Lancaster Bomber - Military Documentary
WW2 British AVRO Lancaster Heavy Bomber.
Born out of the failure that was the
Manchester, the
Lancaster has become the one bomber most associated with the
RAF night offensive over
Germany.
In September 1940, a contract was signed with
Avro for two prototype aircraft, the first of which was to fly within four months.
To do this, Avro was to use as many existing Manchester components as possible to reduce cost and the timescale.
Within a month, Avro had had prepared the requisite technical drawings for the Lancaster and things progressed smoothly with the first flight being made on 9
January 1941. The first aircraft was very much a hybrid design, and a more representative aircraft followed in May
1941. The second prototype had larger tail fins, a new undercarriage and improved
Merlin engines and the true potential of the aircraft could now be tested.
Test flying continued throughout the summer and the first production Lancaster I was flown on the last day of
October 1941.
The first Lancaster squadron was No 44 (
Rhodesia) Squadron, based at
Waddington and commanded by
Wing Commander RAB Learoyd VC and deliveries commenced on
Christmas Eve 1941. Shortly after, No 97 Squadron traded in its Hampdens for Lancasters and both units commenced their operational work-up. By May
1942, No
44 Squadron was ready for operations and during the night of 10th/
11th March 1942, a number of its aircraft took part in a raid on
Essen.
Throughout the remainder of 1942, the transition to Lancasters in
Bomber Command was relatively slow, but the increase in the total tonnage of bombs in operations was increasing rapidly because of the ability of the Lancaster to carry bombs greater than the 4,000lb
High Capacity (the only aircraft that could do so).
One of the new Lancaster squadrons, No 106, was frequently chosen to carry out a number of high-risk attacks.
It's leader was
Guy Penrose Gibson and early in 1943,
Gibson was chosen to recruit the best Bomber Command pilots available to form a new, elite squadron in No 5
Group to perform one very daring attack. Gibson chose as many pilots as possible from his old squadron and made up the rest with many he had previously flown with who had since joined other squadrons.
The new recruits were told to report to
Scampton but given no clue as to why they had been picked and what lay ahead for them
. In the weeks that followed, the crews were ordered to carry out as much low flying as possible and an identity for the new squadron chosen - No 617.
Finally, in May 1943 the reason for the enormous amount of low-level flying was revealed to the crews - three dams in the heart of the
Ruhr that would, it was believed, bring the industrial reason to a halt if they could be breached. More information will appear elsewhere in the site about No
617 Squadron's daring raid on the dams in May 1943, but suffice to say that no similar raid has ever been attempted since, and the success of the operation, despite the great bravery of the crews involved, failed to live up to expectations of the 'boffins' who had dreamt the plan up.
No 617 Squadron was not disbanded, and remained as part of No 5 Group for the remainder of the war for highly-specialised attacks, culminating in the use of the incredible 12,000lb 'Tallboy' and 22,000lb '
Grand Slam' attacks on the ever-elusive
Tirpitz (which was finally sunk in late-1944) and the destruction of a number of important bridges in Germany during the final months of
World War II.
Elsewhere in Bomber Command, the Lancaster continued on more mundane duties (including minelaying). The
Battles of the
Hamburg, theRuhr and
Berlin in 1943 and early
1944, the famous attack on the V1 establishment at Peenemünde in
August 1943 were some of the high points of the Lancaster's service. At the other end of the scale, ovr 60 Lancasters alone were lost during the raid on
Nuremberg in
March 1944.
Almost half of all Lancasters delivered during the war (3,345 out of 7,373) were lost on operations with the loss of over 21,
000 crew members.
The basic Lancaster, the
B.I was such an excellent airframe, that few changes were made to improve it.
The B.II was a
Bristol Hercules-powered variant built to counter possible supply problems with the Merlins; the
B.III was powered by improved Merlins and, along with the B.I, the standard mount of many Lancaster squadrons. The final version built in significant numbers was the
Mark X which was built under licence in
Canada.
Of those 7,000+ aircraft built, only two airworthy examples exist as a tribute to the many thousands who lost their lives in Bomber Command; one with the RAF's
Battle of Britain Memorial Flight and the second based in Canada.