Beginnings British naval flying started in 1909, with the construction of an
airship for naval duties. In 1911 the Royal Navy graduated its first aeroplane pilots at the
Royal Aero Club flying ground near Eastchurch,
Isle of Sheppey under the tutelage of pioneer aviator
George Bertram Cockburn. In May 1912, naval and army aviation were combined to become the
Royal Flying Corps (RFC). The Naval Wing of the RFC lasted until July 1914 when the Royal Navy reformed its air branch, under the
Air Department of the
Admiralty, naming it the Royal Naval Air Service (RNAS). By the outbreak of the First World War, in August 1914, the RNAS had more aircraft under its control than the remaining RFC. The roles of the RNAS were fleet reconnaissance, patrolling coasts for enemy ships and submarines, attacking enemy coastal territory and defending Britain from enemy air raids, along with deployment along the Western Front. In April 1918 the RNAS, which at this time had 67,000 officers and men, 2,949 aircraft, 103 airships and 126 coastal stations, merged with the RFC to form the
Royal Air Force.
Fleet Air Arm On 1 April 1924, the Fleet Air Arm of the Royal Air Force was formed, encompassing those RAF units that normally embarked on aircraft carriers and fighting ships. The year was significant for British naval aviation as only weeks before the founding of the Fleet Air Arm, the Royal Navy had commissioned , the world's first ship to be designed and built as an aircraft carrier. Over the following months RAF Fleet Air Arm
Fairey IIID reconnaissance biplanes operated off Hermes, conducting flying trials. On 24 May 1939 the Fleet Air Arm was returned to Admiralty control under the "
Inskip Award" (named after the
Minister for Co-ordination of Defence overseeing the British re-armament programme) and renamed the Air Branch of the Royal Navy. At the onset of the Second World War, the Fleet Air Arm consisted of 20 squadrons with only 232 frontline aircraft, and 191 additional trainers. By the end of the war the strength of the Fleet Air Arm was 59 aircraft carriers, 3,700 aircraft, 72,000 officers and men and 56 Naval air stations. aircraft into position at a Fleet Air Arm station in India (c. June 1944) During the war, the FAA operated fighters, torpedo bombers and reconnaissance aircraft. Following the
Dunkirk evacuation and the commencement of the
Battle of Britain, the Royal Air Force soon found itself critically short of fighter pilots. In the summer of 1940, the RAF had just over 800 fighter pilots and as personnel shortages worsened; the RAF turned to the Admiralty to ask for help from the Fleet Air Arm. Fleet Air Arm crews under
RAF Fighter Command were either seconded individually to RAF fighter squadrons or entire as with 804 and 808 Naval Air Squadrons. The former provided dockyard defence during the Battle of Britain with
Sea Gladiators. In British home waters and out into the Atlantic Ocean, operations against Axis shipping and submarines in support of the RN were mounted by
RAF Coastal Command with large patrol bombers, flying boats and land-based fighter-bombers. The
aircraft carrier had replaced the
battleship as the
capital ship of the RN and its aircraft were now its principal offensive weapons. The top scoring
fighter ace with 17 victories was Commander
Stanley Orr, the
Royal Marine ace was
Ronald Cuthbert Hay with 13 victories. A number of Royal Marines were
FAA pilots during the war. Notable Fleet Air Arm operations during the war included the
Battle of Taranto, the sinking of the
Bismarck, the attempt to prevent the
Channel Dash,
Operation Tungsten against the
Tirpitz and
Operation Meridian against oil plants in
Sumatra.
Post-war history from
800 Naval Air Squadron approach the flight deck of
U.S. Navy aircraft carrier in 1984. After the war the FAA needed to fly
jet aircraft from their carriers. The jet aircraft of the era were considerably less effective at low speeds than propeller aircraft, but propeller aircraft could not effectively fight jets at the high speeds flown by jet aircraft. The FAA took on its first jet, the
Sea Vampire, in the late 1940s. The Sea Vampire was the first jet credited with taking off and landing on a carrier. The Air Arm continued with high-powered prop aircraft alongside the new jets resulting in the FAA being woefully outpowered during the
Korean War. Nevertheless, jets were not yet wholly superior to propeller aircraft and a flight of ground attack
Hawker Sea Furies downed a
MiG-15 and damaged others in an engagement. As jets became larger, more powerful and faster they required more space to take off and land. The
US Navy simply built much larger carriers. The Royal Navy had a few large carriers built and completed after the end of the war but another solution was sought. This was partly overcome by the introduction of a Royal Navy idea to
angle the flight deck away from the centre line so that the aircraft landing had a clear run away from the usual forward deck park. An associated British invention, intended to provide more precise optical guidance to aircraft on final approaching the deck, was the
Fresnel lens optical landing aid. Another Royal Navy invention was the use of a
steam-powered catapult to cater for the larger and heavier aircraft (both systems were adopted by the US Navy). Defence cuts across the British armed forces
during the 1960s and 1970s led to the withdrawal of existing Royal Navy aircraft carriers, transfer of Fleet Air Arm fixed-wing jet strike aircraft such as the
F-4K (FG.1) Phantom II and
Buccaneer S.2 to the Royal Air Force, and cancellation of large replacement aircraft carriers, including the
CVA-01 design. The last conventional carrier to be retired was in 1978. When HMS
Hermes was converted in 1980/81 to a STOVL carrier to operate Sea Harriers, a
'Ski-jump ramp' was fitted to aid take-off. A new series of small carriers, the anti-submarine warfare ships (known as "through deck cruisers") were built and equipped with the
Sea Harrier a derivative of the
Hawker Siddeley Harrier VTOL aircraft. These carriers incorporated an upswept forward section of the flight deck that deflected the aircraft upward on launch and permitted heavier loads to be carried by the Harrier, for example in weaponry, and the system was used extensively in the Falklands War, with both
Hermes and
Invincible part of the Task Force. At the end of the
Cold War in 1989 the Fleet Air Arm was under the command of the
Flag Officer Naval Air Command, a
rear admiral based at
RNAS Yeovilton. •
Flag Officer Naval Air Command (FONAC), at
RNAS Yeovilton •
RNAS Prestwick: •
819 Naval Air Squadron, (
Anti-submarine, 12×
Sea King HAS.5) •
826 Naval Air Squadron, (Anti-submarine, 12× Sea King HAS.6) •
HMS Gannet SAR Flight, (
Search & Rescue, 8×
Sea King HU.5) •
RNAS Yeovilton: •
707 Naval Air Squadron, (
Air Assault, 10×
Sea King HC.4) •
800 Naval Air Squadron, (12×
Sea Harrier FA.2) •
801 Naval Air Squadron, (12× Sea Harrier FA.2) •
845 Naval Air Squadron, (Air Assault, 10× Sea King HC.4) •
846 Naval Air Squadron, (Air Assault, 10× Sea King HC.4) •
899 Naval Air Squadron, (Training, 24× Sea Harrier FA.2) •
Fleet Requirements and Aircraft Direction Unit, (Aggressor Squadron,
Canberra TT.18,
Hawker Hunter GA.11) •
RNAS Culdrose: •
705 Naval Air Squadron, (Basic Helicopter Training, 38×
Gazelle HT.2) •
706 Naval Air Squadron, (Sea King Training, 12× various types of Sea King) •
750 Naval Air Squadron, (Observer Training,
Jetstream T2) •
771 Naval Air Squadron, (Search & Rescue, 12×
Sea King HU.5) •
814 Naval Air Squadron, (Anti-submarine, 12× Sea King HAS.5) •
820 Naval Air Squadron, (Anti-submarine, 12× Sea King HAS.6) •
824 Naval Air Squadron, (Anti-submarine, 12× Sea King HAS.6) (disbanded August 1989) •
849 Naval Air Squadron, (
Airborne early warning and control, 10× Sea King AEW.2A, 4× Sea King AEW.5) •
RNAS Portland: •
702 Naval Air Squadron, (Aircrew & Maintenance Training, 24×
Lynx HAS.3S) •
772 Naval Air Squadron, (Air Assault, 10× Sea King HC.4) •
810 Naval Air Squadron, (Anti-submarine, 12× Sea King HAS.6) •
815 Naval Air Squadron, (Frigate & Destroyer Helicopters, 32× Lynx HAS.3S, most deployed on frigates and destroyers at sea) •
829 Naval Air Squadron, (Frigate & Destroyer Helicopters, 32× Lynx HAS.3S, most deployed on frigates and destroyers at sea)
Fleet Air Arm inventory 1989 The inventory of the Fleet Air Arm in 1989 consisted of the following aircraft: •
Combat aircraft: • 42×
Sea Harrier FRS.1/F(A).2 • 2×/2×
Sea Harrier T.4A/T.4N •
Helicopters: • 60+
Sea King HAS.5 • 31+
Sea King HAS.6 • 10×
Sea King AEW.2A • 33×
Sea King HC.4 • 80+
Lynx HAS.3S • 23×/8×
Gazelle HT.2/HT.3 •
Trainers: • 3×
Canberra TT.18 • 14×
Chipmunk T.10 • 5×
Hunter T.8M • 12×/9×
Hunter GA.11/T8 • 19×
Jetstream T.2 •
Liaison: • 16×
Dassault Falcon 20 (Civil-registered)
Post Cold War In 2000 the
Sea Harrier force was merged with the
RAF's Harrier GR7 fleet to form
Joint Force Harrier. The Fleet Air Arm began withdrawing the Sea Harrier from service in 2004 with the disbandment of
800 NAS.
801 NAS disbanded on 28 March 2006 at
RNAS Yeovilton (HMS Heron). 800 and 801 NAS were then combined to form the
Naval Strike Wing, flying ex-RAF Harrier GR7 and GR9s. On 1 April 2010, NSW reverted to the identity of 800 Naval Air Squadron. The Harrier GR7 and GR9 retired from service in December 2010 following the
Strategic Defence and Security Review 2010. Two new carriers able to operate the
F-35B short take-off and landing variant of the US
Lockheed Martin Lightning II aircraft were constructed. In the
Strategic Defence and Security Review 2015, it was announced that the carriers would enter service "from 2018". The procurement plan is for a force of 138 F-35 aircraft, which are intended to be operated by both the RAF and FAA from a common pool, in the same manner as the Joint Force Harrier. With the introduction of the F-35, the Fleet Air Arm will return to the operation of fixed-wing strike aircraft at sea. In 2013, an initial cadre of Royal Air Force and Royal Navy pilots and aircraft maintenance personnel were assigned to the
U.S. Marine Corps' Marine Fighter Attack Training Squadron 501 (
VMFAT-501), part of the
U.S. Air Force's
33rd Fighter Wing at
Eglin Air Force Base, Florida, for training on the F-35B.
809 Naval Air Squadron will be the first FAA unit to operate the F-35B and will be based at
RAF Marham.
Helicopters Helicopters also became important combat platforms since the Second World War. Initially used in the
search and rescue role, they were later developed for
anti-submarine warfare and
troop transport; during the 1956
Suez Crisis they were used to land
Royal Marine Commando forces, the first time this had ever been done in combat. Originally operated only from carriers, the development of the
Westland Wasp in the 1960s allowed helicopters to operate on all ships of
frigate size or larger. Wasps,
Sea Kings and
Wessex helicopters all played an active part in the 1982 Falklands War, while
Lynx helicopters played an attack role against Iraqi patrol boats in the 1991
Gulf War and
Commando Sea King HC4s as well as the Lynx HMA Mk 8 from HMS
Argyll, assisted in suppressing rebel forces in the
British intervention in the Sierra Leone Civil War in 2000.
Museums The Fleet Air Arm has a
museum near RNAS Yeovilton (HMS
Heron) in
Somerset, England, at which many of the great historical aircraft flown by the Service are on display, along with aircraft from other sources. There is also a Fleet Air Arm museum inside the
Museum of Transport & Technology in
Auckland, New Zealand. On display there is a full-size replica
Fairey Swordfish, along with historic items and memorabilia. ==The FAA today==