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| Allied and Soviet Air Forces Please use this forum to discuss the Air Forces of the Western Allies and the Soviet Union. |
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#1
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RAF groundcrew numbers.
Does anyone have even a ballpark figure for the number of groundcrew who served in Bomber Command during the war.
We know BC aircrew numbered 125,000, of whom roughly 57,000 were killed, 9,000 wounded and 13,000 made prisoner or went missing. But what of the groundcrew, of whom few were killed or wounded, of course. A million, 750 thousand? I would have thought Harris' biographer, Henry Probert, who spent 11 years heading the Air Historical Branch, or Webster & Frankland, the official historians, would have mentioned somewhere how many men Harris commanded, but nowhere can I find it covered. Come to think of it, there was an establishment for each squadron, which can be multiplied by the number of squadrons to get a ballpark figure. Does anyone have the squadron groundcrew establishment, please. Tony |
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#2
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Re: RAF groundcrew numbers.
Moved from other thread as this thread is more appropriate for my comment.
I am not at all surprised at the numbers of ground crew employed, as an Operational Bomber Command Station had between 1,800 to 2,200 staff of all levels, grades and trades. Also around 1940 aircraft servicing hours were reduced from 60 hours to 30 hours on some aircraft types with minor servicing and checks after each op or flight. Also some of the Command's aircraft had numerous modifications such as the Whitley (one of the most modified aircraft on the RAF fleet) and some were being extensively stripped to embody a structural tail beam modification (twice in WW2), structural wing bracing to the wing, de-icing equipment to wing, airscrew, windscreen, carburettor intake, cabin heating, pitot head and pipe changes, Exactor control joints and pipe mods, oil feed and engine coolant, fire extinguishing mods, wireless type changes and blind landing equipment etc., etc., etc., and repeated complete strips of the elevator assembly to embody several elevator assembly modifications. The official mods list for the Whitley V would have created an absolutely massive workload alone. Engine failure rates were high too, requiring engine rebuilds and modified engine blocks (requiring a complete engine strip). Also you had the routine lighter crash and damage repair (although some aircraft went to Contractors or the Group's Maintenance Station), a heck of a lot was done at the RAF Station and these people have little credit (unsung) and their routine workload along with a continous issue of modifications sheets was absolutely massive. Mark |
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#3
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Re: RAF groundcrew numbers.
Unfortunately I cannot remember where I filed the August 1940 RAF Driffield Station strength / establishment who had two Squadrons and some smaller Units, despite looking.
However, I have found a photocopy "Operations and Statistical Summary" dated 19/8/40 for No. 51 Squadron for Whitleys (with five crew) amongst my papers, it states:- Posted Strength OFFICERS Officer Pilots 26 Crew 8 Non-flying 1 TOTAL 35 Attached 1 Detached 4 (included 1 non-flying) Not Available 1 TOTAL 6 AIRMEN Pilots 13 Crew 47 Non-flying 281 TOTAL 341 Attached Pilots 3 Attached crew 6 Attached non-flying 4 TOTAL 13 So if I can still add up, that is a total of 395 personnel for 51 Squadron. Their SERVICEABLE Aircraft on charge were 13. Unservicable Aircraft over 48 hours (Unit repairable) were 5. Repairable aircraft at Depot or Contractors were 3. Aircraft awaiting Write-off were 2. Mark |
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#4
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Re: RAF groundcrew numbers.
Thank you, Mark.
From what you have kindly provided, we have three bases of calculating groundcrew and support crew, as follows; 1 using the ratio of groundcrew to aircraft (17:1) in 1940 for 50 Squadron 2 using the ratio of groundcrew to squadrons (301:1) in 1940 for 50 Sqdn 3 using your figure of 1,800 to 2,200 staff per station June 1943: 1189 aircraft, in 64 squadrons, on 51 stations April 1945: 2,709 aircraft, in 96 squadrons, on 62 stations. 1. June 1943: 1,189 aircraft x 17 groundcrew = 20,213 April 1945: 2,709 aircraft x 17 groundcrew = 46,053 2. June 1943: 64 squadrons x 301 = 19,264 April 1945: 96 squadrons x 301 = 28,896 3. June 1943: 51 stations x 2,200 less 8,323 aircrew = 103,877 April 1945: 62 stations x 2,200 less 18,963 aircrew = 117,437 Total RAF manpower according to the Central Statistical Office: June 1943: 967,000 April 1945: 970,000 Total civilian manpower devoted to the manufacture of equipment and supplies for the Ministry of Aircraft Production according to the CSO: June 1943: 1,573,800 March 1945: 1,303,000 So here are tentative ballpark figures for 1944; about 1 million civilians were building and equipping bombers, 120,000 were doing the necessary on the airfields to keep them flying, 19,000 were flying and dying in them, and an unknown number were supplying them and repairing them when they were damaged beyond the capabilities of airfield maintenance. Any comments? Tony |
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#5
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Re: RAF groundcrew numbers.
BTW, anyone interested in Bomber Command should watch the DVD "Nightbombers', shot in the winter of 1943 in RAF Hemswell (20 miles north of Lincoln) in No.1 Group during a day and night when Berlin was bombed.
It is unbelievably interesting and well done, and in colour. It costs about £8.50 from tax-minimising Amazon. Tony |
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#6
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Re: RAF groundcrew numbers.
Tony
Looking at the actual figures for 51 Squadron:- Flying personnel (Officer Aircrew and Airmen) was about 108 Non-flying personnel was about 287 The Squadron example had about 2.65 ground support and ground crew for every 1 individual flying crew member. The RAF Station and Station HQ would have had its own separate permanent work and defence force. Mark Last edited by Observer1940; 31st May 2013 at 23:30. |
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#7
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Re: RAF groundcrew numbers.
Quote:
The FIDO scene was filmed at RAF Ludford Magna on 7 December 1944, using a tour-expired 101 Sqn crew and kite (you can see the dorsal ABC aerials on SR-M as she comes in to land) Somewhere online there is a list of the aircrew who played the parts in the film. I seem to recall an airman named Chandler as Harris. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z-cVw7Xb6Nk Thanks to A/C Iliffe Cozens for filming what appears to be the only full colour footage of BC. |
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#8
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Re: RAF groundcrew numbers.
MoD website give this figure:
01-Jul-1944: The RAF reaches its peak strength of 1,185,833 personnel (1,011,427 men and 174,406 women). http://www.raf.mod.uk/history/rafhis...meline1944.cfm BBC history website states "the RAF reached a total strength of 1,208,000 men and women, of whom 185,000 were aircrew. About 70,000 RAF personnel were killed." Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/ww2peop...a6649248.shtml Looking quickly at my pen and paper sources, I can't find anything to contradict or confirm these figures. Maybe the BBSU or Statistical Digest of the War has something else. |
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#9
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Re: RAF groundcrew numbers.
More information, this from 'BRITAIN 1939 – 1945: THE ECONOMIC COST OF STRATEGIC BOMBING' by John Fahey
"At its peak in June/July of 1943, the Air Ministry and MAP had approximately 3,619,500 civilian workers under their direct or indirect control182. This figure represents 20.7 percent of the total civil work force available at the time; or over one in every five people." p. 175. There is a whole chapter on BC manpower. I'll get back to you shortly ![]() |
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#10
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Re: RAF groundcrew numbers.
According to Fahey's thesis: "the strength of Bomber Command never rose to 250,000 men and women and that 125,000 men served as aircrew within the Command during World War II". (p. 407)
He estimates that Bomber Command was provided with 125,000 aircrew and 300,000 ground crew during the war, at a cost of £646.87 million. Bomber Command comprised about 12.5% of the RAF's strength during the war (p.446-448) From p. 408 (emphasis mine): "In July 1943, the official establishment of Bomber Command was 147,923 positions of which Bomber Command claimed only 91,564 (61.9%) were filled. The Air Ministry rebutted these claims by pointing out that 139,195 of the 147,923 positions were filled and that the percentage shortfall was only 5.9%. In mid 1944, the Director General of Manpower noted that Bomber Command had an establishment of 143,171 positions of which 135,607 personnel were posted in the Command. The establishment figures clearly show that between July 1943 and July 1944 the size of Bomber Command fell by 3.22%, whilst the size of the RAF increased by 2.14 percent, from 1,148,600 to 1,173,200 over the same period.... The figures also show that between 1943 and 1944 Bomber Command contained an average of 12.53 percent of the RAF’s total manpower." On aircrew/groundcrew numbers: "Between July 1943 and July 1944, when the average strength of Bomber Command was 147,923, the number of aircrew was probably around nine percent, or 13,904". (p. 438) The majority of ground crew were British. "Australia, Canada and New Zealand were unable to provide large numbers of personnel for ground crew. These nations did not possess large-scale aircraft industries and they had a small pool of qualified manpower." (p. 437). On casulaties (p. 410): "The casualty figure for Bomber Command is estimated by Richard Overy as being 79,172, a few more than the 79,147 reported by Harris in his official report" "Aircrew losses were disproportionately large within Bomber Command with 61.45 percent (76,817) of the 125,000 aircrew becoming casualties and 44.45 percent (55,573) being killed" (p. 411) Ground crew casualties from Fahey - quoting Hiarris' 'Dispatches': "Between 3rd September 1939 and 8th May 1945, 1,870 men and women died serving in Bomber Command, almost one for every day of the war. A further 759 ground crew were seriously wounded or injured and 78 were listed as missing or prisoners of war before being returned safe". (p. 439) Fahey has an interesting graphic on p. 416, showing that nearly 5 million volunteered as ground crew in the second half of 1940 and 5.5 million volunteered as ground crew in the first half of 1941. According to Fahey "80 percent of all volunteers for service wanted to be ground crew and only 17 percent expressed a clear preference for aircrew". (p. 416) WAAF strength peaked in the first half of 1943, at a little over 3.6 million (p. 417) ************** Summing up: Peak Bomber Command strength: about 130-145,000 in the last 2 1/2 years of the war Aircrew: Around 9% of strength Ground crew: About 115-130,000 at any one time in the last 2 1/2 years of the war Last edited by SimonE; 3rd June 2013 at 11:15. Reason: Clarity, if only slightly... |
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