No. 652 Squadron RAF | |
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Active | 1 May 1942 – 1 September 1957 |
Country |
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Branch |
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Role | Air Observation Post Squadron |
Motto(s) |
Latin: Sive aere sive campo (Translation: "In the air and in the field") |
Insignia | |
Squadron badge heraldry | In front of wings conjoined in base, a gun barrel fesswise |
Identification symbol |
XM (Sep 1946 – 1951) |
Aircraft flown | |
Reconnaissance |
de Havilland Tiger Moth Taylorcraft Auster Auster AOP.6 |
No. 652 Squadron RAF was a unit of the Royal Air Force during the Second World War and afterwards in Germany. Numbers 651 to 663 Squadrons of the RAF were Air Observation Post units working closely with Army units in artillery spotting and liaison. A further three of these squadrons, 664, 665 and 666, were AOP units of the Royal Canadian Air Force manned by Canadian and British personnel. Their duties and squadron numbers were transferred to the Army with the formation of the Army Air Corps on 1 September 1957.
No. 652 Squadron was formed at RAF Old Sarum, Wiltshire, on 1 May 1942 and went into action in Normandy on 7 June 1944 in support of the British Second Army and the Operation Overlord landings. Most of its pilots and observers came from the British Army, while maintenance was carried out by RAF personnel. The squadron moved with the Second Army through France, Belgium and the Netherlands into Germany.
'C' Flight, No. 652 Squadron RAF has been credited with firing the last British shots of the war in Europe while directing artillery fire at the siege of Dunkirk on 7 May 1945, sharing in this action with No. 665 Squadron RCAF.
After the German surrender it remained as part of the British Air Forces of Occupation, later of the 2nd Tactical Air Force, until September 1957, when it was merged into the Army Air Corps. It will be a Lynx Wildcat OCU Squadron in the future.