Eagle Biography
Paul C. Webb
Battle of Britain Spitfire ace and Distinguished Flying Cross winner Paul Webb, a
Scotsman, was born in Greenock and educated at Kevinside Academy in Glasgow. As war
clouds loomed in 1937, he joined 602 Squadron. Upon graduation from flight school at
Abbotsinch (now Glasgow Airport), Scotland, he received a commission in the Auxiliary
Air Force in January 1938 and was called to full-time service in August 1939. Flying
Officer Webb and two other Spitfire pilots were scrambled from their dispersal base at
RAF Drem on 16 October 1939 to intercept 12 enemy bombers. In the ensuing action, "
Blue Section's" Spitfires shared in downing the first enemy aircraft over
Britain during World War II.
Webb remembers this as "the day I grew up."
Continuing to fend off the German attack on England, he achieved his first aerial
victory on 1 July 1940, against a Junkers 88. As the Battle of Britain raged, 602
Squadron and Webb scrambled into action almost daily. By 9 September, Flight Lieutenant
Webb had destroyed seven more enemy fighters and bombers before being shot down and
injured, thus ending his Battle of Britain action. In early 1941, he was assigned as an
instructor and flight commander in several squadrons before receiving command, on 22
November 1941, of 416 (Royal Canadian Air Force) Squadron, then forming at Peterhead,
Scotland, again flying Spitfires.
He led this distinguished unit until March
1942, when he was posted to the Middle East as a P-40 Kittyhawk pilot, flying
escort and attack missions for the Desert Air Force during the advance from El Alamein
to Tripoli. Returning to Spitfires, Squadron Leader Webb commanded 253 Squadron
in Italy, from May to September 1944, for the Balkans Air Forces, and then held a 281
Wing staff position as a wing commander when the unit was sent to Yugoslavia to support
the partisan effort. Following the war, he was posted back to England as the Commander of
612 Squadron at RAF Dyce, flying Spitfires.
After completing several staff
billets, Webb was accredited as Her Majesty's Air Attaché to Turkey in 1959. In January
1963, Wing Commander Webb was invested as a Commander of the British Empire and shortly
thereafter, now a Group Captain, he was given command of RAF Watton, equipped with
Canberras. Subsequent assignments took him to India as Air Advisor to the United
Kingdom High Commissioner, to Brussels as a member of the International Military Staff,
then to the RAF staff in London. On 18 March 1973, this famous fighter pilot retired from
the Royal Air Force as an Air Commodore.
|
| More About The Eagle: |
|
| Honored as an Eagle In: |
| 1990
|
| See the Lithograph: |
|
| Lithograph Setting: |
|
At "tea time" on 9 September 1940, the pilots of 602 Squadron were scrambled over Mayfield to intercept a force of 30-40 Dornier bombers flying towards London. After destroying one Do 17, Flight Lieutenant Paul Webb's Spitfire was damaged in a fight with three Luftwaffe Messerschmitt 109 escort fighters. With no rudder control, both ailerons severely damaged, and insufficient altitude to bail out, Webb aimed the aircraft straight ahead and plowed into a grove of trees. He walked away from the crash with minor injuries, but his Spitfire was completely destroyed.
|
|