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No. 409 Squadron Badge: In front of a cloak a crossbow Motto: Media nor meridies noster (Midnight is our noon) Authority: King George VI, March 1944 The crossbow in front of a dark cloak indicates the unit's functions as a night fighter squadron. |
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Formed at Digby, Lincolnshire, England on 7 June 1941 as the RCAF's seventh -- second Night Fighter squadron formed overseas, the unit flew Beaufighter and Mosquito aircraft in the night air defence of Britain and Allied forces in North-West Europe. It was the first night fighter squadron to cross over to Normandy following the Allied landings and operate from the Continent, and the first to be stationed in Belgium and Germany. For the period June 1944 to May 1945, it was the top-scoring RAF/RCAF night fighter unit, with 581/2 aircraft and 12 V-l flying bombs destroyed. The squadron was disbanded at Twente, in The Netherlands, on 1 July 1945. Brief Chronology: Formed at Digby, Lincs., Eng. 17 Jun 41.
Disbanded at Twente, Neth. Title or Nickname: "Nighthawk" Adoption City of Victoria, B.C. Commanders W/C N.B. Petersen 17 Jun 41 - 2 Sep 41 KIFA. Higher Formations and Squadron Locations Fighter Command renamed Air Defence Great Britain (15 Nov 43): Second Tactical Air Force: Operational History: First Mission 3 August 1941, Defiant from Coleby Grange -- aerodrome patrol. First Victory 1 November 1941, Beaufighter II from Coleby Grange with W/C Davoud and Sgt T. Carpenter (RAF, navigator) night readiness, scrambled and credited with a Do.217 destroyed 70 miles east of Digby. Triple Victory 23/24 April 1945, Mosquito XIII HK429 KP-D from Rheine with F/O E. Hermanson and F/L D. Hamm (navigator) patrol; credited with 2 Ju.87's and 1 Fw.190 destroyed. Last Mission 2 May 1945, 6 Mosquito XIII's from Rheine front line patrol; 2 returned early with radar problems, 2 called back early owing to lack of enemy activity, and 2 completed uneventful patrols. Summary Sorties: 2313. Operational/Non-operational Flying Hours: 7514/24,424. Victories: Aircraft: 651/2 destroyed, 7 probably destroyed, 24 damaged. V-l: 12 destroyed. Casualties: Operational: 17 aircraft; 52 aircrew (including 6 RAF) killed or missing. Squadron Ace F/L R.I.E. Britten, DFC 5-0-1. Honours and Awards 2 MBE, 1 DSO, 1 bar to DFC, 13 DFC's, 2 AFC's, 2 BEM's, 7 MiD's, 1 DFC (USA). Battle Honours Defence of Britain 1941-1944. Fortress Europe 1942-1944. France and Germany 1944-1945: Nomandy 1944, Rhine. Post War Formed as an All-Weather (Fighter) unit at Comox, British Columbia on 1 November 1954, the squadron flew CF-100 and CF-101 aircraft on North American (West Coast) air defence duty, and on 1 February 1968 was integrated into the Canadian Armed Forces. Brief Chronology Formed at Comox, B.C. 1 Nov 54. Integrated into CAF 1 Feb 68. Nickname "Nighthawk" Operational History: First CF101 alert began 0001 PST 19 Mar 62 Commanders S/L F.E. Haley, CD 1 Nov 54 - 4 Mar 56. Higher Formations and Squadron Locations North American Air Defence Command (12 Sep 57), |