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“I’ll be with
you boys” Fly and Fight
with the R.C.A.F. Recruiting
poster for the RCAF by Joseph
Sydney Hallam.
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| Department
of Rare Books and Special Collections,
McGill University Libraries, Montreal.
WP2.R14.F3. |
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They are between 18 and 24 years of age.
A majority is not 20 yet. They chose the
Air Force over the Navy and the Army. Most
of them share a dream: they picture themselves
soaring through the skies on mighty planes,
engaging the Fuehrer’s minions in
mortal combat. The BCATP’s task is
to direct those rookies towards a training
that match their skills, to provide discipline
without hampering their resolution, to impart
the know-how needed to conduct dangerous
flight missions, to teach the reflexes that
may save their lives and the lives of their
crewmates.
Training starts at one of the five Manning
Depots, located in Toronto, Brandon, Edmonton,
Quebec City and Lachine. Recruits familiarize
themselves with military discipline and
with the basics of aviation: regulations,
history, and navigation. Between courses
they go through endless drills and weapon-handling
exercises, with the Lee-Enfield rifle for
instance. Manning depots also provide some
language training for those who do not speak
English well enough, in those days the only
language used in the Canadian Armed Forces.
English is also a necessity because airmen
may be called to serve in Britain, where
they may also have to decipher the cockney
accent of air controllers! Upon leaving
the manning depot, trainees become “aircraftsmen
2”. They are then directed towards
a BCATP training school for airmen or towards
a training camp for ground personnel.
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A group photograph is taken
after each step of the training
programme. Here, trainees at
Manning Depot No 5 in Lachine,
Quebec, with instructor V. Beauvilliers,
13th June, 1943.
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| From
Gérard Pelland’s
album; with kind permission of
the Pelland family. |
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Trainees start Initial Training School
(ITS), well aware that at the end of the
ten-week process some of them will be selected
to become pilots – those may still
dream of glorious deeds – or to be
trained as navigators, bombers, wireless
operators or gunners, essential jobs but
lacking in prestige. Their performance on
a thankless machine, the Link Trainer, will
decide. This flight simulator, while solidly
anchored to the ground, reproduces the flying
experience in order to assess the pilot
skills of a recruit; it is also used to
teach air navigation. Throughout the ten-week
training period, recruits also study navigation,
flight techniques, mechanical engineering,
mathematics, telegraphy, and friend-or-foe
airplane recognition. Candidates who get
top grades, especially in mathematics, are
usually selected to become navigators or
air observers.
With changes brought to the programme in
1942 and 1943, the Link Trainer is used
earlier in the process, as soon as the manning
depot. In addition, the preliminary training
of wireless operators and gunners is reduced
to place focus on specialized training and,
starting in 1942, they are no longer required
to go through Initial Training Schools.
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A Link Trainer flight simulator
used at No 19 Elementary Flying
Training School, Virden, Manitoba,
October 1944.
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| Photo
by Nicholas Morant. Department
of National defence / National
Archives of Canada, PA-140658. |
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Pilots
Candidates selected for pilot training
are sent to one of the 30 Elementary Flying
Training Schools (EFTS) throughout Canada.
This is their big day: they will fly soon!
EFTS are civilian schools placed under military
administration. Most of them have been established
under the sponsorship of local flying clubs
and flying courses are given by civilian
instructors.
The future pilot trains at first on a Fleet
Finch, a biplane with two cockpits one behind
the other, painted bright yellow and bearing
the RCAF blue, white and red roundel. During
his eight-week training period, he must
complete at least 50 hours of flight, half
of them flying solo. After eight hours of
flight with his instructor, he must be ready
for his first solo flight. In addition to
common manoeuvres, such as taking off, horizontal
flight, approach with engine on or off,
etc., trainees also familiarize themselves
with aerial acrobatics. An extremely stable
aircraft, the Fleet Finch is wonderfully
adapted to training and to stunt flying.
Starting in 1943, it is gradually replaced
by the Fairchild Cornell, a plane closer
to a modern military aircraft.
On the ground, after 180 hours of flight,
future pilots have gained in-depth knowledge
of aircraft engines and airframes, of flight
theory, of navigation, of signalling and
weapons. With the RAF putting increased
emphasis on night bombing missions, additional
courses are added in 1942 dealing with navigation,
instrument flying and friend-or-foe aircraft
recognition. Machine-gun training is also
part of the curriculum.
Pilots who successfully go through EFTS
training are then assigned to a Service
Flying Training School (SFTS). The schools
located in Eastern Canada train fighter
pilots and rely mostly on the North American
Harvard. Flying an aircraft as powerful
as a Harvard, that can reach 290 km/h, is
an exhilarating experience for young pilots
and many cannot resist skimming or trying
out dangerous acrobatics, only to show off
to their buddies. Even if military regulations
prohibit such demonstrations, authorities
are often lenient, as this may be the best
way for a pilot to learn how to fight and
escape desperate situations.
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Four North American Harvard
flying in formation near No
2 Service Flying Training School,
Ottawa, July 1941.
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| Photo
by Nicholas Morant. Department
of National Defence / National
Archives of Canada, PA-140659. |
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After unloading our
baggage, we inspected one of the planes
at close range. It was a huge, all-metal
creation with a tremendous 600 horsepower
Pratt and Whitney nine-cylinder radial glistening
darkly under an enormous cowl. After the
simple cloth-covered Fleet, the Harvard
looked massive, rugged, heavy, complex.
The instrument panel contained a hopeless
confusion of black-faced dials and toggle
switches. More handles protruded from beneath
the instruments and between the big rudder
pedals.
"Hey, look at the numbers on
the airspeed indicator"
"Man, it reads 300 on the top side!"
"Are we supposed to watch all of this
junk and fly at the same time?"
- Len Morgan, The AT-6 Harvard
Bomber pilots, for their part, are sent
to western flying schools. Training is mostly
on the twin-engine Avro Anson, nicknamed
“Faithful Annie” on account
of its reliability and steadiness. Bomber
pilot training emphasizes professionalism
and precision flying.
During the BCATP’s first year, military
flying training is a ten-week course. But
some weaknesses were identified in the training
of the earlier graduates posted to Great
Britain and the course was expanded to 16
weeks. To successfully complete this programme,
trainees must achieve 100 hours of flight,
40 of them solo. When trainees graduate,
they receive the two-wing pilot badge and
are promoted to sergeant. About one third
will eventually reach an officer rank.
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Two Avro Anson II from No
10 Service Flying Training School,
Dauphin, Manitoba, 26th August,
1944.
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| From
Gérard Pelland’s
album; by kind permission of the
Pelland family |
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Air Observers and
Navigators
The 1940 programme included training “air
observers”, a position that combined
the functions of navigator and bomber. Air
observers also received training in weapons,
so they may help in defending the plane.
As crews on heavy bombers became more specialized,
air observers as such were replaced by separate
navigators and bombers. The need for less-specialized
personnel such as navigators-bombers (called
“navigators B”) or navigators-wireless
operators (or “navigators W”)
was met by different combinations of courses.
Air Observer Schools (AOS) train air observers
– and starting in 1942 navigators
as well – in the skills required by
their functions. The course, which had a
duration of 12 weeks in 1940, was expanded
to 18 weeks in June 1942; it is followed
by a 6-week stay at a Bombing and Gunnery
School. The navigator or bomber in training
must complete at least 23 hours of flight
during which he practices bombing techniques,
by dropping 80 bombs at an average distance
of 120 yards (110 m) from the target. When
they graduate, trainees receive the one-wing
badge of air observers, navigators or bombers
and are promoted to sergeant.
Sgt
E.M. Romilly, RCAF, W.H. Betts,
RAAF, and J.A. Mahoud, RAF, practicing
navigation techniques on board
an Anson from the No 1 Air Navigation
School, Rivers, Manitoba, 4th
June, 1941. |
| National
Defence Image Library, PL 3740. |
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Navigators wrap up their training with
an intensive 4-week programme at an Air
Navigation School; they learn navigation
by the stars and get updated on the most
recent techniques and instruments.
Wireless Operators
and Air Gunners
Starting in 1942, Wireless Schools provide
a 28-week training programme; this is basically
a theoretical technical training, later
completed by a few hours of flying. Wireless
operators / gunners then move on a to a
six-week course at a Bombing and Gunnery
School where they learn to operate machine-guns
and hydraulic turrets. Training planes are
usually Anson or Fairey Battle, both equipped
with Vickers or Lewis .303-calibre machine-guns.
Flight Engineers
Unknown in 1939, the flight engineer position
was created to serve on heavy bombers, as
a replacement for second pilots. Their job
was to ensure that the engines and other
on-board systems worked properly. The BCATP
had only one school for flight engineers,
located in Aylmer, Ontario. It opened on
July 1st, 1944; a 7-week specialized programme
in Great Britain completed the 23-week training.
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Airplane engine mechanics
at the St. Thomas, Ontario,
Technical Training School, 24th
July, 1940.
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| National
Defence Image Library, PL 1035. |
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From Training to
Operations
As each training session draws to its conclusion,
trainees take part in the traditional group
photograph and pilots receive their badges
at the wing parade. They are not yet ready
to fly and fight: they have theoretical
knowledge but little experience. Certified
airmen are directed towards Operational
Training Units (OTU) where they will familiarize
themselves with the planes they will actually
fly on their missions. Six OTUs are located
in Canada but most are attached to RAF air
bases in Great Britain.
In the end, very few BCATP graduates will
see their dream of daring deeds come true.
Instead they will carry on a demanding task,
one that requires competence, know-how and
courage. In their flying machines, they
will face danger, fear, boredom even, and
sometimes death.
Nineteen is an impressionable
age. Put a boy who has never wanted to
do anything but fly in a big, hefty, fully-aerobatic
600 horsepower fighter-type airplane and
he soaks up this new world like a sponge.
The heady aroma of gasoline and dope,
the spine-tingling sound of aircraft engines
coming to life at sunrise, the utterly
indescribable sensation at the top of
a loop, the talk of those who speak your
language, the snug feel of parachute straps,
the entire overwhelming atmosphere. I
remember it all. That was living. — Len Morgan, The AT-6 Harvard
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