Squadron: 419 (B) Sqn (RCAF)
Start Date: 1944-01-28
Completion Date: 1944-01-29
Mission: Bombing
Operation: Battle of Berlin
Target City: Berlin Germany
Target Specific:
Base: RAF Middleton St. George
Take Off Time: 23:35:00
Squadron Code: VR-O
Radio Code:
Return Base:
Return Time:
Crash City: Zuhlen, Germany
Crash Specifics: forty-two miles north-west of Berlin
Crash Latitude: 0.00000000
Crash Longitude: 0.00000000
Crash Reason:
Flak Battery:
Enemy Claim:
War Diary Unavailable

6 Bomber Group January 28/29, 1944

33 Lancasters from 408, 426 and 432 squadrons were joined by 90 Halifaxes from 419, 427, 428, 429, 431, 433, and 434 squadrons on an attack at Berlin. The crews were over the target at between 18,000 and 23,500 feet, releasing 280,000 lbs of high explosives and 359,000 lbs of incendiaries. According to reports, bombing caused serious damage as there was broken cloud and the target could be seen. Richard Koval (6bombergroup.ca)


677 aircraft - 432 Lancasters, 241 Halifaxes, 4 Mosquitoes. Part of the German fighter force was drawn up by the early diversions and the bomber approach route over Northern Denmark proved too distant for some of the other German fighters. The German controller was, however, able to concentrate his fighters over the target and many aircraft were shot down there. 46 aircraft - 26 Halifaxes, 20 Lancasters - lost, 6·8 per cent of the force.

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The cloud over Berlin was broken and some ground-marking was possible but the Bomber Command claim that this was the most concentrated attack of this period is not quite fully confirmed by German records. The western and southern districts were hit but so too were 77 places outside the. city. The Berlin recording system was now showing an increasing deterioration. No overall figure for property damage was recorded; approximately 180,000 people were bombed out on this night. Although many industrial firms were again hit, the feature of this night is the unusually high proportion of administrative and public buildings appearing in the lists of buildings hit: the new Chancellery, 4 theatres, the 'French' cathedral, 6 hospitals, 5 embassies, the State Patent Office, etc. The report concludes with this entry: 'The casualties are still not known but they are bound to be considerable. It is reported that a vast amount of wreckage must still be cleared; rescue workers are among the mountains of it..

source: The Bomber Command War Diaries, Martin Middlebrook and Chris Everitt

419 Moose Squadron (Moosa aswayita) RAF Middleton St George. Halifax BII aircraft JP 119 VR-O was a attacked by a night fighter, possibly Oberfeldwebel Hans Berschwinger of the 4/NJG 2 before suffering a mid-air collision with 7 Squadron RAF Lancaster aircraft JA 718 during a raid on industrial targets in western and southern Berlin, Germany. Both aircraft crashed in the same area near Zuhlen, Rheinsberg, Brandenburg, Germany

The entire crew of Halifax JP 119 VR-O were lost. Two of seven crew on Lancaster III aircraft JA 718 MG-T were missing, presumed killed in action and three others killed in action. Two crew member from Lancaster JA 718 survived to become Prisoners of War

Pilot Officer F H Palmer (RCAF) and Pilot Officer E Milner (RCAF) on Halifax JP 119 were missing, presumed killed in action. The missing have no known grave and are commemorated on the Runnymede Memorial

The other crew members of Halifax JP 119: Flying Officer S J Gibson (RCAF), Flying Officer F Forrest (RCAF), Flying Officer G E Lemmerick (RCAF), Pilot Officer R Tarbet (RCAF), Sergeant J H Parrott (RAFVR) and Flight Sergeant F P Reilly (RAFVR) were all killed in action

unvetted Source Royal Air Force Serial and Image Database

unvetted Source 419 Squadron RCAF 1941 to 1945 Crew of Halifax JP119

unvetted Source Aviation Safety Network

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