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No. 422 (Flying Yachtsman) Squadron RCAF | |
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Active | 1942-1980 |
Country | Canada |
Branch | Royal Canadian Air Force |
Nickname(s) | Flying Yachtsman Tomahawk |
Equipment | Canadair CF-104 Starfighter |
Battle honours | Atlantic 1942-45, English Channel and North Sea 1944-45, Normandy 1944, Biscay 1944-45, Arctic 1942. |
No. 422 Squadron RCAF was a unit of the Royal Canadian Air Force, formed during World War II.
422 General Reconnaissance Squadron formed at RAF Castle Archdale near Lough Erne, Northern Ireland, in April 1942. It was a flying-boat squadron, flying Cansos and Short Sunderlands to patrol the North Atlantic for German U-boats. They were redesignated a Transport Squadron in June 1945, and disbanded in September 1945.
The squadron was reformed at RCAF Station Uplands in January 1953 as 422 Fighter Squadron. The squadron went to 4 Wing RCAF Station Baden-Soellingen in August 1953, becoming part of the Canadian Armed Forces in 1968. Becoming 422 Fighter Squadron, CAF, it remaining there until deactivation in July 1970.
The squadron was reactivated as 422 Tactical Helicopter Squadron in January 1971, and remained a helicopter squadron until it was disbanded in August 1980.
Aircraft
422 General Reconnaissance Squadron
422 Fighter Squadron
422 Tactical Helicopter Squadron
References
- "422 Tactical Helicopter Squadron". Canada: Directorate of History and Heritage, Department of National Defence. Retrieved 28 March 2017.
- ^ Department of National Defence (29 December 2008). "400 Series - 422 Tactical Helicopter Squadron". Archived from the original on 11 June 2011. Retrieved 18 January 2021.
Royal Canadian Air Force squadrons | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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Aircraft administered and serviced by the RCAF but manned by the Royal Canadian Artillery.
Non-standard code as unit using OW added L. Letters normally denoted parent Command, aircraft type (L Liberator transport, D Dakota etc), unit, and individual aircraft. VCXXA where VC was the civil code used by the RCAF replacing CF-, XX was the unit code and A was the aircraft ID letter XXnnn where XX was the unit code and nnn was the last 3 digits of the serial number. Unit code was replaced with "RCAF" in 1958 |
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