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  1. No. 22 Group Royal Air Force (22 Gp) is one of six groups currently active in the Royal Air Force (RAF), falling under the responsibility of Deputy Commander-in-Chief (Personnel) in Air Command.

  2. First World War. No. 1 Group was originally formed on Saturday 1 April 1918 in No. 1 Area, which was renamed the South-Eastern Area on 8 May 1918, Southern Area on 20 September 1919 and Inland Area on 1 April 1920. The Group was renumbered as No. 6 Group on 19 May 1924 at RAF Kenley, and was reformed on the same day at RAF Kidbrooke.

  3. It was merge with No. 60 Group and disbanded into No. 90 Group RAF on 25 April 1945. Order of Battle May 1941 - HQ at Langley. No. 109 Squadron RAF at RAF Boscombe Down, No. 1 Radio School RAF at RAF Cranwell and No. 3 Radio School RAF at RAF Prestwick; April 1942 - HQ at Langley Hall, Slough. Controls 83 stations in No. 80 Wing RAF and No. 81 ...

  4. Part of. Air Forces in India (RAF) No. 222 Group was a group of the Royal Air Force during the Second World War. Formed on 1 September 1941, based at Ceylon. Squadrons were stationed around the Indian Ocean. The group undertook long-range bombing and mine-laying operations that took them as far afield as Sumatra and Singapore.

  5. No. 24 Group RAF (24 Gp) is a former Royal Air Force group.It formed in June 1918 from No. 46 and 48 Wings, disbanding in June 1919. The group reformed in July 1936 as No. 24 (Training) Group within RAF Training Command, and transferred to RAF Technical Training Command in May 1940, becoming No. 24 (Technical Training) Group.

  6. The group HQ was at RAF West Drayton and it had the Aeroplane and Armament Experimental Establishment and Nos 15 and 22 Squadrons at RAF Martlesham Heath under its command. The group also had control over RAF stores, repair depots, and schools, however, it disbanded on 1 February 1934.

  7. No. 70 Group (Army Co-Operation Training) RAF was a group of the Royal Air Force existing from November 1940 to July 1945. It was split from No. 22 Group RAF , Fighter Command , on 25 November 1940 to handle the increasing responsibility of training RAF units for army co-operation duties.