PHOTO GALLERY
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Flying
Officer J B Burnside, the flight engineer on board an Avro Lancaster
B Mark III of No. 619 Squadron RAF based at Coningsby, Lincolnshire,
checks settings on the control panel from his seat in the cockpit.
14th Feb 1944. |
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Flying Officer P Ingleby,
the navigator of an Avro Lancaster B Mark III of No. 619 Squadron RAF
based at Coningsby, Lincolnshire, seated at his table in the aircraft.14th
Feb 1944
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Flight
-Sergeant J Morgan, the rear gunner of an Avro Lancaster of No. 630
Squadron RAF at East Kirkby, Lincolnshire, checks his guns in the
Nash & Thompson FN20 tail turret before taking off on a night
raid on the marshalling yards at Juvisy-sur-Orge, France.
18th April 1944 |
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Flying
Officer R W Stewart, a wireless operator on board an Avro
Lancaster B Mark I of No. 57 Squadron RAF based at Scampton,
Lincolnshire, speaking to the pilot from his position in front
of the Marconi TR 1154/55 transmitter/receiver set |
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Flight
Lieutenant P Walmsley of Hull, Yorkshire, the bomb-aimer on
board an Avro Lancaster B Mark III of No. 619 Squadron RAF,
operating a Mark XIV Stabilised Vector Bombsight at his position
in the nose of the aircraft, at Coningsby, Lincolnshire. |
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Close-up
of a bomb aimer operating a Mark IXA Course-setting Bombsight in
the nose of a Short Stirling. |
A
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Close-up
of the Boulton Paul Type 'E' tail gun-turret, mounting four .303
machine guns, on a Handley Page Halifax Mark II of No. 78
Squadron RAF at Breighton, Yorkshire. |
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Air
gunners preparing to fire twin .303 machine guns mounted on a
tripod at a firing range. 1942 |
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The bomb load
of an Avro Lancaster B Mark I of No. 207 Squadron RAF at Syerston,
Nottinghamshire |
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Operation
CHASTISE: the attack on the Moehne, Eder and Sorpe Dams by No. 617
Squadron RAF on the night of 16/17 May 1943. German official in civilian
clothes standing by the 'Upkeep' weapon ("Bouncing Bomb")
salvaged from Flt Lt R N G Barlow's Avro Lancaster, ED927/G 'AJ-E', after
it struck an electricity pylon and crashed 5km east of Rees near Haldern,
Germany, at 2350 hours on 16 May, while flying to attack the Sorpe Dam.
Barlow and his crew were all killed. 17th of May 1943 |
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Aircrew of No
83 Squadron RAF pack their rations on the lawn in front of the hangars at
Scampton, Lincolnshire, before boarding their Lancasters for a night
raid on Bremen |
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An aircrew of
No. 149 Squadron RAF disembark from their Vickers Wellington Mark IA at
Mildenhall, Suffolk, after a flight.
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The
crew of Avro Lancaster B Mark III, ED905 'BQ-F' "Press on
regardless", of No. 550 Squadron RAF, pose on their aircraft
after it had completed 70 operational sorties, at North
Killinghome, Yorkshire. They were to fly ED905's hundredth
successful sortie on 4 November 1944. The crew consisted of:
captain and pilot, Flight Lieutenant D A Shaw; navigator, Sergeant
R Harris; engineer, Pilot Officer C Bruce; air bomber,
Flight-Sergeant A Llanwarne; mid-upper gunner, Flight-Sergeant A
Buckingham; and rear gunner, Flight-Sergeant E Griffiths.
September 1944 |
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RAF and WAAF
personnel wave off Flight Lieutenant D A Shaw and crew of No. 550 Squadron
RAF as they take off for a bombing raid on Bochum, Germany, from North
Killinghome, Lincolnshire, in Avro Lancaster B Mark III, ED905 'BQ-F'
"Press on regardless", on the aircraft's 100th operational
sortie. |
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Leading
Aircraftwoman Lilian Yule tractors Avro Lancaster B Mark III,
DV238 'EA-O', of No. 49 Squadron RAF to its dispersal slot at
Fiskerton, Lincolnshire. DV238 later went to No. 44 Squadron with whom it was lost during a raid on Berlin on 16/17 December
1944. August/ Sept 1943 |
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A
WAAF corporal radio telephony operator communicating with
aircraft from the watch office at a Bomber Command station. |
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WAAF
safety equipment assistants, working in the parachute section at
Snaith, Yorkshire, inspecting Mark I Life Jackets ('Mae Wests').
Behind them are parachutes hanging up to air after their monthly
inspection |
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A WAAF
intelligence officer, Section Officer P Duncalfe, questions the pilot,
Warrant Officer H Blunt (to her left), and crew of Avro Lancaster B Mark
III, JB362 'EA-D', ("D for Donald") of No. 49 Squadron RAF, on
their return to Fiskerton, Lincolnshire, from a bombing raid on Berlin,
Germany. On their next sortie to Berlin five days later, Blunt and his
crew were shot down in "D for Donald" and killed. |
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Crews
of No. 77 Squadron RAF about to be driven to the dispersals at
Elvington, Yorkshire, for the Squadron's fourth raid on Berlin,
Germany. |
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Following
their briefing, Handley Page Halifax crews of No. 76 Squadron
RAF board their transports at Holme-on-Spalding-Moor, Yorkshire,
to be driven to their dispersals in preparation for a raid on
Kassel, Germany. This raid, on 22/23 October 1943 |
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The
crew of a Short Stirling B Mark III of No. 90 Squadron RAF relax
by their aircraft on a hard standing north of the main runway at
West Wickham/Wratting Common, Cambridgeshire, while other
Stirlings of the Squadron are prepared for the night's
operation, a raid on Berlin, Germany |
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Squadron Leader
Peter Hill, briefs crews of No. 51 Squadron RAF on the forthcoming
raid to Nuremberg, Germany in the Operations Room at Snaith,
Yorkshire. The Station Commander, Group Captain N H Fresson, sits
third from the left in the front row. No. 51 Squadron lost six
Handley Page Halifaxes that night (30/31 March 1944), suffering 35
men killed (including Sqn Ldr Hill) and seven made
prisoners-of-war. 30th March 1944 |
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The personnel
required to keep one Avro Lancaster flying on operations, taken at
Scampton, Lincolnshire. Front row (left to right); flying control officer,
WAAF parachute packer, meteorological officer, seven aircrew (pilot and
captain, navigator and observer, air bomber, flight engineer, wireless
operator/air gunner and two air gunners): second row, twelve flight
maintenance crew (left to right; n.c.o. fitter, flight maintenance
mechanic, n.c.o. fitter, five flight maintenance mechanics, electrical
mechanic, instrument repairer, and two radio mechanics): third row,
bombing up team; WAAF tractor driver with a bomb train of 16 Small Bomb
Containers (SBC), each loaded with 236 x 4-lb No. 15 incendiaries and,
behind, three bombing-up crew: fourth row, seventeen ground servicing crew
(left to right; corporal mechanic, four aircraft mechanics, engineer
officer, fitter/armourer, three armourers, radio mechanic, two instrument
repairers, three bomb handlers, machine gunbelt fitter): back row (left to
right); AEC Matador petrol tender and two crew, Avro Lancaster B Mark I
heavy bomber, mobile workshop and three crew. |
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| The Station
Commander at Pocklington, Yorkshire, signals Handley Page
Halifax B Mark II Series I (Special), DT742 'DY-O', of No. 102
Squadron RAF, piloted by Sergeant T H Dargavel, to begin its
take-off run on a night raid to the Schneider armaments factory
at Le Creusot, France.
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Lancaster
B Mark III, JB362 'EA-D', ("D for Donald") of No. 49
Squadron RAF to its dispersal point at Fiskerton, Lincolnshire,
after returning from the greatest and most destructive raid
mounted on Berlin to date (22/23 November 1943);
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Aircrews
of No. 199 Squadron RAF are briefed for a mine-laying sortie to
be undertaken off the Dutch coast, in the Operations Room at
Lakenheath, Suffolk. |
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An
Avro Lancaster of No. 75 (New Zealand) Squadron RAF at Mepal,
Cambridgeshire, for a night raid on Krefeld, Germany. The bomb
load consists of a 4,000-lb HC 'cookie' and mixed 1,000-lb and
500-lb MC bombs |
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A
snow-clearing vehicle sweeps the perimeter track at Waddington,
Lincolnshire, to enable the night's raid, on Stuttgart, Germany to take
place. In the background, Avro Lancasters of No. 463 Squadron RAAF await
their bomb-loads in an already-cleared dispersal. 1st March 1944 |
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WAAF
and other ground crew members wave off Pilot Officer W H Eager
RCAF and his crew in Avro Lancaster B Mark I, W4236 'QR-K', of
No. 61 Squadron RAF, as they begin their take-off run from
Syerston, Nottinghamshire, for a night raid on Hamburg, Germany.
This was W4236's 74th mission, from which it returned safely: it
was lost, however, during a raid on Mannheim on 10 August 1943. |
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An aircrew of
150 Squadron RAF Benson checking an aerial survey camera |
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Captured
RAF bomber crew member being interrogated after Berlin raid. |
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The crew of
Avro Lancaster B Mark III, ED831 'WS-H', of No 9 Squadron RAF,
captained by Squadron Leader A M Hobbs RNZAF, boarding their
aircraft at Bardney, Lincolnshire, for a raid on the Zeppelin
works at Friedrichshafen, on the shores of Lake Constance (Bodensee),
Germany. This special raid introduced novel tactics devised by
No. 5 Group, among which was the 'shuttle' technique. After
bombing the target, the Lancasters flew to Blida in North
Africa, where they were refuelled and rearmed, returning to the
United Kingdom two nights later and attacking La Spezia, Italy,
en route. Six days later, Hobbs and his crew were shot down and
killed in ED831, while returning from a raid on Gelsenkirchen,
Germany |
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The crew of
Avro Lancaster B Mark III, ED689 'WS-K', of No. 9 Squadron RAF,
headed by the captain, Flight Lieutenant J A Wakeford boarding
their aircraft at Bardney, Lincolnshire, for their 50th mission,
a raid on the Zeppelin works at Friedrichshafen, on the shores
of Lake Constance (Bodensee), Germany. This special raid
introduced novel tactics devised by No. 5 Group, among which was
the 'shuttle' technique. After bombing the target, the
Lancasters flew to Blida in North Africa, where they were
refuelled and rearmed, returning to the United Kingdom two
nights later and attacking Spezia, Italy, en route. Two weeks
later, Wakeford and his crew were shot down and killed in ED689,
during a raid to Cologne, Germany. |
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18
Year Old Sgt Hannah VC
John
Hannah was only a young man when he attempted to fight a fire
inside his Handley Page Hampden. Such was the restricted space in
the Hampden; it was nick- named the “Flying Suitcase”!
Hannah's recommendation describes the heat of the fire as
‘completely roasting the aircraft's two carrier pigeons'.
18
year old Sergeant J. Hannah V.C. (83, Squadron, Royal Air Force)
won his Victoria Cross "Over
Antwerp
" on
15th September 1940
. He
was born at
Paisley
, Renfrewshire on
27th November 1921
and died at Markfield, Leicestershire on
9th June 1947
aged 25 years
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RAAF
460 Squadron in 1944
1944-12-08. Group
portrait close up of air and ground crew members of Lancaster No.
460 Squadron RAAF at RAF Station Binbrook. In the centre front row
(gloveless, holding a pipe) is Group Captain Parsons, the Station
Commander. On either side of him are Squadron Leader (Sqn Ldr) J.
Clarke DFC AFC, of Sydney, NSW (left), the CO of the Squadron, and
Sqn Ldr J. R. Henderson DFC, of Mosman, NSW, Flight Commander.
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Aircrew
button compass |
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Bomber
Command shield |
Acknowledgements
to the Imperial War Museum for their photographs and text. Copying for
commercial purposes would require their permission
I
would be grateful for any photographs and memories you would like to
share with this site
tom.bint@tiscali.co.uk
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