No. 48 Squadron RAF
No. 48 Squadron was a Royal Air Force squadron that saw service in both the First and Second World Wars.
History
First World War
No. 48 Squadron of the Royal Flying Corps was formed at Netheravon, Wiltshire, on 15 April 1916. The squadron was posted to France in March 1917 and became the first fighter squadron to be equipped with the Bristol Fighter. One of the squadron's commanders was Keith Park, then a Major, who later led No. 11 Group of Fighter Command during the Battle of Britain as an Air Vice Marshal. The squadron became part of the Royal Air Force when the Royal Flying Corps merged with the Royal Naval Air Service in 1918. It moved by sea to India during May/June 1919, being based at Quetta. On 1 April 1920 the squadron was disbanded by renumbering it to No. 5 Squadron.The squadron had 32 aces serve in it. Besides Park, they included:
Fred Holliday,
John Letts,
Brian Edmund Baker,
Harold Anthony Oaks,
Leonard A. PayneRobert Dodds,
John Theobald Milne,
Charles Napier,
Frank Ransley,
Alan Wilkinson,
Thomas Percy Middleton,
William Price, future Air Marshal
Charles Steele,
Norman Craig Millman,
Thomas G. Rae,
Owen Scholte, Harold Johnstone Pratt, Hugh Leslie Owen,
Roger Hay,
Norman Roberts,
Joseph Michael John Moore,
Arthur Noss
and Maurice Benjamin.
Second World War
The squadron reformed on 25 November 1935 at RAF Bicester, and became a General Reconnaissance unit operating Avro Anson aircraft. It moved into RAF Coastal Command on 14 July 1936. With the outbreak of war in 1939 the squadron was engaged in coastal patrols along the south coast of England. In 1941 the squadron re-equipped with Lockheed Hudson aircraft and took on the role of an anti-submarine squadron, patrolling first the North Sea; in December 1942 the squadron moved to RAF Gibraltar to patrol the Mediterranean.In 1944 the squadron returned to the UK and was re-equipped with Douglas Dakota aircraft. It remained a transport squadron until being disbanded on 16 January 1946. During this period it operated from Chittagong, Bengal, India on supply operations in the Irrawaddy valley of Burma.