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No. 99 Squadron

Image courtesy of Brent Maartens

99 Squadron was formed on 15th August 1917, at Yatesbury in Wiltshire and moved at the end of the month to Ford Farm. It was initially equipped with the normal selection of training aircraft and obsolescent combat types. In March 1918 it received its intended combat type, the de Havilland DH.9 Bomber, in preparation for its move to France in late April.

de Havilland DH9A of the type flown by 99 Squadron
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The squadron was sent to the area south of Nancy, at the southern end of the Western Front; initially to Tantonville, and then on 5th June to Azelot where it was to stay for the remainder of the war. It formed part of Trenchards Independent Bombing Force tasked to bomb targets in the German homeland up to the Rhine.

de Havilland DH9A of the type flown by 99 Squadron
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During this period the squadron was plagued by unreliability of the aircrafts Puma engines and a shortage of spares. In August it began to receive the replacement DH9A but the transition was still ongoing when the war ended.

In May 1919 the squadron embarked on the SS Magwa and SS Syria to deploy to India. The squadron operated from Ambula and Mianwali, flying patrols over the North-West Frontier. On the 1st April 1920 the squadron was disbanded, being renumbered 27 Squadron.

Vickers Vimy
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99 Squadron reformed on the 1st April 1924 at Netheravon with the Vickers Vimy; moving at the end of May to its intended base of Bircham Newton. From August the Vimy was replaced by the Aldershot III, but at the end of 1925 these were in turn replaced with the Hyderabad.

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