- No. 39 Squadron Royal Flying Corps during the Great War -
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No. 39 Squadron Royal Flying Corps
No. 39 Squadron, Royal Flying Corps was formed at Hounslow Heath in April 1916. It operated as a Home Defence Squadron protecting the London. It was redesignated No. 39 Squadron, Royal Air Force in April 1918.
29th Jan 1916 Raid
15th April 1916 Home Defence Squadron formed
15th May 1916 New Home Defence Squadron formed No 52 Squadron formed at Hounslow from a nucleus of 39 Squadron on the 15th of May 1916 as a Corps reconnaissance squadron flying BE2Cs.No.39 Squadron then relocated to Suttons Farm, already in use as a outstation of the Squadron.
http://1914-1918.invisionzone.com/forums/index.php?/topic/117679-52-squadron-royal-flying-corps/More info.
16th July 1916
3rd Sep 1916 Air Ship Destroyed
24th Sept 1916
1st Oct 1916
24th Sept 1917
19th Oct 1917
15th Dec 1917 Relocated
20th May 1918 Bombers brought down
5th August 1918 By the beginning of 1917 the German High Command was losing faith in the extremely costly air ships campaign, which overall had wreaked only limited structural damage on Great Britain. From May 1917 most bombing raids were carried out by the Gotha bombers although, with a more limited range, these operations were largely limited to London and the South East. There were only seven airship-raids in 1917 and four in 1918. The final airship raid on Great Britain took place on the 5th August 1918. The command airship was shot down over the North Sea by the gunner of a British DH4 twin-seater aircraft flying from South Denes aerodrome, Great Yarmouth. The German Leader of Airships, Peter Strasser, and his 23 crew were all killed. The remaining four airships hurriedly and mistakenly dropped their bombs into the English Channel and turned for home.The total number of airship attacks on Britain between 1915 and 1918 probably numbered only a total of 12 raids on London and 40 more over the rest of the country, but the Zeppelin was very effective in drawing RFC and RNAS resources away from the battle front. By December 1916 at the height of the Zeppelin threat 17,340 officers and men were in the AA service together with 12 RFC squadrons comprised of 200 officers, 2,000 other ranks and 110 aircraft for home defence duties. By 1918, facing the raids by Gotha bombers, there were 55 Home Defence Squadrons. The threat of bombing certainly reduced the numbers of effective squadrons and trained pilots at the front and thus reduced the pressure on the German front line.
The First Air Raid on Lancashire: The Zeppelin Menace By Scott Carter-Clavell
October 1918If you can provide any additional information, please add it here.
Want to know more about No. 39 Squadron Royal Flying Corps?
There are:13 items tagged No. 39 Squadron Royal Flying Corps available in our Library
These include information on officers, regimental histories, letters, diary entries, personal accounts and information about actions during the Great War.
Those known to have served with
No. 39 Squadron Royal Flying Corps
during the Great War 1914-1918.
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Records of No. 39 Squadron Royal Flying Corps from other sources.
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