The 'Fairey Battle' was a
British single-engined
light bomber built by
Fairey Aviation in the late
1930s for the
Royal Air Force. The Battle was powered by the same
Rolls-Royce Merlin piston engine that gave the contemporary
Supermarine Spitfire its high performance; however, the Battle was weighed down with a three-man crew and a bomb load. It was slow, limited in range and highly vulnerable to attack. During the
Battle of France in 1940, the Fairey Battle recorded the first RAF aerial victory of the
Second World War. Despite this claim, it sustained terrible casualties and was pulled from the front lines.
Design and development
The original Battle was designed to
Specification P.27/32 as a two-seat day bomber, to replace the ageing
Hawker Hart and
Hawker Hind biplane bombers. The prototype Battle first flew on
10 March 1936. When the RAF embarked on the pre-war expansion programme, the Battle became a priority production target with 2,419 ordered,
[1] and an initial production order placed for 155 Battles built to Specification P.23/35. The first of these aircraft was completed in June
1937 at Fairey's
Stockport factory, and tested at their Manchester (Ringway) facility.
Production Battles were powered by the
Rolls Royce Merlin I, II, III and V, and took their Mark numbers from the powerplant (ie., a Battle Mk II was powered by a Merlin II). 1,029 aircraft were later produced to Specification P.32/36 by the
Austin Motors "Shadow Factory" at
Longbridge.
The Battle's standard payload of four 250 lb (110 kg) bombs was carried in cells inside the wings, and an additional 500 lb of bombs could be carried in under-wing racks. Replacing the RAF's Hawker Harts and Hinds, when it entered service in 1937 the Battle was already obsolescent as fighter technology had soon outstripped the modest performance gains that the light bomber possessed over its biplane antecedents.
[2]
Operational history
The first RAF squadron to be equipped with the Battles was
63 Squadron in June,
1937. The Battle had the distinction of becoming the first operational aircraft to enter service with a Merlin engine, beating the
Hawker Hurricane's service debut by a few months.
The Battle was obsolete by the start of the
Second World War but remained a front line RAF bomber due to a lack of a suitable replacement. On
2 September 1939, during the "
Phony War", ten Battle
squadrons were deployed to
France to form a vanguard of the
Advanced Air Striking Force. On
20 September 1939, a German
Messerschmitt Bf 109 was shot down by Battle gunner Sgt. F. Letchard during a patrol near
Aachen, marking the RAF's first aerial victory of the war. Nonetheless, the Battle was hopelessly outclassed by
Luftwaffe fighters, being almost 100 mph slower than the contemporary Bf 109 at 14,000 feet. The Battle's defence consisted of a single .303
Vickers K machine gun mounted in the rear cockpit, and a forward-firing .303
Browning machine gun in the starboard wing.
When the
Battle of France began, Battles were called upon to perform unescorted, low-level tactical attacks against the advancing German army. This put the aircraft at risk of attack from Luftwaffe fighters, and within easy range of the German Army's light anti-aircraft guns. In the first of two sorties carried out by Battles on
10 May 1940, three out of eight aircraft were lost, while in the second sortie, 13 out of 32 went down, with the remainder suffering damage. Despite bombing from as low as 250 ft (76 m), their attacks had little impact on the German columns.
On
11 May, 15 Battles of the Belgian Air Force attacked bridges over the
Albert Canal on the
River Meuse, losing ten aircraft, and in another RAF sortie that day only one Battle out of eight survived. During the following day, six Battles of
12 Squadron attacked the bridges, when four of the aircraft were destroyed. Two
Victoria Crosses were awarded posthumously for the action - to
Flying Officer Garland and navigator/bombardier
Sgt. Gray of Battle P2204/K - for pressing home the attack in spite of the heavy defensive fire. The third crewmember, rear gunner Leading Aircraftman Lawrence Reynolds, did not share the award. Garland's Battle destroyed one span of the bridge, although the German army quickly erected a
pontoon bridge to replace it.
The penultimate Fairey Battle sorties included an "all-out" attack against German pontoon bridges on
30 May 1940. The light bombers were swarmed by opposing fighters and were devastated; out of a strike force of 71 Battles, 40 were lost. After these abortive raids, the Battle was withdrawn from front line service in France. A similar situation would befall the German Luftwaffe during the early days of the
Battle of Britain when the
Ju 87 Stuka divebomber suffered equivalent losses in a similar role. With the exception of the successful
de Havilland Mosquito,
Bristol Beaufighter and
Douglas A-20, low-level attack missions passed into the hands of single-engined, multi-role fighter aircraft such as the
Hawker Hurricane,
Hawker Typhoon and
P-47 Thunderbolt.
While the few remaining Fairey Battles were evacuated from France, for a short period of time, the RAF continued to rely on the light bomber. Reforming the No. 1 Group and later equipping some new Polish squadrons with the type, it continued to be deployed in cross-channel operations. The last operational sortie was mounted on the night of 15/16 October 1940 by No.
301 (Polish) Squadron in a raid on
Boulogne, and Nos. 12 and 142 Squadrons bombing
Calais. Shortly after, all Battle squadrons were re-equipped with more potent
Vickers Wellington bombers.
[3]
Additional roles
While the Fairey Battle was no longer used as a combat aircraft, its benign handling characteristics made it an ideal platform for testing engines and it was used in this role to evaluate engines up to 2,000 hp. As the dual-control Fairey Battle T, it served as a trainer and as the winch-equipped Fairey Battle TT, it was used as a target-towing aircraft. The Battle served as a trainer with the
Royal Australian Air Force, the
Royal Canadian Air Force and the
South African Air Force. From August 1939, 739 Battles were stationed in Canada as trainers in the
Commonwealth Air Training Plan. Most were used for bombing and gunnery training with a small number equipped as target tugs. Some aircraft had the rear cockpit replaced with a Bristol turret for turret-gunnery training. Ironically, the Battle remained in RAF service in secondary roles until 1949.
Variants
;'Fairey Day Bomber': Prototype (K4303).
;'Battle Mk I': Three-seat light bomber version. This was the first production version, which was powered by a 1,030-hp (768-kW) Rolls-Royce Merlin I inline piston engine.
;'Battle Mk II': Three-seat light bomber version. Powered by a 1,030-hp (768-kW) Rolls-Royce Merlin II inline piston engine.
;'Battle Mk V': Three-seat light bomber version. Powered by a Rolls-Royce Merlin V inline piston engine.
;'Battle T': After May 1940, a number of Battle Mk Is, IIs and Vs were converted into training aircraft.
;'Battle IT': After May 1940, a number of Battle Mk Is, IIs and Vs were converted into training aircraft with a turret installed in the rear.
;'Battle TT': After May 1940, a number of Battle Mk Is, IIs and Vs were converted into target tug aircraft; 100 built.
;'Battle TT.Mk I': Target tug version. This was the last production version; 226 built.
Production
In total 2,185 Battles were built during the machine's production life; 1,156 by Fairey and 1,029 by the
Austin Motor Company. A further 18 were built under licence by Avions Fairey in
Belgium for service with the
Belgian Air Force.

A Fairey Battle under restoration at the Brussels Air Museum, 2006.
Survivors
There are only five examples of the Battle held by various museums, but none of them are in flying condition. The best known is that of ''L5343'' displayed at the
RAF Museum in
Hendon. In July 1940 it was allocated to No. 98 RAF Squadron, after which it and other Battles were flown to
Iceland for anti-invasion operations in support of British forces which had occupied the island in May 1940. ''L5343'' was the first RAF aircraft to land on Icelandic soil, and crashed during subsequent operations. In 1972, the RAF embarked on a successful recovery operation to salvage the wreck and return it to the UK for restoration. The wreck of a further Battle was discovered in an Icelandic glacier in 1995,
[1] although there are no plans to restore it.
Another airframe is on display at the
Canada Aviation Museum as a Battle T (marked as R7384/35), to represent the contribution the aircraft made to aircrew training in the British
Commonwealth Air Training Plan. ''R7384'' was manufactured as a pilot trainer in 1940, and taken on strength by the RCAF in 1941. Converted to a turret-gunnery trainer in 1942, it was used until 1943, when it entered storage. After moving among several storage locations, the aircraft was transferred to the Canada Aviation Museum in 1964, and a final restoration program was completed in the 1990s. Although far from complete, another Canadian-based Battle trainer is currently being restored at the
Commonwealth Air Training Plan Museum at
Brandon, Manitoba.
A fourth aircraft, currently under restoration, is part of the collection of the Royal Museum of the Armed Forces and of Military History,
Brussels,
Belgium.
The
South Australian Aviation Museum at
Port Adelaide is undertaking a restoration project using the remains of a Battle which was recovered from a tidal swamp near the Second World War
RAAF training base at
Port Pirie in South Australia.
Operators
;:
Royal Australian Air Force – 364 planes
;:
Belgian Air Force – 16 planes
;:
Royal Canadian Air Force – 739 planes
;:
Irish Air Corps
;:
Hellenic Air Force
;:
Polish Air Forces on exile in Great Britain
::
No. 300 Polish Bomber Squadron "Ziemi Mazowieckiej"
::
No. 301 Polish Bomber Squadron "Ziemi Pomorskiej"
::
No. 304 Polish Bomber Squadron "Ziemi Śląskiej im. Ks. Józefa Poniatowskiego"
::
No. 305 Polish Bomber Squadron "Ziemi Wielkopolskiej im. Marszałka Józefa Piłsudskiego"
;
South Africa:
South African Air Force
;:
Turkish Army Air Force – 29 planes
;:
Royal Air Force
Specifications (Mk.II)

Orthographically projected diagram of the Fairey Battle.
References
1. Moyes 1971, p.120.
2. Taylor 1969, p. 358.
3. Moyes 1971, p. 115.
★ Moyes, Philip, J.R. "The Fairey Battle." ''Aircraft in Profile Volume 2''. Windsor, Berkshire, UK: Profile Publications, 1971. ISBN 0-85383-011-8.
★ ''RAF Timeline: 20 Sep 1939''.
Royal Air Force.
RAF Timeline Access date: 28 January 2007.
★ Taylor, John W. R. "Fairey Battle." ''Combat Aircraft of the World from 1909 to the present''. New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1969. ISBN 0-425-03633-2.
External links
★
British Aircraft Directory entry
★
British Aircraft of WWII
Related content