425 Tactical Fighter Squadron

425 Tactical Fighter Squadron (French: 425e Escadron d'appui tactique, also "Alouette" (English: skylark) Squadron, is a unit of the Royal Canadian Air Force. It operates CF-18 Hornet fighter jets from CFB Bagotville in Quebec, Canada. The squadron was originally formed during the Second World War.

A Cold war, early issue RCAF uniform patch for 425 Squadron manufactured by Crest Craft circa 1955

425 Tactical Fighter Squadron
425e Escadron d'appui tactique
Active1942–1945, 1954–present
Country Canada
Branch Royal Canadian Air Force
RoleStrategic bombing (1942–1945), fighter-interceptor (1954–present)
Part ofNo. 6 Group RCAF (1943–1945), 3 Wing (1961–present)
Home stationCFB Bagotville
Nickname(s)Alouette Squadron
Motto(s)French: Je te plumerai, lit. 'I shall pluck you'
Battle honours
  • English Channel and North Sea, 1942–1943
  • Fortress Europe, 1942–1944
  • France and Germany, 1944–1945
  • Biscay Ports, 1943–1944
  • Ruhr, 1942–1945
  • Berlin, 1944
  • German Ports, 1942–1945
  • Normandy, 1944
  • Rhine
  • Biscay, 1942–1943
  • Sicily, 1943
  • Italy, 1943
  • Salerno
  • Kosovo
Websitercaf-arc.forces.gc.ca/en/squadron/425-squadron.page
Insignia
BadgeA lark volant wings elevated and adorned proper
Aircraft flown
Bomber
Fighter

History

425 Squadron, the first French Canadian squadron, was formed on 22 June 1942 at RAF Dishforth in Yorkshire, England, as a bomber unit flying Vickers Wellingtons. On the night of 5/6 October 1942, the squadron went into action for the first time, bombing Aachen with a small number of aircraft. In 1943, the squadron flew to Kairouan, Tunisia, and from there, it conducted operations against Italy and Sicily, returning to the UK in November of the same year. In December, they were re-equipped with Handley Page Halifaxes and flew their first mission with these aircraft in February 1944. Their final operation took place on 25 April 1945, when they bombed gun batteries on the tiny Frisian island of Wangerooge. Following the end of the war in Europe, in May 1945, 425 Squadron re-equipped again, this time with Avro Lancaster Mk X's. In June, they flew back to Canada to prepare for their role in Tiger Force for the continuing war against Japan. The use of atomic bombs precluded the need for Tiger Force, and 425 was disbanded on 5 September 1945 at RCAF Station Debert, less than three weeks after the Japanese surrender.

The squadron was reformed at RCAF Station St Hubert in October 1954, flying CF-100 Canucks as an all-weather fighter squadron. After re-equipping with the CF-101 Voodoo, 425 became the RCAF Operational Training Unit for this aircraft type at RCAF Station Namao in late 1961 before transferring to its current base at Bagotville, Quebec, and becoming a front-line squadron a few months later. From 1982, the Canadian Forces started to acquire CF-18 Hornets; 425 received them in 1985[1] and still flies them today.[2] In 2005, 433 Squadron was merged into 425 Squadron. In 2008, the squadron was awarded its first battle honour since the Second World War for its part in Operation Allied Force.

Equipment

Affiliation

gollark: Inb4 your eyes automatically filter out any content someone deems objectionable and you can't change it because something something "trusted computing".
gollark: Important internet infrastructure was designed and put into production last millennium when people assumed private networks and just ignored security concerns, and we still run it, sometimes with patches for the bigger problems which aren't actually anywhere near universally deployed.
gollark: Oh, and it's all a giant maze of interlocking abstraction layers which manage to somehow erase decades of Moore's law because someone wanted to ship an entire browser for their desktop app or something, and which nobody actually understands.
gollark: Even the lowest level hardware stuff is vulnerable to weird exotic side channels, there's unauditable proprietary code running lots of stuff, and even outside of that people just cannot seem to write consistently secure code.
gollark: Actual implanted cybernetics are somewhat worrying because I don't really trust computers at this point, especially higher-performance ones.

References

  1. "425 Tactical Fighter Squadron". Royal Canadian Air Force. 2013. Archived from the original on 2 October 2013. Retrieved 9 September 2013.
  2. "No. 425 Squadron, Canadian Air Force". canadianwings.com. 2013. Retrieved 9 September 2013.
  3. "425 Sqn ATC". 425atc.co.uk. 2013. Archived from the original on 9 November 2013. Retrieved 9 September 2013.
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