779 Naval Air Squadron

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779 Naval Air Squadron
Latin for 'The end crowns the work')
Insignia
Squadron BadgeBendy of four gold and black, a roundle per fess white and green chief a triple-towered battlement proper base a key fesswise wards uppermost gold (1944)[2]
Identification MarkingsOn some aircraft consisted of single letters[3]
Fairey Swordfish Mk II

779 Naval Air Squadron (779 NAS) was a Naval Air Squadron of the Royal Navy's Fleet Air Arm. Formed as a Fleet Requirements Unit, in October 1941, at R.N. Air Section Gibraltar. It operated a small variety of aircraft for target towing and coastal defence. In 1943, the squadron received some Bristol Beaufighter aircraft and a detachment of these deployed to Taranto, after which they also saw service at various airbases around North Africa. It disbanded, during August 1945, at Gibraltar.

History of 779 NAS

Fleet Requirements Unit (1941 - 1945)

779 Naval Air Squadron formed as a Fleet Requirements Unit, on 1 October 1941, at R.N. Air Section Gibraltar (the

Hawker Sea Hurricane, a navalised version of the Hawker Hurricane fighter aircraft, were also used, but in April 1943, a target tug variant of the Boulton Paul Defiant interceptor aircraft replaced the Blackburn Skua aircraft.[3]

Later in the year the squadron received a number of

RAF Oujda, Blida, Maison Blanche and La Senia.[4] Miles Martinet target tug aircraft replaced the Boulton Paul Defiants in June 1944, and the squadron consisted two Fairey Swordfish, three Bristol Beaufighters, two Hawker Sea Hurricanes and nine Miles Martinets.[3] 779 Naval Air Squadron disbanded at R.N. Air Section Gibraltar, North Front on 5 August 1945.[4]

Aircraft operated

The squadron operated a number of different aircraft types, including: [2][5]

Naval Air Stations

779 Naval Air Squadron operated from a naval air station of the Royal Navy, overseas and number of other airbases:[2]

  • R N Air Section GIBRALTAR
    (1 October 1941 - 5 August 1945)
    • Taranto Detachment (18 - 22 September 1943)
    • Blida Detachment (19 October 1943 - 12 October 1944)
    • R N Air Section Tafaraoui Detachment (27 October 1943 - 21 May 1944)
    • RAF Oujda
      Detachment (26 January - 16 February 1944)
    • Maison Blanche Detachment (22 February - 23 May 1944)
    • La Senia Detachment (3 March - 3 August 1944)
  • disbanded - (5 August 1945)

Commanding Officers

List of commanding officers of 779 Naval Air Squadron with month and year of appointment:[3][2][5]

  • Lieutenant Commander(A) B.F. Cox, RNVR, from 1 October 1941
  • Lieutenant Commander(A) L. Gilbert, RNVR, from 17 January 1942
  • Lieutenant Commander(A) J.M. Keene-Miller, RNVR, from 22 June 42
  • Lieutenant Commander(A) C.R. Holman, RNR, from 1 May 1943
  • Lieutenant Commander(A) E.L. Meicklejohn, RNVR, from 14 September 1943
  • disbanded - 5 August 1945

References

Citations

  1. ^ Sturtivant & Ballance 1994, p. 100.
  2. ^ a b c d e Ballance, Howard & Sturtivant 2016, p. 82.
  3. ^ a b c d Wragg 2019, p. 133.
  4. ^ a b c "North Front". Royal Navy Research Archive - Fleet Air Arm Bases 1939 - present day. Retrieved 10 February 2024.
  5. ^ a b "779 NAS Fleet Air Arm". wings-aviation.ch. Retrieved 10 February 2024.

Bibliography


The 779 Fleet Requirement unit was formed as the Gibraltar fleet requirement unit on 1 October 1941 with just two Skuas for target towing and coastal defence, later acquiring a small number of Swordfish as well as Defiants, Fulmars and Sea Hurricanes. Variety of aircraft later included Beaufighters IIs, while detachments saw service in Italy and North Africa, but two Swordfish remained in the squadron to the end of the war.