Joy, Douglas Gordon Mackenzie

Killed in Action 1945-05-01

Birth Date: 1919-June-21

Born:

Son of Douglas G. and Beatrix E. G. Joy, of Toronto, Ontario.

Home: Winnipeg, Manitoba

Enlistment:

Enlistment Date: Unknown

Service

RCAF

Unit

160 (B) Sqn- Squadron (RAF)
Api Soya Paragasamu We seek and strike

Base

Rank

Squadron Leader

Position

Squadron Leader

Service Numbers

C/1218

160 Squadron (Api Soya Paragasamu). Liberator aircraft missing.addendum 2: See page 372. Liberator aircraft BZ 868 was returning from a 22 hour flightlaying mines off Burma when all four engines failed. The aircraft crash landed in heavy seas,F/O. J.D.A. Robertson and P/O, P.R. Arscoft (RAAF) were also killed. Two Canadians, F/0,sR.L. Freeman, C.M. Fisher, and three crew members, not Canadians, were taken Prisoners Of War.

Consolidated Liberator B-24 / F-7

(DND Photos via James Craik) (Source Harold A Skaarup Web Page)
Consolidated Liberator G.R. Mk. VIII, RCAF (Serial No. 11130) ex-USAAF Consolidated (Vultee) B-24L Liberator USAAF (44-50154)
ex-RAF (Serial No. 5009), ex-Indian Air Force (Serial No. HE773).
Currently preserved in the Canada Aviation and Space Museum Ottawa Ontario.
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The Consolidated B-24 Liberator was an American heavy bomber flown by the RCAF during the Second Word War. It was designed with a shoulder-mounted, high aspect ratio Davis wing which gave the Liberator a high cruise speed, long range and the ability to carry a heavy bomb load. Early RAF Liberators were the first aircraft to cross the Atlantic Ocean as a matter of routine. In comparison with its contemporaries the B-24 was relatively difficult to fly and had poor low speed performance; it also had a lower ceiling compared with the Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress. Of the roughly 18,500 B-24s built in the USA during the war, 148 were flown by the RCAF on long range anti-submarine patrols, with the B-24 serving an instrumental role in closing the Mid-Atlantic gap in the Battle of the Atlantic. The RCAF also flew a few B-24s post war as transports.

Roughly half of all (RAF) Liberator crews in the China-Burma-India (CBI) Theatre were Canadian by the end of the war. John Muir of Vancouver flew the longest mission of the war: 24hrs, 10mins from Ceylon to Burma and back. (Kyle Hood) Harold Skaarup web page


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