Battle of Barking Creek at
Biggin Hill, Kent. No. 74 Squadron was dispatched 15 hours after war was declared to intercept a bomber raid that turned out to be returning RAF planes. On 6 September 1939, "A" Flight was scrambled to intercept a suspected enemy radar track and ran into the Hurricanes of
No. 56 Squadron RAF. Believing 56 to be the enemy, Malan ordered an attack. Paddy Byrne and
John Freeborn downed two RAF aircraft, killing one officer – Montague Hulton-Harrop – in
friendly fire, which became known as the Battle of Barking Creek. At the subsequent
court-martial, Malan denied responsibility for the attack. He testified for the prosecution against his own pilots stating that Freeborn had been "irresponsible, impetuous, and had not taken proper heed of vital communications". This prompted Freeborn's counsel,
Patrick Hastings, to call Malan a bare-faced liar. Hastings was assisted in defending the pilots by
Roger Bushell, who, like Malan, had been born in South Africa. The court ruled the entire incident as an unfortunate error and acquitted both pilots.
Dunkirk After fierce fighting over Dunkirk during
the evacuation of the British Army from Dunkirk on 28 May 1940, Malan was awarded the
Distinguished Flying Cross (DFC) having achieved five "kills". During the night of 19/20 June Malan flew a night sortie in bright moonlight and shot down two
Heinkel He 111 bombers, a then-unique feat for which a bar was awarded to his DFC. On 6 July, he was promoted to flight lieutenant. Malan and his senior pilots abandoned the
Vic formation used by the RAF and turned to a looser formation (the
finger-four) similar to the four aircraft
Schwarm the
Luftwaffe had developed during the
Spanish Civil War. It is believed that on 28 July he met
Werner Mölders in combat, damaged his plane and wounded him, but failed to bring him down, though recent research has suggested that Mölders was wounded in a fight with
No. 41 Squadron RAF.
Squadron leader of No. 74 Squadron On 8 August, Malan was given command of 74 Squadron and promoted to acting
squadron leader at the height of the
Battle of Britain. On 11 August, action started at 7 am when the squadron was sent to intercept a raid near
Dover, which was followed by three more raids, lasting all day. At the end of the day, 74 Squadron had claimed to have shot down 38 aircraft, and was known from then on as "Sailor's August the Eleventh". Malan himself commented, "thus ended a very successful morning of combat". He received a bar to his DFC on 13 August. On 29 December 1941 Malan was added to the select list of airmen who had sat for one of
Cuthbert Orde's iconic RAF charcoal portraits. He had the rarer honour of also being the subject of a full colour painting by Orde.
Wing commander – Biggin Hill On 24 December, Malan received the
Distinguished Service Order, and on 22 July 1941, a bar to the DSO. On 10 March 1941 he was appointed as one of the first
wing leaders for the offensive operations that spring and summer, leading the Biggin Hill Wing until mid-August, when he was rested from operations. He finished his active fighter career in 1941 with 27 kills destroyed, 7 shared destroyed and 2 unconfirmed, 3 probables and 16 damaged, as one of the highest scoring pilots to have served wholly with Fighter Command during World War II. He was transferred to the reserve as a squadron leader on 6 January 1942. After a lecture tour to the USA, he commanded the
Central Gunnery School for more than a year. Malan was promoted to temporary
wing commander on 1 September 1942 and became station commander at
RAF Biggin Hill, receiving a promotion to war
substantive wing commander on 1 July 1943. ==Post-war opposition to apartheid==