WORLD WAR TWO
On December 18 1939, a group of 24 British Vickers Wellington medium 
bombers were frustrated by low clouds and fog in their mission to bomb 
Wilhelmshaven, and they turned for home. The formation attracted the 
energetic attention of Luftwaffe pilots flying Messerschmitt 109 and 110
 fighter aircraft and more than half of the Wellingtons went down in the
 North Sea. The German air sea rescue service, Seenotdienst, sent rescue
 boats based at Hörnum to work with Heinkel 59 float planes to save some
 twenty British airmen from the icy water. This was the first multiple 
air-sea rescue operation.
During the first two years of the war, the British had no coordinated
 air-sea rescue (ASR) units, just 28 marine craft launches and no 
dedicated aircraft. Inaugurated as the Marine Craft Section, just eleven
 days after the Royal Air Force itself was founded, the Marine Craft 
Section initially provided back-up for the flying boats. The ditching of
 a British aircraft in the Channel or the North Sea usually doomed its 
crew, only one out of five would survive. Fighter Command borrowed 12 
Lysander aircraft from the British Army to use as spotter planes for 
ASR.
BATTLE OF BRITAIN
Early Allied rescues of downed airmen were ad hoc affairs involving a
 search by operational aircraft from the crews own unit and then 
attempting to divert any surface craft in the vicinity to the aircrew in
 distress. New Zealand pilot, Flt Lt RF Aitken even borrowed a Walrus 
flying boat from the Fleet Air Arm and saved 35 airmen over the summer 
of 1940.
One of the most important lessons learnt from the Battle of Britain 
was that the RAF could not afford to lose pilots who ditched to the sea.
 British fighters such as the Spitfire and the Hurricane did not carry 
inflatable rafts, only lifejackets which were little help against the 
cold. During the early stages of the battle 220 aircrew were killed or 
missing in the Channel close to our shores. Air Vice Marshal Sir Keith 
Park, commanding the South East Fighter Group from RAF Uxbridge even 
ordered his controllers not to vector aircraft over the sea ‘as too many
 were getting drowned.’
In 1940, the Seenotdienst added bases in Denmark, Holland and France.
 The Heinkel He59s were painted white in June of that year, with red 
crosses to indicate emergency services. A few French seaplanes were also
 modified for rescue and attached to the organisation. In response to 
the heavy toll of German air action against Great Britain, Adolf Galland
 recommended that German pilots in trouble over the ocean make an 
emergency water landing in their aircraft, instead of bailing out and 
parachuting down, as the aircraft each carried an inflatable rubber raft
 which would help the airmen avoid hypothermia from continued immersion 
in the cold water and increase the time
available for rescue.
In July 1940, a white-painted Heinkel 59 operating near Deal, Kent 
was shot down and the crew taken captive because it was sharing the air 
with 12 Messerschmitt 109 fighters and because the British were wary of 
Luftwaffe aircraft dropping spies and saboteurs. Significantly, the 
German pilot’s log showed that he had noted the position and direction 
of British convoys. British officials determined that this constituted 
military reconnaissance, not rescue work. The Air Ministry issued 
Bulletin 1254 indicating that all enemy air-sea rescue aircraft were to 
be destroyed if encountered.
CHURCHILL
Winston Churchill later wrote “We did not recognise this means of 
rescuing enemy pilots who had been shot down in action, in order that 
they might come and bomb our civil population again.” Germany protested 
this order on the grounds that rescue aircraft were part of the Geneva 
Convention agreement, stipulating that belligerents must respect each 
other’s “mobile sanitary formations” such as field ambulances and 
hospital ships.
Churchill argued that rescue aircraft were not anticipated by the 
treaty, and were not covered. British attacks on He59s increased. The 
Seenotdienst as a result, ordered the rescue aircraft armed as well as 
painted in the camouflage scheme of their area of operation and rescue 
flights were to be protected by fighter aircraft when possible.
In October 1940, yellow-painted Sea Rescue Floats code-named ‘Lobster
 Pots’ were placed by the Germans in waters where air emergencies were 
likely. The highly visible buoy-type floats held emergency equipment 
including food, water, blankets and dry clothing and they attracted 
distressed airmen from both sides of the war. The British equivalent 
code-named ‘Cuckoos’ were rumoured to have had some design features from
 Churchill himself. A model float is on display to this day at the SARF 
HQ at RAF Valley. Both German and British rescue units checked the 
floats from time to time, picking up any airmen they found, though enemy
 airmen were immediately made prisoner of war. In British waters moored 
navigational buoys were fitted with a hatch where crews would find 
rations, a first aid box and a flag to hoist to indicate it was 
occupied. Sixteen larger floats containing food, clothing, a cooking 
stove, bunks and blankets for six men were provided around the South 
East coastline.
DIRECTORATE OF AIR SEA RESCUE IS FORMED
As a result of an emergency meeting chaired by Air Marshal Sir Arthur
 ‘Bomber’ Harris to discuss the shortcomings of rescue provision and 
acting on the instructions from the Chief of the Air Staff (CAS) Air 
Chief Marshal Sir Charles Portal, the Directorate of Air Sea Rescue was 
formed. The Directorate took up its duties at HQ Coastal Command on 6th 
February 1941.
With a keen interest in Sea Rescue, the Station Commander at RAF St 
Eval in Cornwall, Group Captain Lewis George Le Blount Croke RAF was 
appointed Director of Sea Rescue with Captain C L Howe R.N. as his 
deputy. They were responsible for the co-ordination of all sea rescue 
operations for aircraft and crews, providing ancillary equipment to be 
dropped by aircraft at the scene of distress and provide marine craft, 
moored buoys and similar aids to rescue. The organisation copied much 
from the successful efforts of the German Seenotdienst which first 
employed the use of yellow dinghies, skull caps and flotation jackets.
The Directorate had four main problems to solve; how to teach aircrew
 to ditch and abandon a plane, how to maintain the life of the aircrew 
and how to locate them and then bring them safely home. A fifth problem 
was how to improve the design of aircraft so it could be successfully 
ditched and the crew could make a safe exit. The introduction of water 
tight lower hatches, auxiliary floatation gear and stowage of pneumatic 
dinghies became the norm in aircraft design. Aircrew were trained in 
ditching and dinghy drills for different aircraft types and how to use 
equipment that could be dropped to them in the sea.
AIRBORNE LIFEBOAT
The first airborne lifeboat was a 32-foot (10m) reinforced wooden 
canoe-shaped boat designed in 1943 by Uffa Fox, to be dropped by Avro 
Lancaster heavy bombers for the rescue of aircrew downed in the English 
Channel. The Mark I lifeboat’s descent to the water was slowed by 
parachutes. The ‘Thornaby Bag’ (consisting of a parachute pack with 
floatation pads taken from a life jacket) containing food, drink and 
first aid equipment could also be dropped to survivors and later the 
‘Bircham Barrel’ made from a watertight cardboard bomb tail container, 
which could be carried and dropped from standard bomb racks. ‘Lindholme 
Gear’ has been used with modifications up to the present day and 
consists of a 7-8 man inflatable dinghy together with 4 supply packs, 
all linked by a floating rope, helping survivors easily seize the 
apparatus.
Every RAF station had an Air Sea Rescue (ASR) Officer appointed who 
was responsible for all aspects of rescue on his unit. Even homing 
pigeons were placed aboard multi-seater aircraft if the crew had no time
 to send a May Day (M’Aidez) or S.O.S. before ditching.
By May 1941 the number of Lysanders with Fighter Command had 
increased to 18, with 2 placed at each coastal fighter station. By 
October, that had increased to 36 with 9 Walrus flying boats and two 
squadrons of Hudsons with Coastal Command. In 1942 ASR consisted of six 
squadrons of 85 aircraft and by the busiest time for ASR in June 1944, 
it had 81/2 squadrons of 169 aircraft including, Ansons, Warwicks, 
Spifires, and Defiants.

 
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