No. 3 Squadron was formed at Point Cook, Victoria, on 19 September 1916 under the command of Major David Blake.[4] It was one of four operational squadrons of the Australian Flying Corps, and its personnel were members of the Australian Army. Shortly afterwards, the unit embarked upon the HMAT Ulysses and sailed to England for training, before becoming the first AFC squadron deployed to France, in September 1917, equipped with the R.E.8 two-seat reconnaissance/general purpose aircraft.[5] To avoid confusion with the British No. 3 Squadron RFC, it was known to the British military as "No. 69 Squadron RFC".[6] This terminology was never accepted by the squadron or the Australian Imperial Force who continued to use the AFC designation regardless,[7] and in early 1918, the British designation was dropped.[4]
R.E.8s of No 3 Sqn AFC
After moving to the Western Front, the squadron was initially based at Savy. In November 1917, it was assigned the role of a corps reconnaissance squadron and allocated to I Anzac Corps, which was based around Messines, and established itself at Bailleul.[4] No. 3 Squadron would remain with I Anzac for the remainder of the war,[4] and participated in bombing, artillery spotting and reconnaissance missions supporting ANZAC and other British Empire ground forces. Its first air-to-air victory came on 6 December 1917; by the end of the war its aircrews had been credited with another 15 German aircraft,[4] and a total of 10,000 operational hours.[8]
In early 1918, the collapse of Russia allowed the Germans to concentrate their strength on the Western Front, and launched a major offensive.[9] As the Allies were pushed back, the squadron's airfield at Baileul came into range of the German guns and it was moved first to Abeele and then, as the Allies were pushed back further, it moved again to Poulainville.[10] During the offensive, the squadron operated mainly in the Somme Valley, providing artillery observation.[5] In April 1918, the squadron became responsible for the remains of the "Red Baron", Manfred von Richthofen, after he was shot down in its sector.[10] Blake initially believed that one of the squadron's R.E.8s may have been responsible but later endorsed the theory that an Australian anti-aircraft machine gunner actually shot down the Red Baron.[11] In July, the squadron undertook reconnaissance and deception operations in support of the Australian attack at Hamel,[12] before later joining the final Allied offensive of the war around Amiens in August, flying support operations until the armistice in November.[5] Shortly before the end of the war, the squadron began converting to the Bristol F.2 Fighter.[10]
Following the end of hostilities, the squadron was engaged briefly in mail transport duties before being withdrawn to the United Kingdom in early 1919. It was disbanded in February and over the course of the next couple of months its personnel were repatriated back to Australia.[5][10] Casualties amounted to 32 killed and 23 wounded,[5] of which the majority were aircrew; the squadron lost 11 aircraft during the war.[13]
No. 3 Squadron ground crew in front of a P-40 in 1942.
At the outbreak of World War II, the squadron was one of 12 permanent RAAF squadrons. It was initially given an army co-operation role, and was deployed to the Middle East in mid-1940, to support the 6th Division of the Australian Army.[15] The squadron was to spend the entire war in the Mediterranean theatre, and became part of the Allies' Desert Air Force (later the First Tactical Air Force), supporting the 8th Army.[16]
Commanded by Squadron Leader Ian McLachlan,[14] the squadron's personnel travelled by sea to Egypt, where it was to be provided with aircraft from RAF stocks. Initially, it used two obsolete biplane types, the Gloster Gauntlet and Gloster Gladiator, for close air support, along with the Westland Lysander, for reconnaissance sorties, against Italian forces in Egypt and Libya.[17] In the course of these operations, the squadron clashed with aircraft from the Regia Aeronautica. It then, briefly, operated the Hawker Hurricane instead, before converting to the Curtiss P-40B/C Tomahawk in 1941. It saw action against Vichy French aircraft during the Syria–Lebanon campaign.[18]
With the Tomahawk and its successor, the Kittyhawk (P-40D – P-40N), the squadron returned to the North African campaign, during which it often engaged in intense air battles with state of the art fighters operated by the Reggia Aeronautica (such as the Macchi C.202) and GermanLuftwaffe (Messerschmitt Bf 109E/F), during 1941–1943.[18] There is evidence that 3 Sqn was the DAF Kittyhawk squadron that attacked German ground forces at Mezzouna, Tunisia, on 3 April 1943 and caused, in the process, severe injuries to Claus Von Stauffenberg (who would, the following year, attempt to assassinate Adolf Hitler, as part of a failed coup against the Nazi regime).[19]
A CAC CA-18 Mustang warbird painted to represent a North American P-51 Mustang of No. 3 Squadron used in Italy during World War II
No. 3 Squadron's longest-serving commanding officer (CO) during the war was Squadron LeaderBobby Gibbes, whose tour lasted from February 1942 to April 1943.[20] Gibbes was replaced by Squadron Leader Brian Eaton, who led the unit until February 1944.[21] During this period, No. 3 Squadron took part in the Allied invasions of Sicily and Italy. It re-equipped with P-51 Mustangs in November 1944 and continued to operate in Italy and Yugoslavia until the end of the European war in May 1945. No. 3 Squadron's record of 25,663 operational flight hours and 217.5 enemy aircraft destroyed made it the highest-scoring RAAF fighter squadron.[15][22]
After 15 years deployed to Malaysia, No. 3 Squadron returned to Australia, and after transferring aircraft and personnel to No. 79 Squadron, on 29 August 1986 No. 3 Squadron became the first operational RAAF unit to receive F/A-18 Hornets.[22]
Post-Cold War
Two No. 3 Squadron Hornets in 2013
The squadron continues to operate the Hornets from its home base at RAAF Base Williamtown. In February 2002, during the Afghanistan War, elements of No. 3 Squadron were deployed to Diego Garcia, in the Indian Ocean, to relieve No. 77 Squadron, providing air defence for the Coalition base there.[27] No. 3 Squadron personnel also participated in Operation Falconer, No. 75 Squadron's deployment to the Iraq War during 2003, conducting air interdiction operations and combat air patrols.[28][29] The squadron currently forms part of the Air Combat Group's No. 81 Wing RAAF.[30] In April 2016, No. 3 Squadron deployed to the Middle East during Operation Okra as part of the military intervention against ISIL, taking over from No. 77 Squadron.[31]
On 8 December 2017, No. 3 Squadron ceased F/A-18 flight operations, followed by the disbandment of the squadron, under Wing Commander John Haly on 14 December 2017 and subsequent re-establishment of the squadron at Luke AFB in Arizona, under command of Wing Commander Darren Clare.[32] All of its Hornets and most of its personnel were transferred to No. 77 Squadron.[33] As of February 2018, No. 3 Squadron was equipped with two Lockheed Martin F-35 Lightning IIs and was scheduled to have ten of the type by the end of the year. It was planned to dispatch two of these F-35s to Australia in late 2018, the other eight remaining in the United States for training purposes.[34]
Aircraft operated
Four No. 3 Squadron F-35As in 2023
No. 3 Squadron has operated the following aircraft:[10][24]
^Payne, Jacqui (8 February 2018). "3SQN blazes new trail"(PDF). Air Force. Department of Defence. p. 10. Retrieved 6 February 2018.
Bibliography
Baldwin, Hanson (1962). World War I: An Outline History. London: Hutchinson. OCLC988365.
Barnes, Norman (2000). The RAAF and the Flying Squadrons. St Leonards, New South Wales: Allen & Unwin. ISBN1-86508-130-2.
Eather, Steve (1995). Flying Squadrons of the Australian Defence Force. Weston Creek, Australian Capital Territory: Aerospace Publications. ISBN1-875671-15-3.
Halley, James (1988). The Squadrons of the Royal Air Force & Commonwealth, 1918–1988. Tonbridge, Kent: Air-Britain (Historians). ISBN0-85130-164-9.
Holmes, Tony (2006). US Marine Corps and RAAF Hornet Units of Operation Iraqi Freedom. Osprey Combat Aircraft 56. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. ISBN1-84176-847-2.
McGuire, Frank (2001). The Many Deaths of the Red Baron: The Richthofen Controversy, 1918–2000. Calgary: Bunker to Bunker Publishing. ISBN978-1-894255-05-9.
McLaughlin, Andrew (January–February 2018). "To the Future". Australian Aviation (356): 28–35. ISSN0813-0876.
Nunan, Peter (2000). "Diggers' Fourth of July". Military History. 17 (3): 26–32, 80. ISSN0889-7328.
O'Connor, Michael (2005). Airfields and Airmen of the Channel Coast. Barnsley: Pen & Sword Military. ISBN978-1-84415-258-2.
RAAF Historical Section (1995). Units of the Royal Australian Air Force: A Concise History. Volume 2 – Fighter Units. Canberra: Australian Government Publishing Service. ISBN0-644-42794-9.
Stephens, Alan (2006) [2001]. The Royal Australian Air Force: A History (2nd ed.). London: Oxford University Press. ISBN0-19-555541-4.
Further reading
Molkentin, Michael (2010). Fire in the Sky. The Australian Flying Corps in the First World War. Crows Nest, New South Wales: Allen & Unwin. ISBN978-1-74237-072-9.
Wrigley, Henry (1935). The Battle Below: Being the History of No. 3 Squadron, Australian Flying Corps. Sydney: Errol G Knox. OCLC2634858.