History of RAF

North American B-25 Mitchell

North American B-25 Mitchell

This is one of those iconic American aircraft which was used extensively in every theatre of the war in many different versions by the USAAF. It is a twin-engine mid gull-wing twin tail tripod medium bomber and ground attack monoplane aircraft. It was powered by twin Wright R-2000-9 engines in wing nacelles. The Mitchell was introduced in 1941 and remained in service after the war ended.

The RAF snapped up the Mitchell on Lend Lease Act very early in the war with the first batch of 23 being delivered in August 1941 to No.111 training unit in the Bahamas. These were used for training and familiarisation purposes and never saw action. The Mitchell II were delivered from early 1942. These consisted of 167 B-25C and 370 B-25D with the upgraded Wright R-2600-13 engines giving 1750hp each. 40 of these went to the Bahamas and the rest to the UK. The RAF trialled the G version, with the solid nose armed with 4 x .50 Browning but did not order any due to the imminent arrival of the Mosquito. In November 1944 the Mitchell III began to appear, 240 of the B-25J, to replace the Mitchell II but No.2 group retained most of the Mitchell II’s. Several second line units in the UK were equipped with Mitchell II’s and III’s.

Despite the numbers of Mitchells delivered, the first Mitchell II mission was not flown until January 1943. This was executed by No.180 Squadron which was a disaster. Three of the six aircraft were lost to flak and enemy fighters. The Mitchell was stood down while crews were retrained in tight formation tactics. After that the Mitchell squadrons of No.2 Group, the RAFs tactical medium bomber wing, were used more frequently as they gradually replaced the Bristol Blenheim and the Armstrong-Whitworth Whitley as well as some of the ageing Wellington squadrons. Two squadrons equipped with Mitchell II’s were operated in the Far East as photo reconnaissance and army support.

The Mitchell was in operation until the end of the war when the majority were retired from RAF service, many being returned to the US. 300 or so continued as an occupation force until December 1945 when they too were removed from service. There are many surviving examples around the world, most of which are in the USA, including 42 airworthy examples.

In the UK there are 2 on display, both American, one in Lincolnshire Heritage Centre and one in the American Air Museum at Duxford. There are no surviving RAF Mitchells.
The Model

This was built from a rather good Academy kit. The internal detail is quite fetching and that glazed nose cone and large canopy shows off a good portion of it. Thank you, Academy, for providing such good canopy masks. However, it did require a shed load of weight in the nose, about 70g in the end, tucked into every available hidden cavity of which there are few. We got there though but the nose landing gear needed strengthening to cope with the weight. Another issue was the ventral turret. In the early variants it was retractable but proved worthless. Most of the operational squadrons removed them later in the war. This one would have had it operating. Unfortunately, I totally stuffed up the construction of the turret mechanism, so it got thrown in the bin…yes, in a tantrum! Oh, the trials and tribulations we must endure.

The model represents a Mitchell II of No.180 Squadron FL218, (Rampant Leopard insignia with ‘Nulli Secundus’) of 2nd Tactical Air Force based at RAF Foulsham in July 1943. This was one of the early Mitchell II’s to be delivered. The RAF left the Mitchells in the colour scheme provided of Olive Drab upper over Medium Sea Grey lower. Its American ID is B-25C 41-12806. As all Lend Lease Act inventory, the aircraft is registered with the American serial numbers.

FL218 took off from RAF Dunsfold on the January 25th as part of a raid over Northern France piloted by W/O Douglas Rogers, a 24yo RAAF pilot in RAF service. They encountered heavy flak over the target and the aircraft was hit but Rogers managed to limp back to the UK. He was able to get within a mile of RAF Hawkinge but realised he could not make the landing. He ordered his three crew to bail out. Just as they had exited, the plane went out of control and plummeted to the ground about a mile NNW of Hawkinge. Douglas Rogers was unable to bail out and was killed.

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