No. 162 Squadron RCAF explained

Unit Name:162 Osprey Squadron RCAF
Dates:1942-1945
Country: Canada
Allegiance: Canada
Branch: Royal Canadian Air Force
Role:Bomber Reconnaissance
Command Structure:Eastern Air Command, RAF Coastal Command
Nickname:Osprey
Motto:Sectabimur usque per ima. (We will hunt them even through the lowest deeps)
Battles:Second World War
Battle Honours:North-West Atlantic 1942-44[1]
Disbanded:7 August 1945
Commander1:C. W. G. Chapman
Commander1 Label:Wing Commander (W/C)
Aircraft Bomber:Consolidated Canso

No. 162 Squadron RCAF was a unit of Royal Canadian Air Force Eastern Air Command. Formed as a bomber reconnaissance squadron at RCAF Station Yarmouth, Nova Scotia, Canada on 19 May 1942 with Canso A aircraft, the squadron spent an uneventful eighteen months on east coast anti-submarine duty.[2] [3] In January 1944, it was seconded to RAF Coastal Command and moved to RAF Reykjavik, Iceland to cover the mid-ocean portion of the North Atlantic shipping route. On April 17, Flying Officer T. C. Cooke and his crew attacked and sank U-342 while on a meteorological flight west of Iceland.

In May 1944, a large detachment of the squadron moved east to RAF Wick, Scotland to support the invasion of Normandy. Its task was to intercept U-boats operating from Norwegian ports. While in Scotland, No. 162 sank four German submarines and shared in the sinking of a fifth that tried to break through the North Transit Area to attack the Allied D-Day invasion fleet. These engagements took place in the Norwegian Sea roughly 200 miles north of the Shetland Islands, for example at .

Flight Lieutenant (F/L) D.E. Hornell won the Victoria Cross for attacking and sinking U-1225 on June 24, 1944, despite withering anti-aircraft fire from the U-boat.[4]

No. 162 left RAF Wick for Camp Maple Leaf at RAF Reykjavik in August, and remained there until it returned to Canada in June 1945. It was the RCAF's most successful anti-submarine squadron during the Second World War with five U-boats destroyed, one shared sinking and one U-boat damaged. The squadron flew the Canso during its entire operational lifetime. From the beginning of operations until the end of the war, the squadron flew 2,100 sorties and lost 6 aircraft and 34 crew on operations, with a further 3 aircraft and 8 crew lost non-operationally.

The squadron was disbanded at Sydney, Nova Scotia on August 7, 1945.

A Canso at the Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum is restored in the markings and colors of No. 162 Squadron, Royal Canadian Air Force. The museum is located in Hamilton, Ontario.

Honours and awards

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.vac-acc.gc.ca/remembers/sub.cfm?source=history/secondwar/battlegulf/airforce
  2. Book: Wikene , I. . Les . Wilkinson . I'll Never Forget...Canadian Aviation In The Second World War . Canadian Aviation Historical Society . Willowdale, Ontario . 1979 . 47–54 . Canso & Catalina In The R.C.A.F . 0-920610-00-5 . registration . https://archive.org/details/illneverforgetca0000unse/page/47 .
  3. Book: Douglas . William Alexander Binney . The Official History of the Royal Canadian Air Force vol. 2 The Creation of a National Air Force . 1986 . Department of National Defence . Canada . 0-8020-2584-6 . 592–593 .
  4. Book: Milberry . L. . Aviation in Canada : evolution of an air force . 212–219 . CANAV Books . 2010 . Toronto . 9780921022237.