441 Tactical Fighter Squadron

  • Defence of Britain 1945
  • Fortress Europe 1944
  • Normandy
  • France and Germany 1944-45
  • Arnhem
  • Walcheren
  • Kosovo[1]
InsigniaSquadron BadgeThe head of a silver fox affronteAircraft flownFighterSupermarine Spitfire
North American P-51 Mustang
de Havilland Vampire
Canadair Sabre
Canadair CF-104 Starfighter
McDonnell Douglas CF-18 Hornet
Military unit

441 Tactical Fighter Squadron was a unit of the Canadian Forces. It was originally formed as a unit of the Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF) during the Second World War. The squadron operated the McDonnell Douglas CF-18 Hornet fighter jet from CFB Cold Lake in Alberta, Canada. It was deactivated in 2006.

History

A Canadair Sabre (#23314) formerly of 441 Squadron now refurbished in the colours of the Golden Hawks[2]

No. 125 (Fighter) Squadron was formed on 20 April 1942 at Sydney, Nova Scotia and flew Hurricanes as part of RCAF Eastern Air Command. It was renumbered No. 441 Fighter Squadron when it transferred overseas to RAF Station Digby, Lincolnshire, England, on 8 February 1944, under the command of Squadron Leader George Hill. It was posted to airfields in England, France, and Belgium throughout the Second World War, flying the Supermarine Spitfire. When the squadron returned to England it was disbanded on 7 August 1945.

No 441 Squadron reformed at RCAF Station St. Hubert on 1 March 1951 and went to No 1 Wing, then located at RAF North Luffenham, in Rutland, England on 13 February 1952. The squadron was temporarily situated at 3 Wing Zweibrücken on 21 December 1954, before moving to their intended destination, RCAF Station Marville, France. They were deactivated (disbanded) on 1 September 1963 at Marville and then reactivated (reformed) as No 441 Strike/Attack squadron on 15 September 1963, then moved with 1 Wing to Canadian Forces Base Lahr in April 1967. In 1971 the squadron moved to CFB Baden-Soellingen and changed its name to 441 Tactical Fighter Squadron. They disbanded again in 1986 and then finally reformed at 4 Wing Cold Lake on 26 June 1986.

On 6 July 2006, No 441 Squadron was once again stood down (disbanded), and its crew amalgamating with 416 Tactical Fighter Squadron at CFB Cold Lake and re-formed as 409 Tactical Fighter Squadron. The squadron's colours and battle honours were placed in Sydney, Nova Scotia, where it first operated.

References

  1. ^ "441 Tactical Fighter Squadron". CMP Directorate of History and Heritage. 2013. Retrieved 11 September 2013.
  2. ^ LtCol (Ret'd) Dan Dempsey. "Hawk One: The Return of a Legend" (PDF). Vintage Wings of Canada. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 September 2013. Retrieved 11 September 2013.

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to 441 Squadron RCAF.
  • History of 441 Squadron at DND website
  • No. 441 Squadron at Canadianwings.com
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Squadron
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Pre-WWII Squadrons
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AOP squadrons1
Post-war squadrons
Squadron
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WW2 Canada
1 August 1939 - May 1942
Unit formation in 1940 - May 1942
  • AN
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Dartmouth Hurricanes 1942
May 1942 - 16 October 1942
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1 Aircraft administered and serviced by the RCAF but manned by the Royal Canadian Artillery.
2 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.

3 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

4 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