No. 96 Squadron RAF | |
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![]() Official Squadron Badge of No. 96 Squadron RAF
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Active | 8 October 1917 - 4 July 1918 28 September 1918 - November 1918 18 December 1940 - 12 December 1944 21 December 1944 - 1 June 1946 17 November 1952 – 21 January 1959 |
Country |
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Branch |
Royal Flying Corps 8 October 1917 – 1 April 1918 ![]() |
Role | Training unit Night Fighter unit Transport unit |
Garrison/HQ |
RAF Wyton RAF Cranage RAF Wrexham RAF Honiley RAF Ford RAF Odiham RAF Leconfield RAF Cairo West RAF Kai Tak RAF Ahlhorn RAF Geilenkirchen |
Motto(s) |
Latin: Nocturni obambulamus ("We prowl by night") |
Insignia | |
Squadron badge heraldry | A lion passant facing to the sinister with ten stars representing the constellation of Leo |
Squadron codes |
ZJ December 1940 - December 1944 6H December 1944 - June 1946 L October 1952 - 1955 |
Aircraft flown | |
Bomber | December 1944-April 1945: Handley Page Halifax |
Fighter | December 1940 - March 1942: Hawker Hurricane February 1941 - June 1942: Boulton Paul Defiant May 1942 - June 1943: Bristol Beaufighter June 1943 - December 1944: de Havilland Mosquito |
Royal Flying Corps 8 October 1917 – 1 April 1918
No. 96 Squadron was a Royal Air Force squadron. The squadron served on the Western Front during World War II and the Burma Campaign in the South-East Asian Theatre of World War II. No. 96 Squadron served in a variety of roles such as night fighter cover and transportation. It was disbanded in 1959, when its personnel were assigned to No. 3 Squadron.
No. 96 Squadron was formed on 8 October 1917 at Lincolnshire as an aircrew training unit of the Royal Flying Corps, the air force of the British Army during most of World War I. The unit was disbanded on 4 July 1918 but was reformed at St. Ives, Cambridgeshire on 28 September 1918 as a ground attack squadron of the Royal Air Force.
The headquarters of the squadron at that time were located at RAF Wyton. On 11 November 1918 an armistice between the Allies and the German Empire was signed, marking the end of World War I. As a consequence No. 96 Squadron was disbanded by the end of November, 1918 before becoming operational.
On 18 December 1940 No. 422 Flight, a night fighter unit stationed at RAF Shoreham was renamed to No. 96 Squadron. The squadron's headquarters were located at RAF Cranage in Cheshire. During the war it was commanded by Edward Crew.