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No. 268 Squadron RAF

No. 268 Squadron RAF
Active 1918–1919
1940–1945
1945–1946
Country United Kingdom
Branch Royal Air Force
Motto(s) Adjidaumo

No. 268 Squadron RAF was a Second World War Royal Air Force squadron that operated the North American Mustang on missions over occupied Europe and in support of the D-Day landings.

The squadron was formed in August 1918 at Kalafrana, Malta from No. 433 and 434 Flights of the Royal Naval Air Service operating the Short 184 and Short 320 torpedo carrying floatplanes. It operated patrols in the Mediterranean until the end of the First World War and was disbanded on 11 October 1919.

On 30 November 1940 the squadron reformed at RAF Bury St. Edmunds with the Westland Lysander. It first flew anti-invasion sorties along the English coastline but the primary role was tactical reconnaissance. The squadron deployed to RAF Penshurst from 4 to 8 August 1941. It started operations with the Curtiss Tomahawk in October 1941 but these were replaced in April 1942 with the more capable North American Mustang. It converted to the Hawker Typhoon FR IB in July 1944 and continued to support the D-Day landings with tactical reconnaissance sorties.

Built in small numbers, the FR IB was intended for photo-reconnaissance at very low level. One of the Typhoon's four cannon was removed and three F24 cameras were fitted in its place, one 14-inch (360 mm) camera pointing forwards and two vertical 5-inch (130 mm) cameras. However, although the Typhoon well regarded as a combat aircraft, the reconnaissance variant was unpopular with pilots and unsatisfactory in use as inherent engine and airframe vibrations invariably blurred the photographs.

As with many RAF squadrons, 268 Squadron was manned with pilots from a wide range of backgrounds, in part due to programs such as the British Commonwealth Air Training Plan. In September 1944, half its pilots were Canadian, with others from Trinidad, Australia, Malta, Scotland and Wales; later in the year Polish and Indian pilots were transferred in.


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