No. 1697 (Air Despatch Letter Service) Flight RAF
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| No. 1697 (Air Despatch Letter Service) Flight | |
|---|---|
| Active | April 1944–March 1945 |
| Country | |
| Branch | |
| Part of | No. 46 Group, Transport Command |
| Aircraft operated | Hawker Hurricane Avro Anson Douglas Dakota |
| Engagements | Operation Overlord |
| Commanders | |
| Notable commanders | James Storrar |
| Insignia | |
| Unit Identity Code | DR |
No. 1697 (Air Despatch Letter Service) Flight was a unit of the Royal Air Force that was formed at Hendon in April 1944 for the purpose of providing secure communications between Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force and unit commanders in the Normandy beachhead during the 1944 Allied invasion of France. Operating mainly Hawker Hurricanes, it continued to deliver mail and small packages close to the front line during the Allied advance into France and Belgium. It was disbanded in March 1945.
For Operation Overlord, the Allied invasion of Normandy, it was expected that it may take some time for conventional forms of communication, such as radios and teleprinters, to be set up in the beachhead. As such an alternative method of securely communicating between the Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force (SHAEF) and the landing units in Normandy would be required. Accordingly, the Royal Air Force (RAF) formed No. 1697 (Air Despatch Letter Service) Flight at Hendon on 22 April 1944 for this purpose.[1]
Commanded by an experienced fighter pilot, Squadron Leader James Storrar, the flight was part of Transport Command's No. 46 Group. As the unit was potentially to operate close to the front-lines, an armed fighter was deemed necessary to equip the flight. Accordingly, the Hawker Hurricane fighter was selected. This was a monoplane aircraft that first entered service with the RAF in December 1937, but by 1944 was no longer suitable for front-line service in Europe. The flight used Hurricane Mk IICs, which had four cannons, and these were modified to take 31 cubic feet of mail and packages. It had a range of 350 miles, more than enough to fly to Normandy and back, and this could be extended with underwing drop tanks.[2][3]
The flight's aircraft, which it began to receive on 29 April, carried the unit identity code DR and just prior to D-Day, was painted with black and white invasion stripes for recognition purposes.[3]
