Did the FAA not have a Pensacola, FL counterpart? It appears as though the pilots went through the RAF training command for primary, basic and part of advanced before going through a specialized Naval Aviation training syllabus. Is that at all accurate?
I cant be sure, but if the RAN experience was anything to go by, our aircrew were all trained with the RAAF flight school at Point Cook, before transfer to HMAS Albatross and allocation to one of the three training squadrons (we had the same number ing system as the RN...squadrons in the 700 series are all support or training, squadrons in the 800 seriesd were frontline and combat ready category. As the war progressed there were special (short service) commission squadrons formed in the 1000 series (but none of these existed before the war. If you locate where the 700 series squadrons are/were based, you will find where the FAA training was undertaken.
At HMAS Albatross, pilots would train at Point Cook for about 4 years, before getting their land based navy wings. they then trained at Albatross for some years further, before being given the opportunity to go for their Carrier Qualification. This was pretty much the same for both fixed wing and rotary wing quals. It generally took about 6 years to train a pilot to carrier capabale status, with over 1000 hours. Training at Albatross included a pretty intensive air combat and bombing training courses. It was great to watch the A4s in action at the Bombing range off Jervis Bay. Those guys really knew their stuff. They would come in at virtually zero feet, before climbing a bit and dropping the bomb on the target. An A4 going flat sick at deck level is an impressive sight, until you see an F-111 doing the same, only twice as fast.
Some specialist traing for the ASW crews was still being undertaken in England, even after the Navy changed to the Grumans. Later there was some training for the US types done in the US, though I am unsure exactly what.
I would have expected the RN to have similar arrangements....of course what im talking about is post war peacetime training....prewar was almost certainly different. Just the same, as an example, have a look at Eugene Esmondes career (the guy that led the 1st strike against the Bismarck and then was killed during the strikes against the BCs fleeing up the Channel).
"Born 1st March 1909, at Thurgoland, Wortley, Yorkshire. Eugene Esmonde was commissioned as a Pilot Officer in the RAF, on the 28th December 1928, and was posted to the Fleet Air Arm, serving in the Mediterranean until the expiry of his commission five years later. On leaving the RAF, Esmonde joined Imperial Airways as a First Officer on the 9th August 1934. Esmonde flew on the mail carrying routes between London and Glasgow, and as Imperial Airways expanded its service, to the Middle East and India. In 1935, he flew on regular service between Rangoon and Mandalay in Burma, and survived a serious accident when his aircraft crashed into Irrawaddy. He was promoted to Captain on the 3rd July 1937, and was one of the first to fly the giant flying boats which introduced the first airmail service between the UK and Australia. On the 3rd May 1939, Esmonde resigned to take up a commission as a Lieutenant-Commander in the Fleet Air Arm.
Esmonde was a survivor of the carrier HMS Courageous, which was torpedoed and sunk in the Western Approaches on the 17th September 1939. Following this he served at RNAS Lee-on-Solent and other naval air stations in the south of England. He was then appointed to the aircraft carrier HMS Victorious. On the night of the 24th May 1941, he led a squadron of nine Swordfish aircraft, armed with torpedoes, to make a 120 mile flight in foul weather and into head-winds to attack the German battleship, Bismarck. Esmonde's aircraft attacked through intense anti-aircraft fire from Bismarck, and scored one hit, amidships on the starboard side. Esmonde received the Distinguished Service Order for this action on the 11th February 1942.
Esmonde's next appointment was on HMS Ark Royal, and his air squadron rescued members of the ship's company when the ship was sunk off Gibraltar on the 13th November 1941. By the end of November, Esmonde was back at Lee-on-Solent, until 12th February 1942, the day when the German battlecruisers Scharnhorst and Gneisenau, with the cruiser Prinz Eugen, and a strong escort of surface craft, made their 'Channel dash' from Brest back to Germany. In the Straits of Dover, Esmonde led the 825 Squadron of six Swordfish aircraft to attack the German ships. The squadron encountered a hail of fire from the German ships off Calais in their desperate but unsuccessful attempt at least to damage the enemy vessels. Esmonde's plane sustained a direct hit, just after he had fired its torpedo, he continued the run-in towards his target until his plane burst into flames and crashed into the sea. The attack continued and three of the other Swordfish were also shot down and their crews killed. Five men of Esmonde's flight survived, four of them wounded. The four officers received the DSO, while the sole rating who survived received the Conspicuous Gallantry Medal. Admiral Ramsey stated that 'the gallant sortie of these six Swordfish constitutes one of the finest exhibitions of self sacrifice and devotion to duty that the war has yet witnessed'.
Esmonde was awarded a posthumous Victoria Cross for his actions, which was gazetted on the 3rd March 1942. A memorial to Eugene Esmonde is at Woodlands Cemetery, Gillingham, Kent."
From the above, I would suggest that the main training establishment for the FAA prewar was Lee-On-Solent. Other wartime air stations used by the FAA included
HMS Seahawk (RNAS Culdrose, Cornwall)
HMS Gannet (RNAS Prestwick, South Ayrshire)
HMS Heron (RNAS Yeovilton, Somerset)
The principal testing facility appears to have been located at Worthy Downs, a RAF establishment from memory