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No. 47 Squadron

Hercules C-130J
Image courtesy of Richard Ross

No 47 Squadron was formed on 1st March 1916 at Beverley, East Yorkshire with BE2cs and Armstrong Whitworth FK3s which were joined by Bristol Scouts in June.

In September it left for Greece, arriving at Salonika on 20th September, to join a British, French and Serbian force holding an area of Macedonia, against the Bulgarian and Austro-Hungarian armies. Its initial equipment in Greece was the FK.3 and BE12.

Armstrong Whitworth FK.3
Crown Copyright

Two flights operated reconnaissance aircraft and one flight fighters. The fighter flight operated the DH2 from June 1917 until April 1918 when it was transferred to 150 Sqn.
When the Bulgarian army was forced into retreat, the squadron was engaged in bombing raids on escape routes until Bulgaria signed an Armistice.

As was common in theatres other than the Western Front, the squadron used a variety of aircraft until the last months of the war. The FK3s and DH2s were joined by FB19, BE12a, BE2e, SE5a and M1c. From the early spring of 1918 most of these disparate types were replaced by FK8s which, in August, were joined by DH9s.

de Havilland DH.9
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In April 1919 the squadron left Greece for Novorossiysk in southern Russia. Although nominally a training unit, the squadron operated in support of the White Russian Army fighting the Bolsheviks. In August and September respectively, the squadron received DH9As and Camels. On 20th October the squadron formally disbanded, being redesignated A Squadron RAF Mission. A Squadron was a “volunteer” unit and operated under its own flag, in place of the Royal Air Force ensign. This arrangement was agreed in Parliament as the best way to avoid entanglement in the ongoing Russian civil war and there followed many brave feats of aviation from 47 Squadron. Since then the Squadron has been the only RAF Squadron to have its own special flag, which has proudly flown outside No. 47 Squadron HQs. Additionally, its aircrew wear a tri-colour patch on their flying overalls.

On 1st February 1920 206 Sqn at Helwan was renumbered 47 Sqn. Equipped at first with D.H. 9s these were replaced, from June, by D.H.9As which served for the next 8 years. In 1921 it stationed a detachment at Khartoum to co-operate with ground forces in the Sudan in policing the desert areas.

In October 1927 this detachment was joined by the rest of the squadron and from December Fairey IIIFs began to replace the DH9As. In mid-1933 these were replaced by Gordons which were joined in July 1936 by Vincents.

Fairey IIIF
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Wellesleys arrived in June 1939 to join and eventually replace the Gordons and Vincents; with a flight of Vincents being retained for army co-operation duties until June 1940.

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