Mk IIA in October 1941 and again with the Spitfire Mk VB/C in December.[9] The squadron spent the first part of 1942 in Wales. It moved to RAF Fairwood Common in Glamorgan on 1 January, then to RAF Angle in Pembrokeshire on 20 February,[7] and then returned to Fairwood Common on 10 April.[10] The squadron's duties included coastal patrols and shipping reconnaissance flights.

 
312 Squadron pilots at RAF Harrowbeer in Devon in 1942 just after being decorated by Czechoslovak President Edvard Beneš

On 23 June 1942 Sqn Ldr Vašátko was killed in action and Sqn Ldr Jan Čermák was appointed to succeed him.[3] On 3 July 1942 the squadron moved to RAF Harrowbeer in Devon.[10] On 19 August the squadron provided air cover for the Operation Jubilee raid on Dieppe. During the raid Miroslav Liškutín [cs] shot down a Dornier Do 217 bomber[11] and 312 Squadron lost one of its own aircraft.[citation needed]

On 10 October 1942 the squadron moved to RAF Church Stanton[10] in Somerset. On 1 January 1943 Sqn Ldr Tomáš Vybíral succeeded Čermák as squadron commander.[3] On 24 June the squadron moved to RAF Skaebrae on Orkney. On 7 September the squadron moved to RAF Ibsley[10] in Hampshire and joined the 2nd Tactical Air Force as a fighter-bomber unit. The squadron operated over France softening up targets in preparation for the invasion and then supporting the landings.[12] On 1 November Sqn Ldr František Vancl succeeded Vybíral as squadron commander.[4]

In January 1944 the squadron was re-equipped with the Spitfire Mk IX.[9] From 20 February it spent a few days at RAF Mendlesham in Suffolk, before moving on 23 February to RAF Rochford in Essex.[10]

 
Mk IXB Spitfires of 312 Squadron at RAF Appledram being repaired outside a camouflaged Butler combat hangar

On 3 April 1944 the squadron moved to RAF Appledram in West Sussex.[13] From here its operations included intercepting V-1 flying bombs, escorting bombers and attacking rail and road targets in German-occupied Europe.[11] On 15 May Sqn Ldr Jaroslav Hlad'o succeeded Vancl as squadron commander.[4] On 22 June the squadron moved to nearby RAF Tangmere,[13] also in West Sussex.

From 4 July 1944 the squadron spent a week at RAF Lympne in Kent.[13] On 11 July it moved again to RAF Coltishall[13] in Norfolk and operated daytime bomber escort flights over continental Europe.[12] However, on 27 August its duties were switched to the Air Defence of Great Britain (ADGB), for which it was moved on RAF North Weald in Essex.[13] On 3 October it moved again to RAF Bradwell Bay, also in Essex.[13]

On 15 November 1944 Sqn Ldr Václav Šlouf succeeded Hlad'o as squadron commander.[4] From 27 February to 8 June 1945 the squadron was based at RAF Manston[13] in Kent.

 
Farewell parade of Czechoslovak squadrons at RAF Manston, Kent, on 3 August 1945. Air Marshal John Slessor, with walking stick, inspects some of the men. Air Marshal Karel Janoušek can be seen behind him.

On 3 August members of all of the RAF's Czechoslovak squadrons held a farewell parade at RAF Manston. Air Marshal John Slessor inspected the parade, accompanied by Air Marshal Karel Janoušek. On 24 August 312 squadron moved to Ruzyně Airport in Prague.[13] It became a squadron of the new Czechoslovak Air Force, and on 15 February 1946 was officially disbanded as an RAF squadron.[1][9]

Seven Spitfire F Mk IXs survive today that flew with the squadron in 1944–45. This is by far the largest number of surviving aircraft associated with a single squadron.

Notable members

Aircraft operated

[19][20][21]

 
A Spitfire Mk IX that served with 312 Squadron
From To Aircraft Variant Notes
August 1940
May 1941
May 1941
December 1941
Hawker Hurricane I
IIb
single-engined monoplane piston-engined fighter
October 1941
November 1941
December 1941
August 1942
September 1943
January 1944
June 1944
December 1941
January 1942
February 1944
June 1943
February 1944
June 1944
February 1946
Supermarine Spitfire IIa
IIb
Vb
Vc
Vc
LF.IXb
HF.IX
single-engine monoplane piston-engined fighter

Aircraft of this squadron used a unit code letters DU.

Loch Doon Spitfire

On 25 October 1941, when 312 Squadron was based at RAF Heathfield, F/O František Hekl crashed a Spitfire Mk IIA into a reservoir in Ayrshire on a solo training flight. The Spitfire was serial number P7540, carrying the marking DU-W.[22]

An eyewitness the Spitfire flying low over the surface of Loch Doon when Hekl banked the aircraft to starboard and its starboard wingtip caught the water surface. Hekl lost control and the aircraft broke up and sank, leaving only a patch of oil on the water. An RAF salvage crew brought a boat and spent several days trawling parts of the bed of the loch, but failed to find either the aircraft or Hekl's body.[23]

In 1977 the Dumfries branch of the Scottish Sub Aqua Club began a systematic search of the bed of the loch in the area where an eyewitness thought the aircraft had crashed. In 1979 several clubs from the Northern Federation of British Sub-Aqua Clubs joined the search, and Blackpool Sub-Aqua Club took over organisation of the project.[23]

The search was unsuccessful so in 1982 it was moved to a different area of the loch, where divers quickly found the Spitfire's tail and rear part of the fuselage. In subsequent dives other parts of the aircraft were found, scattered over a distance of 200 metres. Both wings were badly damaged, magnesium parts such as the undercarriage wheels had corroded away, but the Merlin Mk XII engine was recovered in good condition. Hekl's body was not found.[23]

The wreckage was moved to Dumfries and Galloway Aviation Museum, where the aircraft was slowly restored and a pair of replica wings fitted.[23] Restoration to non-flying condition was completed in 2017.[citation needed]

References

Notes

  1. ^ a b Lewis 1968, p. 96.
  2. ^ "Squadron Commanding Officers, Nos 300 - 361 Squadrons". Air of Authority – A History of RAF Organisation.
  3. ^ a b c d e f van Eyck 1993, p. 16.
  4. ^ a b c d van Eyck 1993, p. 17.
  5. ^ . Speke. South Lancs Aviation. Archived from the original on 30 June 2012. Retrieved 30 September 2006.
  6. ^ Šafařík, Jan Josef (7 April 2010). "Ján K. Ambruš". Air Aces (in Czech). Retrieved 2 February 2018.
  7. ^ a b c d e van Eyck 1993, p. 18.
  8. ^ "Station History". RAF Valley. Ministry of Defence.
  9. ^ a b c Jackson 2003, p. 89.
  10. ^ a b c d e van Eyck 1993, p. 19.
  11. ^ a b c "Miroslav Liskutin – RAF's Czech fighter pilot". Chichester Observer. Johnston Press. 7 July 2017. Retrieved 3 October 2017.
  12. ^ a b Orbis 1985, page 4092
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h van Eyck 1993, p. 20.
  14. ^ "Žijí už jen dva. Letec RAF Liškutín oslavil 97. narozeniny". iDNES (in Czech). 28 August 2016. Retrieved 3 October 2017.
  15. ^ "Otto Smik". Free Czechoslovak Air Force. 19 August 2010. Retrieved 12 November 2017.
  16. ^ . Czech News Agency. 20 February 2014. Archived from the original on 23 September 2015. Retrieved 2 March 2014.
  17. ^ "Czech pilot who fought for UK, France dies at 95". Associated Press. 2 February 2014. Archived from the original on 3 March 2014. Retrieved 2 March 2014.
  18. ^ "Stehlík, Josef" (in Czech). Valka. Retrieved 12 November 2017.
  19. ^ Rawlings 1978, p. 398
  20. ^ Halley 1988, p. 363
  21. ^ Jefford 2001, p. 87
  22. ^ . Dumfries and Galloway Aviation Museum. Archived from the original on 29 December 2018. Retrieved 6 January 2019.
  23. ^ a b c d Moran, Peter (15 March 2013). "Loch Doon Spitfire P7540". Free Czechoslovak Air Force. Retrieved 6 January 2019.

Bibliography

  • 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.
  • Jackson, Robert (2003). Spitfire The History of Britain's Most Famous World War II Fighter. Bath: Parragon. p. 89. ISBN 0-75258-770-6.
  • 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. p. 96. SBN 370-00022-6.
  • Liškutín, Miroslav A (1988). Challenge in the Air: a Spitfire pilot remembers. London: William Kimber. ISBN 0718306910.
  • Polak, Tomas; Rajlich, Jiří; Vancata, Pavel (2008). No. 310 (Czechoslovak) Squadron, 1940–45: Hurricane, Spitfire. France: www.RAF-in-Combat.com. ISBN 978-2-9526381-1-1.
  • Rawlings, John DR (1976) [1969]. Fighter Squadrons of the RAF and their Aircraft (new ed.). London: Macdonald and Jane's (Publishers) Ltd. ISBN 0-354-01028-X.
  • Sitenský, Ladislav (2017). Peruť 312 (in Czech). Translated by Martín Helebrant. Introduction by Jiří Rajlich. Prague: Mladá fronta. ISBN 978-80-204-4627-5.
  • The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Aircraft (Part Work 1982–1985). Orbis Publishing. 1985.
  • van Eyck, Manuel F (1993). Zemřeli jsme pro Anglii (in Czech). Translated by František Fajtl. prologue by František Fajtl. Prague: Naše vojsko. ISBN 80-206-0321-2.

External links

  • "312 Squadron". History RAF Formations. Ministry of Defence.
  • "No. 312 (Czechoslovak) Squadron RAF". RAF Fighter Command 1939 – 1945. RAF Commands. 2013. – movement and equipment history
  • "No 312 (Czechoslovak) Squadron". Air of Authority – A History of RAF Organisation.
  • Darlington, Roger. "Czechoslovaks in the RAF".

czechoslovak, squadron, squadron, czechoslovak, manned, fighter, squadron, royal, force, second, world, badge, czechoslovak, squadron, rafactive29, august, 1940, february, 1946countryunited, kingdomallegianceczechoslovakiabranchraf, fighter, commandrolefighter. No 312 Squadron RAF was a Czechoslovak manned fighter squadron of the Royal Air Force in the Second World War No 312 Czechoslovak Squadron RAFBadge of 312 Czechoslovak Squadron RAFActive29 August 1940 15 February 1946CountryUnited KingdomAllegianceCzechoslovakiaBranchRAF Fighter CommandRoleFighter SquadronNickname s CzechoslovakMotto s Latin Non Multi Sed Multa Not many but much EngagementsDieppe RaidNormandy landingsInsigniaSquadron BadgeA stork volantSquadron CodesDU August 1940 February 1946 Armourers preparing belts of 303 inch ammunition for Hawker Hurricane Mk I DU J Contents 1 History 2 Notable members 3 Aircraft operated 3 1 Loch Doon Spitfire 4 References 4 1 Notes 4 2 Bibliography 5 External linksHistory EditThe squadron was formed at Duxford on 29 August 1940 1 It was crewed mostly by escaped Czechoslovak pilots but its first commander was the British Squadron Leader Frank Tyson 2 On 12 September a Slovak fighter pilot Jan Ambrus was appointed as joint commander of the squadron 3 The plan was for responsibility to be transferred gradually from Tyson to Ambrus Initially the squadron was equipped with Hawker Hurricane Mk I fighters On 26 September the squadron moved to RAF Speke 4 to join the air defence of Merseyside Its first victory was on 8 October 1940 when its Yellow Flight Denys Gillam Alois Vasatko and Josef Stehlik shot down a Junkers Ju 88 medium bomber over Liverpool 5 On 13 October Ambrus led a flight of three Hurricane Mk I fighters on patrol Over the Irish Sea Ambrus mistakenly led the flight to attack two Bristol Blenheim Mk IF light bombers of No 29 Squadron RAF One Blenheim L6637 code letters RO S crashed into the sea off Point of Ayre on the Isle of Man and not far from the Morecambe Bay light ship All three of its crew were killed The other Blenheim L7135 code letters RO S survived with minor damage and returned safely to RAF Ternhill in Shropshire with its crew unharmed 6 Ambrus was relieved of his command and on 12 December Sqn Ldr Evzen Cizek was appointed to succeed him 3 On 17 December Ambrus was transferred to the Inspectorate General of the Czechoslovak Air Force in London On 3 March 1941 the squadron moved to RAF Valley 7 on Anglesey and began flying convoy patrols over the Irish Sea 8 On 24 April the squadron moved to RAF Jurby Isle of Man In May 1941 the squadron was re equipped with the Hurricane Mk II On 27 May Sqn Ldr Jan Klan succeeded Cizek as commanding officer 3 and two days later the squadron moved to RAF Kenley 7 in Surrey Klan s tenure was brief as he was replaced on 5 June with Sqn Ldr Alois Vasatko 3 On 20 July the squadron moved to RAF Martlesham Heath 7 in Suffolk On 19 August it moved again to RAF Heathfield 7 in Ayrshire Scotland The squadron was re equipped with the Supermarine Spitfire Mk IIA in October 1941 and again with the Spitfire Mk VB C in December 9 The squadron spent the first part of 1942 in Wales It moved to RAF Fairwood Common in Glamorgan on 1 January then to RAF Angle in Pembrokeshire on 20 February 7 and then returned to Fairwood Common on 10 April 10 The squadron s duties included coastal patrols and shipping reconnaissance flights 312 Squadron pilots at RAF Harrowbeer in Devon in 1942 just after being decorated by Czechoslovak President Edvard Benes On 23 June 1942 Sqn Ldr Vasatko was killed in action and Sqn Ldr Jan Cermak was appointed to succeed him 3 On 3 July 1942 the squadron moved to RAF Harrowbeer in Devon 10 On 19 August the squadron provided air cover for the Operation Jubilee raid on Dieppe During the raid Miroslav Liskutin cs shot down a Dornier Do 217 bomber 11 and 312 Squadron lost one of its own aircraft citation needed On 10 October 1942 the squadron moved to RAF Church Stanton 10 in Somerset On 1 January 1943 Sqn Ldr Tomas Vybiral succeeded Cermak as squadron commander 3 On 24 June the squadron moved to RAF Skaebrae on Orkney On 7 September the squadron moved to RAF Ibsley 10 in Hampshire and joined the 2nd Tactical Air Force as a fighter bomber unit The squadron operated over France softening up targets in preparation for the invasion and then supporting the landings 12 On 1 November Sqn Ldr Frantisek Vancl succeeded Vybiral as squadron commander 4 In January 1944 the squadron was re equipped with the Spitfire Mk IX 9 From 20 February it spent a few days at RAF Mendlesham in Suffolk before moving on 23 February to RAF Rochford in Essex 10 Mk IXB Spitfires of 312 Squadron at RAF Appledram being repaired outside a camouflaged Butler combat hangar On 3 April 1944 the squadron moved to RAF Appledram in West Sussex 13 From here its operations included intercepting V 1 flying bombs escorting bombers and attacking rail and road targets in German occupied Europe 11 On 15 May Sqn Ldr Jaroslav Hlad o succeeded Vancl as squadron commander 4 On 22 June the squadron moved to nearby RAF Tangmere 13 also in West Sussex From 4 July 1944 the squadron spent a week at RAF Lympne in Kent 13 On 11 July it moved again to RAF Coltishall 13 in Norfolk and operated daytime bomber escort flights over continental Europe 12 However on 27 August its duties were switched to the Air Defence of Great Britain ADGB for which it was moved on RAF North Weald in Essex 13 On 3 October it moved again to RAF Bradwell Bay also in Essex 13 On 15 November 1944 Sqn Ldr Vaclav Slouf succeeded Hlad o as squadron commander 4 From 27 February to 8 June 1945 the squadron was based at RAF Manston 13 in Kent Farewell parade of Czechoslovak squadrons at RAF Manston Kent on 3 August 1945 Air Marshal John Slessor with walking stick inspects some of the men Air Marshal Karel Janousek can be seen behind him On 3 August members of all of the RAF s Czechoslovak squadrons held a farewell parade at RAF Manston Air Marshal John Slessor inspected the parade accompanied by Air Marshal Karel Janousek On 24 August 312 squadron moved to Ruzyne Airport in Prague 13 It became a squadron of the new Czechoslovak Air Force and on 15 February 1946 was officially disbanded as an RAF squadron 1 9 Seven Spitfire F Mk IXs survive today that flew with the squadron in 1944 45 This is by far the largest number of surviving aircraft associated with a single squadron Notable members EditJan Ambrus Miroslav Liskutin cs 11 14 Frantisek Perina Otto Smik 15 Miroslav Standera 16 17 Josef Stehlik 18 Emil Bocek cs last surviving member of the squadron Aircraft operated Edit 19 20 21 A Spitfire Mk IX that served with 312 Squadron From To Aircraft Variant NotesAugust 1940May 1941 May 1941December 1941 Hawker Hurricane IIIb single engined monoplane piston engined fighterOctober 1941November 1941December 1941August 1942September 1943January 1944June 1944 December 1941January 1942February 1944June 1943February 1944June 1944February 1946 Supermarine Spitfire IIaIIbVbVcVcLF IXbHF IX single engine monoplane piston engined fighterAircraft of this squadron used a unit code letters DU Loch Doon Spitfire Edit Spitfire Mk IIA P7540 DU W at Dumfries and Galloway Aviation Museum On 25 October 1941 when 312 Squadron was based at RAF Heathfield F O Frantisek Hekl crashed a Spitfire Mk IIA into a reservoir in Ayrshire on a solo training flight The Spitfire was serial number P7540 carrying the marking DU W 22 An eyewitness the Spitfire flying low over the surface of Loch Doon when Hekl banked the aircraft to starboard and its starboard wingtip caught the water surface Hekl lost control and the aircraft broke up and sank leaving only a patch of oil on the water An RAF salvage crew brought a boat and spent several days trawling parts of the bed of the loch but failed to find either the aircraft or Hekl s body 23 In 1977 the Dumfries branch of the Scottish Sub Aqua Club began a systematic search of the bed of the loch in the area where an eyewitness thought the aircraft had crashed In 1979 several clubs from the Northern Federation of British Sub Aqua Clubs joined the search and Blackpool Sub Aqua Club took over organisation of the project 23 The search was unsuccessful so in 1982 it was moved to a different area of the loch where divers quickly found the Spitfire s tail and rear part of the fuselage In subsequent dives other parts of the aircraft were found scattered over a distance of 200 metres Both wings were badly damaged magnesium parts such as the undercarriage wheels had corroded away but the Merlin Mk XII engine was recovered in good condition Hekl s body was not found 23 The wreckage was moved to Dumfries and Galloway Aviation Museum where the aircraft was slowly restored and a pair of replica wings fitted 23 Restoration to non flying condition was completed in 2017 citation needed References EditNotes Edit a b Lewis 1968 p 96 Squadron Commanding Officers Nos 300 361 Squadrons Air of Authority A History of RAF Organisation a b c d e f van Eyck 1993 p 16 a b c d van Eyck 1993 p 17 08 10 1940 Junkers Ju88 Wk No 4068 Speke South Lancs Aviation Archived from the original on 30 June 2012 Retrieved 30 September 2006 Safarik Jan Josef 7 April 2010 Jan K Ambrus Air Aces in Czech Retrieved 2 February 2018 a b c d e van Eyck 1993 p 18 Station History RAF Valley Ministry of Defence a b c Jackson 2003 p 89 a b c d e van Eyck 1993 p 19 a b c Miroslav Liskutin RAF s Czech fighter pilot Chichester Observer Johnston Press 7 July 2017 Retrieved 3 October 2017 a b Orbis 1985 page 4092 a b c d e f g h van Eyck 1993 p 20 Ziji uz jen dva Letec RAF Liskutin oslavil 97 narozeniny iDNES in Czech 28 August 2016 Retrieved 3 October 2017 Otto Smik Free Czechoslovak Air Force 19 August 2010 Retrieved 12 November 2017 Czech wartime RAF fighter pilot Standera dies aged 95 Czech News Agency 20 February 2014 Archived from the original on 23 September 2015 Retrieved 2 March 2014 Czech pilot who fought for UK France dies at 95 Associated Press 2 February 2014 Archived from the original on 3 March 2014 Retrieved 2 March 2014 Stehlik Josef in Czech Valka Retrieved 12 November 2017 Rawlings 1978 p 398 Halley 1988 p 363 Jefford 2001 p 87 Spitfire P7540 Loch Doon Dumfries and Galloway Aviation Museum Archived from the original on 29 December 2018 Retrieved 6 January 2019 a b c d Moran Peter 15 March 2013 Loch Doon Spitfire P7540 Free Czechoslovak Air Force Retrieved 6 January 2019 Bibliography Edit 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 Jackson Robert 2003 Spitfire The History of Britain s Most Famous World War II Fighter Bath Parragon p 89 ISBN 0 75258 770 6 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 p 96 SBN 370 00022 6 Liskutin Miroslav A 1988 Challenge in the Air a Spitfire pilot remembers London William Kimber ISBN 0718306910 Polak Tomas Rajlich Jiri Vancata Pavel 2008 No 310 Czechoslovak Squadron 1940 45 Hurricane Spitfire France www RAF in Combat com ISBN 978 2 9526381 1 1 Rawlings John DR 1976 1969 Fighter Squadrons of the RAF and their Aircraft new ed London Macdonald and Jane s Publishers Ltd ISBN 0 354 01028 X Sitensky Ladislav 2017 Perut 312 in Czech Translated by Martin Helebrant Introduction by Jiri Rajlich Prague Mlada fronta ISBN 978 80 204 4627 5 The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Aircraft Part Work 1982 1985 Orbis Publishing 1985 van Eyck Manuel F 1993 Zemreli jsme pro Anglii in Czech Translated by Frantisek Fajtl prologue by Frantisek Fajtl Prague Nase vojsko ISBN 80 206 0321 2 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to No 312 Czechoslovak Squadron RAF 312 Squadron History RAF Formations Ministry of Defence No 312 Czechoslovak Squadron RAF RAF Fighter Command 1939 1945 RAF Commands 2013 movement and equipment history No 312 Czechoslovak Squadron Air of Authority A History of RAF Organisation Darlington Roger Czechoslovaks in the RAF Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title No 312 Czechoslovak Squadron RAF amp oldid 1146560096, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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