No. 150 Squadron RAF
{{Short description|Defunct flying squadron of the Royal Air Force}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2025}}
{{Use British English|date=August 2015}}
{{Infobox military unit
|unit_name= No. 150 Squadron RAF
|image= Vickers Wellington at Blida - Royal Air Force Operations in the Middle East and North Africa, 1939-1943 CNA192.jpg
|image_size= 300px
|caption= A Vickers Wellington of 150 Squadron being prepared for a night raid on Bizerte
|dates= 1918–1919
1938–1945
1959–1963
|country=United Kingdom
|allegiance=
|branch= Royal Air Force
|type=
|role= *Fighter
|size=
|command_structure=
|garrison= Salonika, Greece
|garrison_label= Formed at
|nickname=
|patron=
|motto={{Language with name/for|el|Αιει Φθανομεν|Always Ahead|break=yes}}{{cite book|last1=Pine|first1=L.G.|title=A dictionary of mottoes|date=1983|publisher=Routledge & Kegan Paul|location=London|isbn=0-7100-9339-X|page=[https://archive.org/details/dictionaryofmott00tion/page/269 269]|edition=1|url=https://archive.org/details/dictionaryofmott00tion/page/269}}
|colors=
|colors_label=
|march=
|mascot=
|equipment=
|equipment_label=
|battles=*First World War
|anniversaries=
|decorations=
|battle_honours=
|disbanded= 9 April 1963
|commander1=
|commander1_label=
|commander2=
|commander2_label=
|commander3=
|commander3_label=
|notable_commanders=
|identification_symbol=File:No. 150 Squadron RAF badge.gif
|identification_symbol_label=Squadron badge{{efn|In front of a cross voided, two arrows in saltire, the points uppermost. The cross is adopted in reference to the arms of Greece.}}
|identification_symbol_2=
|identification_symbol_2_label=
|identification_symbol_3=
|identification_symbol_3_label=
|identification_symbol_4=
|identification_symbol_4_label=
|aircraft_attack=
|aircraft_bomber=*Fairey Battle
|aircraft_electronic=
|aircraft_fighter= *Bristol M.1c
|aircraft_helicopter=
|aircraft_interceptor=
|aircraft_patrol=
|aircraft_recon=
|aircraft_trainer=
|aircraft_transport=
}}
No. 150 Squadron RAF was an aircraft squadron of the Royal Air Force during World War I and World War II.Gunston (1978) In the early 1960s it was briefly reformed as a Strategic Missile squadron operating the Thor IRBM.
World War I
The squadron was founded in April 1918 at Salonika, Greece with elements from both No. 17 Squadron RAF and No. 47 Squadron RAF. It was equipped with Bristol M.1c, Royal Aircraft Factory SE.5a, and Sopwith Camel aircraft during its World War I service. Ten aces served with the unit, including such notables as Gerald Gordon Bell, Charles D. B. Green, Douglas Arthur Davies, Acheson Goulding, Frederick Dudley Travers, Franklin Saunders, Arthur Jarvis, George Gardiner, and Leslie Hamilton.Shores, Franks & Guest (1990), p. 40
World War II
File:150 Squadron Wellington crew Tunisia WWII IWM CNA 1271.jpg crew are briefed at Kairouan, Tunisia, for a raid on targets in the Salerno area.{{efn|The photograph is captioned by the Imperial War Museum as being a briefing conducted by S/L Langlois RAAF, the then CO. In fact, the officer shown was almost certainly his successor, Squadron Leader W.Desmond Boxwell DFC, who was immortalised in "The Wimpy Song" celebrating the Desert Air Force and sung to a Bowdlerised version of Lily Marlene.}}]]
It reformed in 1938 equipped with Fairey Battle light bombers, taking them to France as part of the Advanced Air Striking Force in September 1939. It received heavy losses in attempting to oppose the German invasion of France in May 1940, being evacuated back to England by 20 May.{{cite web |url=http://www.raf.mod.uk/history/150squadron.cfm |title=150 Squadron |website=Royal Air Force |access-date=29 December 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170818133150/https://www.raf.mod.uk/history/150squadron.cfm |archive-date=18 August 2017 |url-status=dead }}Melinsky (1971), p. 105.
It re-equipped with Vickers Wellingtons in October 1940, at RAF Newton. It moved to RAF Snaith in July 1941 becoming operational with Vickers Wellington 1Cs. It moved to the Mediterranean Theatre in December 1942, flying its Wellingtons from Blida in Algeria against targets in Tunisia and Sardinia. It moved to Tunisia in May 1943, and to bases in Italy in December, disbanding in October 1944.
It reformed again in November 1944 at RAF Fiskerton in Lincolnshire, equipped with the Avro Lancaster heavy bomber. It soon moved to RAF Hemswell, flying 827 operational sorties and dropping 3,827 tons of bombs while losing eight aircraft and 40 aircrew. It was involved in Operation Manna to drop food supplies to starving Dutch civilians at the end of the War in Europe, and after the end of hostilities, was used to repatriate POWs from Europe back to the United Kingdom. It was disbanded again on 7 November 1945.
Cold war
The squadron was reformed – as No. 150 (SM) Squadron – on 8 January 1959 as one of 20 Strategic Missile (SM) squadrons associated with Project Emily. The squadron was equipped with three Thor Intermediate range ballistic missiles, and based at RAF Carnaby in Yorkshire. In October 1962, during the Cuban Missile Crisis, the squadron was kept at full readiness, with the missiles aimed at strategic targets in the USSR. The squadron was disbanded on 9 April 1963, as the Thor Program in Britain was brought to a close.
Notable pilots
References
;Notes
{{notelist}}
;Citations
{{reflist}}
;Bibliography
- {{cite book |title=The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Combat Aircraft of World War II |last=Gunston |first=Bill |author-link=Bill Gunston |year=1978 |publisher=Salamander Books Ltd. |isbn=0-89673-000-X |url=https://archive.org/details/illustratedencyc00guns }}
- {{cite magazine |last1=Melinsky |first1= M. A. H |title=Your Questions Answered; No 150 Squadron RAF |magazine=Air Pictorial |date=March 1971}}
- {{cite book |last1=Shores |first1=Christopher |last2=Franks |first2=Norman |last3=Guest |first3=Russell |title=Above The Trenches: A Complete Record of the Fighter Aces and Units of the British Empire Air Forces 1915–1920 |year=1990 |location=London |publisher=Grub Street |isbn=0-948817-19-4}}
External links
{{Commons category|No. 150 Squadron RAF}}
- {{cite web |url=http://www.epibreren.com/ww2/raf/150_squadron.html |title=No. 150 Squadron, 10 May to 30 June 1940 |website=Traces of World War 2 |year=2008}}
- {{cite web |url=http://www.historyofwar.org/air/units/RAF/150_wwII.html |title=No. 150 Squadron (RAF): Second World War |website=Military History Encyclopedia on the Web |first=J. |last=Rickard |year=2008}}
- {{cite web |url=http://www.rafweb.org/Squadrons/Sqn146-150.htm |title=No. 146-150 Squadron Histories |website=Air of Authority – A History of RAF Organisation |first=M. B. |last=Barrass |year=2016}}
{{RAF squadrons}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:No. 150 Squadron Raf}}
Category:Military units and formations established in 1918
Category:Military units and formations disestablished in 1963