Photos:
Lt Cahill prepares for another sortie. Aircraft appears to be coded 4X. Note black band still requires painting under the roundel.
Lt Doyle shakes hands with his wingman after return from a mission in which they broke up an enemy column. (Looks staged to me.)
VCS-7's CO Lt Cdr Denton in front of Spitfire 4X.
Lt Calland in front of Spitfire 4R
US Navy groundcrew maintaining Spitfire 4Q before another sortie. Kill marking might be from previous owner as no claims were made by a VCS-7 pilot.
During the planning of 'Operation Overlord', it was intended that a major element of the initial fire support to the landing forces on the days immediately following D-Day would be provided by naval bombardment from Allied battleships and cruisers sitting off the Normandy coast. The gunfire support spotting was clearly seen as a Naval task, so several Fleet Air Arm squadrons, as well as a number of RAF units, were specially trained and formed the Air Spotting Pool.
This Pool also had another, somewhat unusual, squadron - a spotting unit of the US Navy. Most major US Navy warships embarked catapult seaplanes for spotting duties, but it was recognised that over Normandy the possibility of enemy fighter opposition meant the current embarked types, the Curtiss SOC Seagull and Vought OS2U Kingfisher floatplanes, would be highly vulnerable. It was therefore agreed that Britain would loan the US Navy sufficient Spitfires for a spotting squadron and so Cruiser Scouting Squadron 7, (abbreviated as VCS-7), came to fly the only Spitfires ever operated by the USN, albeit in British markings.
On 8 May 1944, VCS-7 and the Catapult Flights from of the battleships USS Nevada, USS Texas and USS Arkansas and the cruisers USS Quincy, USS Augusta, and USS Tuskaloosa came together as VCS-7 under Lt H W Calland. The floatplanes were catapulted off their parent ships and alighted on the Solent where they were then put into open storage at RNAS Lee-on-Solent, which was also to be the unit's operational base.
The USN pilots were all experienced at artillery spotting, but needed conversion onto the Spitfire - the switching of floatplane pilots over to fast single-seater fighters was seen as an experiment. Once ashore, VCS-Ts engineers had a period of technical training whilst the pilots underwent conversion flying training with the USAAF's Spitfire-equipped 67th Reconnaissance Group based at Membury. Their training also included air-to-air gunnery and formation flying, skills new to the pilots.
However, any concerns the USAAF had were dispelled when all the Navy pilots converted without problem and at the end of the training the VCS-7 pilots were led on a twenty-ship formation sweep over northern France to just short of Paris! Soon after this, Lt Cdr William Denton took over command and led his squadron back to Lee-on-Solent where, on 29 May 1944, its own Spitfire Mk Vbs arrived. These wore the standard RAF Day Fighter camouflage and markings, and, in addition to an individual aircraft letter, VCS-7's aircraft were identified by the numeral '4', both of which were carried just forward of the cockpit.
Although a part of the Air Spotting Pool, VCS-7 was intended to co-operate solely with the Western Naval Task Force which mainly comprised US Navy warships. VCS-7's aircraft were standard Spitfire Mk Vbs which, on operational sorties across the Channel, would carry 35 gallon 'slipper" tanks to increase their endurance, which could be jettisoned when arriving on scene.
In an attempt to prevent fratricide, on 3 June 1944, the aircraft were all painted with broad back and white recognition stripes which covered most of the fuselage aft of the cockpit including the aircraft serial number. Missions would be flown as pairs with one pilot doing the spotting whilst being covered by his wing man, the 'weaver', flying 2,000 feet above. This system allowed the 'spotter' to concentrate on seeing the fall of the ships' fire and calling in the correction. Each sortie lasted up to two hours.
The first sorties from the Spotting Pool were off early on D-Day, 6 June, although the weather was poor, but gradually improved. Throughout this momentous day, VCS-7 provided pairs of Spitfires to provide the 'eyes' to their allocated warships as they pounded the enemy defences on the beaches.
Typical was that flown by Ensign Bruce Carmichael who made his first sortie during the afternoon of the 6th, and after contacting USS Texas which was sitting off Omaha beach, began to direct fire at camouflaged guns inland, although he received minor flak damage to his aircraft. Despite the carnage at Omaha Beach, the landings were largely successful and as there was a reduced need for bombardment spotting some of the squadron's sorties, allowed the eager Navy pilots to indulge in some ground strafing and they claimed several enemy MTs destroyed during the day! However, the spotting sorties did prove vulnerable and were engaged by both fighters and by accurate light flak, but during thirty-nine sorties, the squadron only lost one aircraft.
The following day the enemy began to target the spotters, when they could get through the Allied fighter cover. Sorties continued on subsequent days whenever the weather allowed, but after D+3 many were weather limited and occasionally VCS-7 pilots encountered the Luftwaffe.
Ensign Carmichael and his wing man were intercepted by a Bf 109 on one mission, although they evaded successfully.
During another mission Lt(jg) Bob Doyle and Ens John Mudge sighted a German armoured column moving forward and directed effective fire so that it was broken up. One of the squadron's pilots also gained for himself a unique 'first' when on one mission, Ens R J Adams, (believed to have been flying BL729/4G), force landed at a recently constructed Advanced Landing Ground to become the first US Naval aviator to land in France after the invasion.
However, from as early as D+4, there was a gradual decrease in the primary tasking as the available artillery support ashore increasingly met the fire support requirements. By 15 June, there were considerably fewer calls and in VCS-7's sector in the west, the American advance had put targets outside the range of the ships' guns.
After D-Day itself, the squadron's busiest day was during the assault on the port of Cherbourg on 25 June, when the Western Naval Task Force bombarded the enemy coastal defences. The wisdom of equipping VCS-7 with the Spitfire was shown when an OS2U Kingfisher launched from one the ships weas shot down as soon as it came within range of the enemy.
After the fall of Cherbourg, the requirement for the squadron ended and the bombardment tasking ended. Most of the VCS-7 pilots had flown upwards of ten operational sorties each on the Spitfires, although Lt(jg) Doyle of the USS Arkanas flew seventeen. As tasking reduced some of the squadron's pilots began air testing their floatplanes once more pending a return to sea and their parent ships. On the
26th, the squadron was informed that its task was complete and that it was to be withdrawn after a commission of just fifty days.
Possibly because of their lack of fighter experience, during fourteen days of combat operations, the squadron lost nine aircraft during 209 sorties. Nonetheless, the squadron had gained a small but unique niche in the annals of US
Naval aviation.