On This Day, 1999: On 5 June 1999 RAF Tornados flew their first combat missions from Solenzara in Corsica during Operation Allied…
Read the entry →“1 September 1915”
RAF Boulmer — BAE Hawk T.1/T.1A (last flying aircraft)
Explore 19 Squadron RAF from First World War fighters and the first Spitfires to Lightnings, Phantoms and RAF Boulmer.
R. M. Rodwell
19 Squadron holds a distinctive place in Royal Air Force history because it links the early fighter arm of the First World War with some of the best-known milestones of twentieth-century RAF development. It fought on the Western Front, became the first squadron to receive the Spitfire in 1938, served through the Battle of Britain and later offensive fighter operations, then continued into the jet age on the Hornet, Meteor, Hunter, Lightning and Phantom. More recently, its number has been carried in training and, since 2021, in the RAF’s Control and Reporting Centre structure.
Its significance lies in the continuity across changing forms of air power. Few squadrons can connect SPAD fighters and Sopwith Dolphins with the Spitfire story, Cold War interception and a modern command-and-control role. 19 Squadron offers a particularly useful squadron-level view of how RAF identity could survive radical changes in aircraft, doctrine and operational purpose.
19 Squadron formed at Castle Bromwich on 1 September 1915 from a nucleus provided by 5 Reserve Squadron. Training began on a variety of types before the squadron moved towards front-line service with Royal Aircraft Factory R.E.7s and then Royal Aircraft Factory B.E.12s. When it reached France in July 1916, it was already being shaped for the fighter role, though the B.E.12 proved an unsatisfactory aircraft for that purpose.
The squadron's effectiveness improved with re-equipment on the SPAD S.VII and later the SPAD S.XIII. In January 1918, it received the Sopwith Dolphin, the type later commemorated in the squadron badge. Flying these aircraft, 19 Squadron took part in the air fighting of the Western Front through the closing phases of the war before returning to Britain and disbanding at the end of 1919.
The squadron re-formed at Duxford on 1 April 1923 within No. 2 Flying Training School and soon became an independent fighter unit. Over the inter-war period, it flew the Gloster Grebe, Armstrong Whitworth Siskin, Bristol Bulldog and Gloster Gauntlet, remaining closely associated with Duxford and the professional development of the RAF fighter arm.
This long inter-war residence mattered because it placed 19 Squadron at the centre of Fighter Command's pre-war expansion. In August 1938, it became the first squadron to receive the Supermarine Spitfire, giving it a special place in RAF history beyond its earlier wartime record. The squadron was therefore linked not only to fighter continuity but also to one of the RAF's most important moments of technical and symbolic transition.
Operating in 12 Group from Duxford and Fowlmere, 19 Squadron fought on defensive duties through 1940. It covered the Dunkirk evacuation and served during the Battle of Britain, one of the central campaigns in the RAF's history. For a period, it also used early cannon-armed Spitfires, though the new armament proved unreliable at first, and the unit reverted to the standard eight-gun arrangement.
The squadron remained in Fighter Command on successive marks of Spitfire. It later took part in the offensive sweeps and cross-Channel operations that carried the air war back over occupied Europe. It was involved in the period that linked home defence to a more aggressive fighter campaign, including operations connected with Dieppe and, later, the run-up to the invasion of Normandy.
In February 1944, the squadron converted to the North American Mustang. These aircraft were used for escort and army-support work during the period around Operation Overlord and the Allied advance into north-west Europe. That change showed the squadron's adaptability, moving from the close defensive association of the early Spitfire years into a longer-range fighter role suited to the changing demands of the war.
After 1945, the squadron remained active and continued to evolve. Spitfires returned briefly before re-equipment with the de Havilland Hornet in 1946. Gloster Meteors followed in 1951, then Hawker Hunters in 1956. In 1962, at RAF Leconfield, 19 Squadron received the English Electric Lightning, placing it in the front line of Britain's Cold War air-defence system.
A further major change came in 1977, when the number was transferred to a Phantom FGR.2 unit in RAF Germany. In this form, the squadron remained part of the central NATO air-defence structure until disbanding in 1992. It then reappeared as 19 (Reserve) Squadron on the BAE Hawk, first at Chivenor and later at RAF Valley, linking the squadron's long fighter heritage to advanced fast-jet training.
Since April 2021, 19 Squadron has existed in a different but still important form at RAF Boulmer as part of the Control and Reporting Centre structure. Although no longer a flying unit, it remains part of the RAF's wider air-defence system. That current role underlines one of the most interesting features of the squadron's history: a continuing contribution to national air power even when the means of service have changed completely.
19 Squadron matters because it sits at several important points in RAF history. It links First World War fighter development, the inter-war strengthening of the fighter arm, the arrival of the Spitfire, the Battle of Britain, offensive fighter operations, the post-war jet transition and the Cold War interceptor era.
It is therefore more than simply the first Spitfire squadron, although that distinction alone would make it notable. Its longer significance lies in the way it helps explain continuity across the RAF's changing fighter and air-defence story, from the Western Front to the command-and-control structure of the present day.
1915
Phillip Babington
H. D. Harvey-Kelly
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