Formation and early years No. 603 Squadron was formed on 14 October 1925 at
RAF Turnhouse as a
day bomber unit of the
Auxiliary Air Force. Originally equipped with
DH.9As and using
Avro 504Ks for flying training, the squadron re-equipped with
Wapitis in March 1930, these being replaced by
Harts in February 1934. On 24 October 1938, No. 603 was redesignated a
fighter unit and flew
Hinds until the arrival of
Gladiators at the end of March 1939.
Second World War In August 1939, the squadron began to transition to
Spitfires. As war approached the squadron was put on a full-time footing, and within two weeks of the outbreak of the
Second World War,
Brian Carbury was permanently attached and the squadron began to receive Spitfires, passing on its Gladiators to other squadrons during October.
On Spitfires Scotland was in range of
Nazi Germany's long-range bombers and reconnaissance aircraft. The
Luftwaffe's main operations being mainly against the Royal Naval Home Fleet anchored in
Scapa Flow. The squadron was operational with Spitfires in time to intercept the first German air raid on the
British Isles on 16 October, when it shot down a
Junkers Ju 88 bomber into the
Firth of Forth north of
Port Seton – the first enemy aircraft to be shot down over Great Britain since 1918, and the first RAF victory in the Second World War. It remained on defensive duties in Scotland until 27 August 1940, when it moved on rotation to
Southern England, based with No 11 Group at
RAF Hornchurch, where it was operational from 27 August 1940 for the remaining months of the
Battle of Britain. Two days after the squadron became operational in southern England, Carbury claimed the first of his 15½ victories, becoming the
fifth highest scoring fighter ace of the battle. He was awarded the
Distinguished Flying Cross and Bar with 603 Squadron during the battle. P/O
R. 'Ras' Berry claimed some 9 (of an eventual total of 14) victories during this time, while P/O 'Sheep' Gilroy claimed over 6 victories.
Plt Off Richard Hillary (5 victories) was shot down on 3 September in combat with Bf 109s of
Jagdgeschwader 26 off
Margate at 10:04hrs – rescued by the
Margate lifeboat, he was severely burned and spent the next three years in hospital, during which time he wrote a book,
The Last Enemy. By the end of the Battle of Britain, according to more recent academic research including the scrutiny of German records, 603 Squadron were identified as the highest-scoring Battle of Britain fighter squadron. Returning to Scotland at the end of December, Carbury damaged a Ju 88 on
Christmas Day over
St Abb's Head, before leaving squadron in January 1941 as an instructor at the
Central Flying School. In May 1941, the squadron moved south again to take part in sweeps over France (termed "
rhubarbs"), until the end of the year. After a further spell in Scotland, No. 603 left in April 1942 for the
Middle East where its ground
echelon arrived early in June. Concurrently, Flt Sgt Joe Dalley moved from the squadron to PRU duties and flew a Spitfire PR direct from RAF Benson to Malta, joining
No. 69 Squadron RAF to become one of four pilots known as the "Eyes and Ears" on the Island. The squadron's aircraft were embarked on the U.S. aircraft carrier and flown off to
Malta on 20 April to reinforce the island's beleaguered fighters. After nearly four months defending Malta, the remaining pilots and aircraft were absorbed by
229 Squadron on 3 August 1942.
On Beaufighters At the end of June 1942, No. 603's ground echelon had moved to Cyprus, where it spent six months as a servicing unit before returning to Egypt. In February 1943,
Bristol Beaufighters and crews arrived to begin
convoy patrols and escort missions along the
North African coast and in August sweeps over German held islands in the
Aegean and off Greece began. Attacks on enemy shipping continued until the lack of targets enabled the squadron to be returned to the UK in December 1944.
Spitfires again On 10 January 1945, No. 603 reassembled at
RAF Coltishall and by curious coincidence, took over the Spitfires of
No. 229 Squadron RAF and some of its personnel, the same squadron which had absorbed No. 603 at
Ta' Qali in 1942.
Fighter-bomber sweeps began in February over the Netherlands and continued until April, when the squadron returned to its home base at Turnhouse for the last days of the war. On 15 August 1945, the squadron was disbanded.
Post war 603 Sqn reformed as a unit of the Auxiliary Air Force on 10 May 1946 and began recruiting personnel to man a Spitfire squadron during June at
RAF Turnhouse. Receiving its first Spitfire in October, it flew this type until conversion to
De Havilland Vampire FB.5s in May 1951. By July it was completely equipped and the type was flown until disbandment on 10 March 1957. ==Present role==