RCAF 435 Transport and Rescue Squadron


RCAF 435 Transport and Rescue Squadron RCAF 435 Transport and Rescue Squadron RCAF 435 Transport and Rescue Squadron
Added by Alain Martineau
General Description : Motto: Certi provenhendi (Determined on delivery)
The "Chinthe" squadron was the RCAF's second Far East transport unit formed during World War Two. Flying DC-3 Dakota aircraft, 435 Squadron would conduct missions throughout the China-Burma-India (CBI) theatre of operations in support of Allied forces in general and the Anglo-Indian Fourteenth Army in particular. For the Canadians involved in this part of the war, living and working conditions would pose as great a threat as enemy action. No. 435 Squadron achieved operational status on 1 November 1944 at Gujrat, Punjab, India. Less than two months later, the squadron was transferred to Tulihal, Manipur, India, where it flew its first official mission on 20 December. Sixteen Dakotas delivered supplies to advance units of the Fourteenth Army through a combination of air-drop and rapid off-loading at a temporary air strip carved out of the jungle. This first operation would be the basic "blue-print" for future sorties.
Despite promises that the Canadians would return home at the end of the European war, 435 Squadron remained in the Far East until late August 1945. After that it was back to England and eventually home to Canada. While in the CBI theatre, the squadron flew 15,681 sorties delivering 27,460 tons of badly needed freight and over 14,000 passengers. It was an enviable record.
No. 435 Squadron Formed as a Transport unit at Edmonton, Alberta on 1 August 1946 from the Edmonton portion of No. 164 (Transport) Squadron, the squadron flew Dakota and C-119 aircraft on western Canada transport duty and parachute training at Rivers, Manitoba. From November 1956 to January 1957, it airlifted members of the United Nations Emergency Force from Italy to Egypt. In 1960, it was re-equipped with C-130 Hercules aircraft and, during the 1962-63 conversion of No. 1 Air Division Europe squadrons from Sabre to Starfighter aircraft, ferried 137 CF-104 aircraft from Canada to Europe. On 1 February 1968 the squadron was integrated into the Canadian Armed Forces.
The squadron was reformed at 17 Wing Winnipeg in the summer of 1994 where it remains today and currently operates the CC-130E and CC-130H(T) Hercules.
Front Description : The chinthe is a legendary monster which guards the temples in Burma, where this squadron operated
Back Description : A CC-130 Hercules aircraft
Diameter 41.00 mm
Material -I do not know-
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