ROYAL AIR FORCE
EXPANSION PROGRESS
SATISFACTORY RECRUITING
26 NEW SQUADRONS FORMED
(British Official Wireless.)
(Received September 17, 11 a.m.)
RUGBY,- September 16,
Twenty-six new squadrons—twentythree in the regular service and three auxiliary—have now been added to the strength of the Royal Air Force under the terms of the expansion plan announced by the Government in May last year. Three of these have been formed during the past month. Forty-five more units must be added to bring up the strength of the Metropolitan Air Force to the 123 squadrons then proposed. A further extension to 129 squadrons, backed by full war reserves and representing a vast augmentation of the striking power of the service, was outlined in a White Paper on defence published early in March this year. Thirteen special civil flying training schools where initial tuition for young pilots is given have been created. Men are joining the service in satisfactory numbers and quality. Between April, 1935, and the end of March this year the force took on 940 pilots and just under 15,000 airmen. Since April 1 a further 900 pilots and large numbers of airmen have joined
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CXXII, Issue 68, 17 September 1936, Page 9
Word Count
189ROYAL AIR FORCE Evening Post, Volume CXXII, Issue 68, 17 September 1936, Page 9
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