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No. 512 Squadron RAF

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Country
  
United Kingdom

Branch
  
Royal Air Force

Active
  
18 June 1943 – 14 March 1946

Role
  
Transport Airborne forces

Motto(s)
  
Latin: Pegasus Militans (Translation: "Pegasus at war")

Squadron Badge heraldry
  
In front of a horse's head couped, a sword erect, the point upwards

No. 512 Squadron was a Second World War Royal Air Force transport squadron.

History

No. 512 Squadron was formed on 18 June 1943 from the Dakota element of 24 Squadron at RAF Hendon. It operated on supply routes from the United Kingdom to Gibraltar and Algeria to support the campaign in North West Africa. It also flew internal routes within the United Kingdom, and to the Azores and India. In February 1944 the squadron changed role and was transferred to No. 46 Group at RAF Broadwell, it was now a tactical Dakota squadron and started training glider towing and parachute dropping. Its first operation in the new role was a leaflet drop on 5 June 1944 over France, this followed intensive flying in and out of France including dropping parachutists at Arnhem. It suffered losses during Operation Market Garden and was withdrawn to operate a transport service from Brussels in March 1945, although it was still involved in airborne operations associated with the Rhine crossing. After VE Day in July 1945 it extended its trooping routes to Palestine and the Middle East and moved to RAF Qastina in Palestine in October 1945, moving on by the end of the month to Gianaclis near Alexandria, Egypt. In December 1945 it moved to Bari, to operate scheduled flights within Italy. It returned to the United Kingdom in February 1946 and was disbanded upon arrival on 14 March 1946.

References

No. 512 Squadron RAF Wikipedia