The name No. 68 Squadron has been used for two quite different units, only one of which was strictly a unit of the Royal Air Force. "No. 68 Squadron RFC" was for a time the official British military designation for No. 2 Squadron Australian Flying Corps.
World War I
No. 2 Squadron, Australian Flying Corps was formed at Heliopolis, Egypt in 1916.[4] For a while it was known to the British military as "No. 68 Squadron RFC" - according to some accounts in order to avoid confusion with No. 2 Squadron, RFC. This designation was never accepted by the squadron or the Australian Imperial Force, and was in fact officially dropped by the British by early 1918, before the formation of the RAF.
Initially equipped with Airco DH.5 aircraft, the unit's main role with these aircraft was the strafing of hostile trenches. In January 1918 the unit was re-equipped with S.E.5a fighters, which it retained for the rest of the war. The squadron claimed 77 enemy aircraft destroyed.[5] It remained in Europe until 28 February 1919 when it was disbanded.
From July 1941 No. 68 Squadron always had a strong element of Czechoslovak airmen in exile, with up to eight flying crews consisting entirely of Czechoslovak personnel. One flight of the squadron was Czechoslovak. Notable pilots included flying aceMiloslav Mansfeld, who as a Beaufighter pilot shot down numerous Luftwaffe bombers and as a Mosquito pilot shot down two V-1 flying bombs. From October 1943 Mansfeld commanded the squadron's "A" flight.[6]
The poet James Farrar was a Pilot Officer of 68 Squadron. He was killed on the night of 25/26 July 1944 when, on patrol over the Thames (as navigator of a Mosquito piloted by Fred Kemp), he was ordered to intercept a V1 flying bomb.[7]
Both the Czechoslovak element and the squadron's night fighter service were honoured in 1944 when Air Chief MarshalCharles Steele presented a badge to the squadron that shows an owl's head and has the Czech motto Vždy připraven – "Always prepared" or "Always ready".[2][8]
No. 68 Squadron was deactivated on 20 April 1945 with the personnel joining various other units including No. 125 Squadron RAF.
Molkentin, Michael (2010). Fire in the Sky:The Australian Flying Corps in the First World War. Sydney: Allen & Unwin. ISBN978-1-74237-072-9.
Croft, Peter L (1994). "A History of No. 68 Squadron RAF"(PDF). Royal Air Force Museum Laarbruch-Weeze. Archived from the original(PDF) on 3 September 2013. Retrieved 16 February 2013.