Swift to Battle: No 72 Fighter Squadron RAF in Action, 1937–1942: Phoney War, Dunkirk, Battle of Britain, Offensive Operations
By Tom Docherty
3.5/5
()
About this ebook
Read more from Tom Docherty
No. 7 Bomber Squadron RAF in World War II Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsDinghy Drop: 279 Squadron RAF, 1941–46 Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsSwift to Battle: No 72 Fighter Squadron RAF in Action, 1947 to 1961: Cold War Operations Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratings
Related to Swift to Battle
Related ebooks
RAF Duxford: A History in Photographs from 1917 to the Present Day Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsWorld War One Aircraft Carrier Pioneer: The Story and Diaries of Captain JM McCleery RNAS/RAF Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Hurricane over the Jungle: 120 Days Fighting the Japanese Onslaught in 1942 Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsAmerican Eagles: US Fighter Pilots in the RAF 1939–1945 Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsThe Flatpack Bombers: The Royal Navy & the Zeppelin Menace Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Surviving the Skies: A Night Bomber Pilot in the Great War Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Racing Ace: The Fights and Flights of 'Kink' Kinkead DSO, DSC*, DFC* Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Dambusters: The Forging of a Legend: 617 Squadron in World War II Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsHornchurch Offensive: A Definitive Account of the RAF Fighter Airfield, Its Pilots, Groundcrew and Staff, 1941–1962 Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsDogfight: The Supermarine Spitfire and the Messerschmitt BF 109 Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Air-Launched Doodlebugs: The Forgotten Campaign Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5Pedro: The Life and Death of Fighter Ace Osgood Villiers Hanbury, DFC and Bar Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsSpitfire Pilot [Illustrated Edition] Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsThe Hurricane Story Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5SS Panzer Battalion 501: Tigers in the Ardennes Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsMontpellier Fighter Squadron Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsAttack out of the Sun: Lessons from the Red Baron for Our Business and Personal Lives Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsStalag Luft I: The PoW Camp for Air Force Personnel, 1940–1945 Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsRAF Bomber Command at War, 1939–1945 Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsDiscovering my Father: The Wartime Experiences of Squadron Leader John Russell Collins DFC and Bar (1943-1944) Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsThe Kiel Raid 1939: Eyewitness World War II series Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsCoastal Dawn: Blenheims in Action from the Phoney War through the Battle of Britain Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5First Fighter Ace: In the Cockpit with a World War II Fighter Pilot Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsThe Sylt Raid 1940: Eyewitness World War II series Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsHistory of the 91st Aero Squadron Air Service U.S.A. (WWI Centenary Series) Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsOne Man Air Force Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsObservers and Navigators: And Other Non-Pilot Aircrew in the RFC, RNAS and RAF Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5A Bloody Summer: The Irish at the Battle of Britain Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsThe Royal Naval Air Service in the First World War: Aircraft and Events as Recorded in Official Documents Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsMission Accomplished: The Engaging Memoir of a Czech Fighter Pilot Flying for Britain in World War Two Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratings
Wars & Military For You
Art of War: The Definitive Interpretation of Sun Tzu's Classic Book of Strategy Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Resistance: The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Art of War Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Last Kingdom Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Sun Tzu's The Art of War: Bilingual Edition Complete Chinese and English Text Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5How to Hide an Empire: A History of the Greater United States Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Ordinary Men: Reserve Police Battalion 101 and the Final Solution in Poland Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Blitzed: Drugs in the Third Reich Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5On Killing: The Psychological Cost of Learning to Kill in War and Society Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Art of War & Other Classics of Eastern Philosophy Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Wager Disaster: Mayem, Mutiny and Murder in the South Seas Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Masters of the Air: America's Bomber Boys Who Fought the Air War Against Nazi Germany Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Happiest Man on Earth: The Beautiful Life of an Auschwitz Survivor Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Killing the SS: The Hunt for the Worst War Criminals in History Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Rise of the Fourth Reich: The Secret Societies That Threaten to Take Over America Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Making of the Atomic Bomb Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5They Thought They Were Free: The Germans, 1933–45 Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Band of Brothers: E Company, 506th Regiment, 101st Airborne from Normandy to Hitler's Eagle's Nest Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Dr. Seuss Goes to War: The World War II Editorial Cartoons of Theodor Seuss Geisel Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Faithful Spy: Dietrich Bonhoeffer and the Plot to Kill Hitler Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Bill O'Reilly's Legends and Lies: The Civil War Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5God Is Not One: The Eight Rival Religions That Run the World--and Why Their Differences Matter Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A Daily Creativity Journal Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Mein Kampf: The Original, Accurate, and Complete English Translation Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsThe God Delusion Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Unit 731: Testimony Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Reviews for Swift to Battle
2 ratings0 reviews
Book preview
Swift to Battle - Tom Docherty
CHAPTER ONE
World War I and Re-formation
When the First World War commenced in 1914 the Royal Flying Corps (RFC) was a very small part of the British Army and was equipped with a wide variety of flimsy biplanes, used in the main for artillery spotting and reconnaissance. By 1917 the RFC was a very different organization and had grown from the original small number of squadrons to over 100 operating some of the most advanced aircraft of the period.
It was in this expanded and still expanding RFC that No. 72 Squadron was formed on 28 June 1917. Commanded by Capt H.W. Von Poellnitz, the squadron was based at Upavon in Wiltshire and was equipped with Avro 504 trainers that it had brought with its nucleus of men and equipment from ‘A’ Flight of the Central Flying School. The squadron had a training role at this point, and soon added the highly regarded Sopwith Pup to its inventory, training scout pilots for the Western Front. The squadron moved to Netheravon and then to Sedgeford in Norfolk, where it began preparations to move to Mesopotamia for operations against the Turks.
After a long journey by land and sea the squadron arrived in Basra and was joined by seventeen flying officers from Egypt. The squadron received two types of aircraft as its equipment – the monoplane Bristol M1C, which despite official prejudice proved itself to be a very successful fighter type, and the Martinsyde G.100 Elephant, a slow but forgiving fighter/reconnaissance type. It was with these two types that the squadron fought a successful campaign in support of the Army.
With the formation of the Royal Air Force (RAF), 72 Sqn continued to serve in Persia, Mirjana and Samarra, before being recalled to Baghdad, where it was reduced to a cadre in February 1919. By September 1919 the rapid run-down of the RAF was in full swing, and among those to disband was 72 Squadron on 22 September 1919.
e9781783409266_i0002.jpgMaj H.W. Von Poellnitz. (72 Sqn)
e9781783409266_i0003.jpgGround crew enjoying mounted wrestling during squadron sports, Christmas 1918. (72 Sqn)
e9781783409266_i0004.jpgPilots looking on as the ground crew do battle, Christmas 1918. (72 Sqn)
The RAF was to suffer many lean years throughout the 1920s and early 1930s, but the possibility of another war was looming: with the blatant rearmament of the German armed forces following Adolf Hitler ’s Nazi Party’s rise to power, all that was to change. The RAF began a planned series of expansions, each one being rapidly overtaken by events, and finally, on 22 February 1937, 72 Squadron was re-formed. The story that follows is the history of No. 72 Squadron and its twenty-five years of unbroken service as one of the premier fighter units of the RAF.
e9781783409266_i0005.jpgThe squadron observes the arrival of the first Handley Page 0400 bomber in Mesopotamia in 1918. (72 Sqn)
e9781783409266_i0006.jpgLt Leech and Lt Carrol in Mesopotamia on 1 April 1919. (72 Sqn)
e9781783409266_i0007.jpgSgt H.L. Howard photographed in Baghdad in 1919. (72 Sqn)
e9781783409266_i0008.jpg‘C’ Flt 72 Sqn Bristol M1Cs at Baghdad in 1918. At the time the flight were attached to 3rd Corps. (72 Sqn)
e9781783409266_i0009.jpg72 Sqn Bristol M1C viewed from the rear. (72 Sqn)
e9781783409266_i0010.jpg72 Squadron camp at Baghdad in 1918. (72 Sqn)
e9781783409266_i0011.jpg72 Sqn aircraft in captured Turkish hangars, Baghdad 1918.
e9781783409266_i0012.jpg72 Squadron’s new Gladiators, K6143 to the fore. (72 Sqn)
e9781783409266_i0013.jpgAnother view of the new Gladiators. (72 Sqn)
e9781783409266_i0014.jpg72 Squadron Gladiators at Tangmere in 1937. (L. Henstock via 72 Sqn)
e9781783409266_i0015.jpgThe Gladiators paraded outside the squadron hangar at Tangmere in 1937. (L. Henstock via 72 Sqn)
e9781783409266_i0016.jpgSpitfire prototype K5054 at Tangmere in 1937. A portent of things to come. (L. Henstock via 72 Sqn)
As with most squadrons which were re-formed during this expansion period, the nucleus would be provided by air and ground crews from established squadrons; 72 Sqn was no exception. The squadron destined to provide that nucleus was No. 1 Squadron, which at that time was equipped with the last of the line of sleek Hawker biplanes, the Fury. The pilots of ‘B’ Flt, 1 Sqn, were initially not very keen to leave as it was rumoured that the squadron was to be shortly re-equipped with the new Hawker Hurricane. Nevertheless, the flight commander, Flt Lt E.M. Donaldson, took his pilots to Gloster’s factory to collect the first Gladiator biplane fighters to join Fighter Command. Donaldson returned to 1 Sqn after four months with 72 Sqn. Over the following months the pilots became used to their new mounts and the ground crew became familiar with the servicing requirements.
e9781783409266_i0017.jpgPlt Off L. Henstock. (L. Henstock via 72 Sqn)
Just one month before the squadron re-formed, Hitler had renounced the Treaty of Versailles, which had stood since 1919, and thus began the inevitable descent into war. By May 1937 Britain had a new Prime Minister in Neville Chamberlain, but he would prove to be ineffective in dealing with Hitler, and easily duped into believing Hitler ’s lies and posturing.
No. 72 Sqn shared Tangmere with three other fighter squadrons – 1,43 and 87. On Empire Air Day, 29 May 1937, all four squadron took part in a four-hour flying display during which the crowds were thrilled by demonstrations of fighter interceptions, aerobatics, air drills and ground attacks.
Finally, in June 1937, now commanded by Sqn Ldr E.J. Hope, 72 Sqn moved to its permanent station at RAF Church Fenton in Yorkshire. Here the squadron shared the airfield with 213 Sqn, which was still operating the Gladiator’s predecessor from the Gloster stable, the Gauntlet. During this period the squadron was presented with its badge, signed by King George VI, by Air Marshal Sir Hugh Dowding. Dowding and 72 Sqn would be linked again during the Battle of Britain.
e9781783409266_i0018.jpgThe cockpit of Gladiator ‘R’ of 72 Sqn. (L. Henstock via 72 Sqn)
e9781783409266_i0019.jpgGladiator K6138 at Tangmere in 1937. (L. Henstock via 72 Sqn)
e9781783409266_i0020.jpgGladiators K6140, K6142 and K6143 flown by Flg Off Henstock, Flg Off Humpherson and Flg Off Sheen respectively, Tangmere 1937. (L. Henstock via 72 Sqn)
e9781783409266_i0021.jpgThe tail of a Gladiator marked with the 72 Sqn Swift inside the standard ‘fighter squadron arrowhead’. (72 Sqn)
e9781783409266_i0022.jpgFlight mechanic LAC Jimmy Hess in the cockpit of Gladiator K6138 at Tangmere. (A. Allsopp)
e9781783409266_i0023.jpgGladiators K6135, K6134 and K6130 at Church Fenton in 1937. (72 Sqn)
e9781783409266_i0024.jpgGladiator K6140 at Church Fenton in October 1937. (72 Sqn)
Les ‘Ginge’ Dwyer was among the first ground crew posted to 72 Sqn at Tangmere. and recalls the early days with the Gladiator:
After training as a fitter’s mate at RAF Manston and then as a flight rigger at RAF Henlow I was posted to 43(F) Sqn at Tangmere, and prior to helping form 72(F) Sqn was a flight rigger on Hawker Fury K1932, Sgt ‘Tich’ Carey’s kite. [Carey fought with distinction in the Battle of Britain and later became a group captain].
Having collected our quota of Gloster Gladiators we followed a Gauntlet squadron to open up the new station – RAF Church Fenton, where I was a flight rigger on K1940 of ‘B’ Flt. It was Flt Lt Edwards’, our flight commander’s kite, until I was posted onto a fitter IIa course at Hednesford. VC holder Nicholson was a pilot officer in ‘A’ Flt, a very tall lad. A very popular officer in ‘B’ Flt was an ‘Aussie’, Flg Off Des Sheen. He borrowed a Hawker Hart from somewhere and took a lot of the ground staff up for their first flip, and I was lucky to be one of them.
72 Sqn adorned its shiny new Gladiators with gaudy bands of red and blue atop the upper wing and along the fuselage sides, and took them to Farnborough in Hampshire for the 1937 Air Exercises. In addition to the red/blue markings the Gladiators were also adorned with fin and wheel hubs painted variously red, yellow or blue to denote each flight commander ’s aircraft. Following this, the squadron adopted the RAF peacetime routine and carried out training in individual pilot skills, formation flying and air gunnery from its base at Church Fenton. The squadron lost one Gladiator on 23 July 1937 when it crashed near Barnsley, killing the pilot, Plt Off Philip Hughes Crompton. The Gladiator was an improvement on the earlier biplane types in RAF service, though the enclosed cockpit was not universally popular with pilots brought up in the days of open-cockpit flying, though they soon came to appreciate the protection the canopy provided from the elements.
e9781783409266_i0025.jpg72 Sqn Gladiator display at Elmdon in 1937. (G. Gillard)
e9781783409266_i0026.jpgGround crew with Gladiator K6143 at Church Fenton in October 1937, including Hess and Bluyer. (G. Gillard)
Sqn Ldr J.B.H. Rogers replaced Sqn Ldr Hope as CO on 15 January 1938, and the squadron continued its training regime. Although a stable aircraft to fly, the Gladiator could bite, and the squadron lost another aircraft and pilot when Plt Off Alfred Alexander Devany crashed his Gladiator on 7 February near Brough. Like all new types to service, the Gladiator had some teething troubles, and during firing practice in April 1938 the squadron had a few problems with holed propellers.
Just prior to the arrival of the new CO the squadron had a new ground crew member, Bob ‘Lupino’ Lane, who recalls Church Fenton in those days:
I arrived at Church Fenton on 13 December 1937. I looked out at the acres of soggy snow amid the gloom. I was not impressed, having just spent the last two years in the Fleet Air Arm, mostly in the Mediterranean. It was something of a culture shock going into the 72 Sqn billet – bright lights, highly polished wood floor, central heating and spring beds!
The following morning found me in the hangar, where, amazingly, I didn’t know a soul. My previous four postings had all been among folk I’d met, and here I found I was in the new, expanded Air Force. We had either airframe mechs or engine mechs, whereas I was a metal rigger and it looked as though I would end up in the workshops until they found I could kick a football!
So began what to me – until 8 May 1939 – was the most friendly posting of my service. Everyone seemed to have a spare hand to help with and there was a lot of laughter. We had resident comics, like Wakefield and ‘Perry’ Como (who dived off a freight train that didn’t slow enough at 4 a.m. wearing my new roll-neck sweater). Spud Murphy, an older guy, played football for Bootle JOC and had a chronic ‘indigestion’ problem which he relieved with his bottle of McLean’s and a request for a ‘spare ciggy’. He got posted to Leconfield later and achieved fame as Cheshire’s rigger.
Other good mates were Willy Hughes, who worked for the Brabazon after the war, Graeme Gillard and Reg Eady. Spud Murphy always wanted a broom house with a blue-tiled bathroom, which he achieved after the war by marrying a greengrocer’s daughter. Reg ‘Ozzy’ Osram ran the ‘fag swindle and loan club’ and saw we were never short. ‘Griff’ Griffiths, a married man with an Austin 7, ferried us back and forth at weekends and never failed us once. Then there were Dick Strickland; Reg Hanniset, whose uncle was ‘Cassandra’ of the Daily Mirror; Richardson, the orderly room clerk, who took many a 30 shillings (£1.50) from me for a weekend standby guard (last heard of he was a squadron leader), and his little mate, the runner, who was always there to put the aircraft away at night; Colin Jones, the ‘Kid Glove Rigger’ who always wore white gloves. He was an ex-Brighton Public School boy and cricketer, who sadly went down with a Sunderland in the Bay of Biscay just after the war started.
We had a big party when our badge was approved (I, incidentally, painted the first Swift on a fin, and was most surprised to find I could only paint the bird flying one way, and the starboard side would face backwards). All the old-timers back from the 1914 – 18 war were invited, and many brought trophies, scarves, silk stocking and crests like ‘U bend ’em. We mend ’em’. There was much debate over the motto, and the first effort of ‘Swiftly we come’ was hooted out by the officers’ ladies.
e9781783409266_i0027.jpgLaurie Henstock and Des Sheen at Church Fenton in 1938. (T.A.F. Elsdon)
e9781783409266_i0028.jpgThree Gladiator pilots at Church Fenton in 1938. (D. Foster-Williams)
Monthly crew room parties were a feature, with beer donated by the pilots, and Nicholson frequently ended up wearing only pants, playing ‘Scissor, stones, paper’. When I arrived the CO was sick and did not return. Sheen was adjutant before moving on to higher things. Flt Sgt Greenhaugh used to let me fly the Hart and Magister. Our new CO used to parade us at lunchtime throughout 1938 and interpret the news of war from The Times and the Telegraph, and when Germany annexed Austria how we might have to go over as part of a League of Nations force. Our monthly flying hours were higher than any bomber squadron at that time.
Fine as the Gladiator was, it was a product of a bygone era, and the pilots of 72 Sqn could only look on in envy as other squadrons were re-equipped with modern Hurricanes, Spitfires and Blenheims. They watched and waited as Hitler ’s troops marched into Austria in March 1938, ostensibly to quell ‘public disorder’, annexing this state the following day. While the country waited, some semblance of normality was maintained, and on 20 May 72 Sqn and 64 Sqn, which had replaced 213 at Church Fenton, put on a spirited air display at the station’s first Open Day. Sadly, 29 June 1938 brought another loss to the squadron when Flt Lt William Forster Pharazyn was killed in a mid-air collision with another Gladiator. The delusion of normality, so fervently believed by many in the country, was rudely shattered in September 1938. On 23 September Hitler demanded that the Czechs evacuate the Sudetenland region. This demand brought about the period known as the ‘Munich Crisis’. A week after Hitler had made his demand, the heads of state of Germany, Italy, France and Great Britain met in Munich and the RAF prepared to go to war.
No. 72 Squadron’s shiny Gladiators soon lost their sparkle under a coat of camouflage paint and toned-down roundels. The overall silver was replaced with a dark green and dark earth disruptive camouflage pattern on the upper surfaces, and the under surfaces split into equal halves of black and white. The country held its collective breath as the politicians talked. Czechoslovakia was divided up and Chamberlain returned with a worthless piece of paper, the Munich Agreement, declaring that Hitler had no more territorial ambitions and that he held in his hand ‘peace in our time’. The people of Britain breathed a sigh of relief, but the RAF and 72 Sqn continued to prepare for war as Hitler ’s army marched into the Sudetenland.
On 14 December 1938 Sqn Ldr Rogers was replaced by the airman who would ultimately lead 72 Sqn to war, Sqn Ldr R.B. Lees. By January 1939 Hitler was calling for the return of Danzig to Germany, while 72 Sqn busied itself with further training, including a visit to Aldergrove in Northern Ireland for an armament training camp at No. 2 ATS, utilizing the extensive range facilities on the shores of Lough Neagh. Les Dwyer went with the Gladiators to Aldergrove:
At Aldergrove with 72 Sqn on Gladiators we had a few props splintered until the armourers got their act together. We had our six weeks’ practice camp there and enjoyed it very much, betting on who would finish on top of the daily target practice board.
e9781783409266_i0029.jpgThe squadron on parade and receiving the squadron badge from MRAF Lord Dowding. (72 Sqn)
e9781783409266_i0030.jpg72 Sqn Gladiator K8004 at Hooton Park on 9 September 1938. (72 Sqn)
e9781783409266_i0031.jpgGladiator K6136 at Hooton Park in September 1938. (72 Sqn)
e9781783409266_i0032.jpgThe squadron badge approved by the King in February 1938. (72 Sqn)
e9781783409266_i0033.jpgThe NCOs of ‘A’ Flt with a Gladiator in 1938. (A. Allsopp)
e9781783409266_i0034.jpg72 Sqn in 1938. (G. Gillard)
Four of us rowed across Lough Neagh (out of bounds) and came ashore at the ‘Castle’ [Shane’s Castle], where the very old caretaker showed us around his greenhouses which were full of perfume-scented geraniums. We took snaps of the row of cannon, but decided against an invitation to visit some dungeons. The café at Antrim hung out over the river and did teas with many varieties of super bread. Feasts to remember!
The only evidence of troubles when we were there was some bullet marks on the canteen, where some keen ‘bod’ years before had driven through the camp one Easter and sprayed a few shots as he went through.
e9781783409266_i0035.jpgFlg Off D.F.B. Sheen of ‘A’ Flt in Gladiator K6143 in formation with K6140 and K6142 during the summer of 1938. (72 Sqn)
e9781783409266_i0036.jpgRed Section of ‘A’ Flt, comprising K6140, K6142 and K6143. (72 Sqn)
e9781783409266_i0037.jpgAnother view of K6140, K6142 and K6143 in formation. (72 Sqn)
e9781783409266_i0038.jpgA photo of the same formation. (T.A.F. Elsdon)
e9781783409266_i0039.jpgFormation of four Gladiators, K6130, K6131, K6142 and K6144, showing off the red and blue squadron bar marking on fuselage and wings. (A. Allsopp)
e9781783409266_i0040.jpg72 Sqn Gladiator formation: K6130, K6142, K6144, K6131 and K6134 show off the squadron red/blue upper wing and fuselage marking to good effect. (72 Sqn)
e9781783409266_i0041.jpgL to R: L. Henstock, unknown, unknown, Des Sheen, unknown. (T.A.F. Elsdon)
e9781783409266_i0042.jpgFlg Off L. Henstock with his ground crew. (72 Sqn)
e9781783409266_i0043.jpgWatercolour painting of Gladiator K6143, commissioned by Desmond Sheen in 1939. (D. Foster-Williams)
e9781783409266_i0044.jpgDesmond Sheen in mess dress pre-war. (T.A.F. Elsdon)
e9781783409266_i0045.jpgDesmond Sheen in civilian clothes pre-war. (T.A.F. Elsdon)
e9781783409266_i0046.jpgGladiator K6131 in flight.
In March the German Army marched into Prague, and Czechoslovakia ceased to exist. The Poles continued to argue Germany’s right to Danzig and the ‘Danzig Corridor’, and Hitler annexed German-speaking Memel. By the end of the month of March, Britain and France had declared their intention to jointly defend Poland against any aggressor. The battle lines were being drawn.
e9781783409266_i0047.jpgAnother view of Gladiator K6131. (72 Sqn)
e9781783409266_i0048.jpg72 Sqn Gladiator K6132 in flight.
e9781783409266_i0049.jpg72 Sqn Gladiators, including K6135, lined up at Church Fenton. (72 Sqn)
e9781783409266_i0050.jpgGladiators outside the 72 Sqn hangar at Church Fenton. (72 Sqn)
e9781783409266_i0051.jpg72 Sqn Gladiators lined up outside the squadron hangar at Church Fenton in 1938. (72 Sqn)
e9781783409266_i0052.jpgGladiator K6133:F of 72 Sqn taxiing. (Glyn Ramsden)
e9781783409266_i0053.jpg72 Sqn Gladiators ‘attacking’ a Whitley bomber during an Air Defence of Great Britain (ADGB) exercise in 1938. (G. Gillard)
e9781783409266_i0054.jpgThree Gladiators attack the Whitley. (G. Gillard)
e9781783409266_i0055.jpgThe Whitley involved in the ADGB exercise at Church Fenton in 1938. (G. Gillard)
e9781783409266_i0056.jpgThe Munich Crisis brought about a hasty change of markings for the RAF, and aircraft began to lose the white part of the roundel and don dull camouflage colours. K7922 is not yet camouflaged but has the modified roundel. (72 Sqn)
e9781783409266_i0057.jpgLysander K9646 following an unfortunate landing incident involving Flg Off Desmond Sheen. (72 Sqn)
e9781783409266_i0058.jpgGladiator K6144 was abandoned in a spin and crashed at Monk Fryston, Yorkshire, on 1 December 1938. (72 Sqn)
e9781783409266_i0059.jpgGround crew servicing Gladiator K9878, seen here with a mixture of pre- and post-Munich Crisis markings. (72 Sqn)
e9781783409266_i0060.jpgTwo 72 Sqn Gladiators with different stages of camouflage and marking application. (72 Sqn)
e9781783409266_i0061.jpgThe sun sets on the Gladiators at Church Fenton in 1939. (72 Sqn)
e9781783409266_i0062.jpgA fully camouflaged Gladiator at Church Fenton in