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Ives, John Learned MiD (Pilot Officer)

Killed in Action 1945-April-28

Birth Date: 1921 (age 24)

Son of Carroll Sanborn Ives and Gladys Emma Ives, of Sherbrooke, Province of Quebec, Canada.

Home: Sherbrooke, Quebec

Decorations: MiD


Mentioned in Dispatches
Service
RCAF
Unit
271 Sqn- Squadron
Rank
Pilot Officer
Marshal
Air Chief MarshalA/C/M
Air MarshalA/M
Air Vice MarshalA/V/M
Air CommodoreA/C
Group CaptainG/C
Wing CommanderW/C
Squadron LeaderS/L
Flight LieutenantF/L
Flying OfficerF/O
Pilot OfficerP/O
Warrant Officer 1st ClassWO1
Warrant Officer 2nd ClassWO2
Flight SergeantFS
SergeantSGT
CorporalCPL
Senior AircraftmanSAC
Leading AircraftmanLAC
Aircraftman 1st ClassAC1
Aircraftman 2nd ClassAC2
Position
Navigator
Service Numbers
J/92827
Prev: R/62735
Enlisted in Sherbrooke, Quebec, 23 July 1940. Trained at No.2 ITS (graduated 1 October 1940), No.2 AOS (graduated 17 January 1941), No.2 BGS (graduated 3 March 1941) and No.1 ANS (graduated 5 April 1941). DHist file 181.009 D.1636 (RG.24 Vol.20604) has application for Operational Wings dated 14 February 1944. Claimed to have flown 29 sorties (160 operational hours) with No.51 Squadron, June 1941 to March 1942. Shot down over enemy territory, September 1941 [sic; see below]; evaded and returned to UK after five months. Instructed at No.32 OTU in 1943. Later commissioned (J92827) and killed on operations 28 April 1945 with No.271 Squadron (Dakota KG406); name on Runnymede Memorial. (AFRO gives unit only as "Overseas") - Award effective 1 January 1943 as per London Gazette of that date and AFRO 232/43 dated 12 February 1943. IVES, Flight Sergeant John Learned (R62735) - Mention in Despatches - No.51 Squadron Public Records Office Air 2/5684 has recommendation and identifies unit. This airman was a member of the crew of an aircraft which bombed Cologne on 18th August 1941. He was compelled to bail out near Maastricht. Immediately he landed he hid in a wood to avoid capture and remained there for four days. He drank some water in a field which gave him fever and he was later found by a farmer and taken to the farmhouse. On 28th August he made his way, alone, to Brussels. Here he lived until 6th November when he left with a guide and two companions. They were escorted across the Franco-Belgian frontier and then made their way alone and left the Zone Interdite on 6th November. Traveling via Paris and Bayonne they reached the Spanish frontier on 10th November. He was repatriated from Gibraltar on 30th November 1941. Detail provided by H. Halliday, Orleans, Ontario. 271 Squadron. Dakota aircraft KG 406 took off on a scheduled run destinated Nivelles. Belgium and crashed into the sea eight miles north-west of Calais, France. It is suspected the artificial horizon failed as the aircraft was flying in cloud just prior to the crash. The crew of a naval launch witnessed the crash and searched the area but all they could find was a mae west life jacket, Flight Sergeant R. Reynolds and three airmen, not Canadians, were also killed. Pilot Officer Ives had gone missing on August 19, 1941 during a bombing operation with 51 Squadron but turned up safely at Gibraltar on November 18,1941.

Canada Source Canadian Virtual War Memorial

Canada Primary Source Library and Archives Canada Service Files (may not exist)

Pilot Officer John Learned Ives has no known grave.

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Panel 280

Dakota KG406

Douglas Dakota Skytrain C-47 DC-3 AC-47 R4D Spooky Gooney Bird

Douglas C-47 Dakota
Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum

Development of the Douglas DC-3 started in early 1935 with the prototype flying by the end of the year. The first production aircraft was delivered to American Airlines in July 1936 and soon orders were pouring in from US and overseas airlines. The US Air Corps became interested in the DC-3 and ordered a military version, called the C-47 or Dakota. It had many capabilities, including dropping paratroops and supplies, evacuating the wounded, troop transportation and glider towing. Eventually, about 10,000 C-47s were built for the US military.

During WW II, the Royal Air Force received about 1,930 Dakotas and they became the RAF's main wartime transport aircraft. The RCAF took delivery of its first Dakota in March 1943, and at its peak had 169 on strength. Within Canada, they were operated by four transport squadrons and several ferry squadrons.

Overseas, Dakotas equipped RCAF 437 Squadron in Europe and RCAF 435 and 436 Squadrons in South East Asia. 437 Squadron was formed in England September 1944, where it supported the British and Canadian Armies fighting in Europe. Its most important actions involved glider towing for the airborne landings at Arnhem and the Rhine crossing at Wesel.435 and 436 Squadrons were formed in India in October 1944. They flew Dakotas in support of the British 14th Army in Burma where they dropped supplies to the British troops fighting the Japanese in the jungle.

At the end of WW II, all three squadrons were transferred back to England to provide air transport for the Canadian occupation forces in Germany. Dakotas continued in service with the Canadian Armed Forces until 1989, when 402 Squadron, based in Winnipeg, retired the last of them. Of the nearly 13,000 DC-3s built, many are still in service today, over 75 years after the aircraft's first flight.

The Museum's Dakota was built for the USAAF and was delivered to the Royal Air Force in February 1944 as FZ692 and the Royal Canadian Air Force 437 Squadron in September 1944. It was later renumbered as 12945 as part of the Canadian Armed Forces where it served with 424 Squadron for Search & Rescue at CFB Trenton. It performed JATO ignition in flight at the 1970 Canadian National Exhibition Air Show on the Toronto waterfront.

After it was struck off strength by the Canadian Armed Forces in 1973, the aircraft ended up with Environment Canada, where it was used for mineral and environmental surveys. C-GRSB was donated to the Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum in May 2014.

FZ692 has been restored to the paint scheme it would have worn at the end of World War II with 437 Squadron RCAF. FZ692 flew 208 operational trips with 437 Squadron and 16 with 233 Squadron for a total of 224. It ended up flying hundreds of individual legs between airfields in Europe. FZ692 participated in two major airborne operations, Normandy and the Rhine Crossing. It carried 298 casualties to medical aid and repatriated 456 prisoners of war. It carried over 5,100 passengers to destinations around Europe and carried over two hundred tons of freight (414,368 lbs). CWHM

YouTube C-47 Skytrain

Wkikpedia Wikipedia C-47 Skytrain

General Harold A Skaarup Web Page

Museum CWHM Flightlines

Museum Canada Aviation Museum Dakota Overview

Canada Source Dakota Maintenance Manual

last update: 2023-07-22 19:20:00

Dakota Mk. lll KG406

42-92620 (MSN 12441) to USAAF Feb 4, 1944 C-47A-10-DK. To RAF as Dakota III KG406 at RAF Montreal Feb 23, 1944. To UK Jar 16, 1944. 48 Sqdn RAF Mar 27, 1944. 271 Sqdn RAF Jan 7, 1945. Crashed Apr 28, 1945 in English Channel 10 mi SE of South Foreland, Kent.

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