Copping, Clarence Lummis

Killed in Action 1943-03-23

Birth Date: 1917-December-18

Born: Valcourt, Quebec

William Carter Copping & Isabella Lummis Copping, of Waterloo, Quebec

Home: Valcourt, Quebec

Enlistment: Montreal, Quebec

Enlistment Date: 1940-10-22

Service

RCAF

Unit

59 (B) Sqn- Squadron (RAF)
Ab Uno Disce Omnes From one learn all

Base

RAF Chivenor

Rank

Warrant Officer 2nd Class

Position

Warrant Officer 2nd Class

Service Numbers

R/77233

Missing with an all Canadian crew on an anti-submarine patrol over the North Atlantic Shot down over Bay of Biscay.

Killed includes Copping:Warrant Officer Class 2 William James Arnold RCAF R/106166 KIA Runnymede Memorial Panel 179.Pilot Officer George Cojocar RCAF J/16374 KIA Runnymede Memorial Panel 175.Warrant Officer Class 2 Richard Glover Montgomery RCAF R/106426 KIA Runnymede Memorial Panel 180.Flying Officer Robert Albert Pilllips RAF KIA Runnymede Memorial Panel 128.Warrant Officer Class 2 Frank Spino RCAF R/75875 KIA Runnymede Memorial Panel 180.Flying Officer Richard John Weatherhead RCAF J/6992 KIA Runnymede Memorial Panel 175.Flying Officer William Christian Zapfe RCAF J/7024 KIA Runnymede Memorial Panel 175.

Warrant Officer Class 2 Copping and three of his crew members, Flying Officer Weatherhead, Flying Officer Zapfe and Warrant Officer Class 2 Spino were all members of the same crew who had been interned in Portuguese Guinea on October 2, 1942 when a 200 Squadron Hudson aircraft went down in bad weather. They all returned to the United Kingdom on October 24, 1942.

Boeing Flying Fortress B-17

The Boeing Flying Fortress B-17

The Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress is a four-engined heavy bomber developed in the 1930s for the United States Army Air Corps (USAAC). Competing against Douglas and Martin for a contract to build 200 bombers, the Boeing entry (prototype Model 299/XB-17) outperformed both competitors and exceeded the Air Corps' performance specifications. Although Boeing lost the contract (to the Douglas B-18 Bolo) because the prototype crashed, the Air Corps ordered 13 more B-17s for further evaluation. From its introduction in 1938, the B-17 Flying Fortress evolved through numerous design advances, becoming the third-most produced bomber of all time, behind the four-engined Consolidated B-24 Liberator and the multirole, twin-engined Junkers Ju 88.

The B-17 was primarily employed by the USAAF in the daylight strategic bombing campaign of World War II against German industrial, military and civilian targets. The United States Eighth Air Force, based at many airfields in central, eastern and southern England, and the Fifteenth Air Force, based in Italy, complemented the RAF Bomber Command's night-time area bombing in the Combined Bomber Offensive to help secure air superiority over the cities, factories and battlefields of Western Europe in preparation for the invasion of France in 1944. The B-17 also participated to a lesser extent in the Pacific War, early in World War II, where it conducted raids against Japanese shipping and airfields.

From its prewar inception, the USAAC (by June 1941, the USAAF) promoted the aircraft as a strategic weapon; it was a relatively fast, high-flying, long-range bomber with heavy defensive armament at the expense of bombload. It developed a reputation for toughness based upon stories and photos of badly damaged B-17s safely returning to base. The B-17 dropped more bombs than any other U.S. aircraft in World War II. Of approximately 1.5 million tons of bombs dropped on Nazi Germany and its occupied territories by U.S. aircraft, over 640,000 tons were dropped from B-17s. In addition to its role as a bomber, the B-17 was also employed as a transport, antisubmarine aircraft, drone controller, and search-and-rescue aircraft.

The RCAF acquired six used B-17E and F aircraft from the United States in 1943. Stripped of all armament and armour, the aircraft were employed by the RCAF's No. 168 Squadron on a trans-Atlantic mail service vital to the morale of overseas forces. The aircraft were progressively modified and improved for service in this transport role, and some aircraft were subsequently stripped of paint and appeared in a polished, bare metal finish. No. 168 Squadron delivered more than two million pounds of mail between December 1943 and March 1946.

As of October 2019, nine aircraft remain airworthy, though none of them were ever flown in combat. Dozens more are in storage or on static display. The oldest of these is a D-series flown in combat in the Pacific on the first day of World War II.Wikipedia and RCAF



YouTube B.17 Flying Fortress

Wikipedia Wikipedia B 17 Bomber

unvetted Source Harold A Skaarup Web Page