No. 255 Squadron RAF
Former flying squadron of the Royal Air Force / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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No. 255 Squadron RAF was a Royal Air Force Squadron formed as an anti-submarine unit in First World War and a night-fighter unit in the Second World War. The First World War squadron was formed from former Royal Naval Air Service coastal flights and was responsible for coastal anti-submarine patrols. It was disbanded after the war.
No. 255 Squadron RAF | |
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Active | 6 July 1918 – 14 January 1919 23 November 1940 – 30 April 1946 |
Country | United Kingdom |
Branch | Royal Air Force |
Motto(s) | Latin: Ad Auroram ("To the break of dawn")[1] |
Mascot(s) | (1942) A Bull Mastiff |
Insignia | |
Squadron badge heraldry | A panther’s head cabossed Sable eyed and tongued proper[2] |
Squadron codes | YD (November 1940 – April 1946) |
During the Second World War the squadron operated as a night fighter unit, at first with the Boulton Paul Defiant and later the Bristol Beaufighter. It served in the United Kingdom from 1940 to 1942 when it moved to operate in North Africa and then Italy, where it remained until the end of the war. It subsequently served in Malta, and then Egypt, before being disbanded in 1946.