Westwood, Jack Arthur (Warrant Officer 2)

Prisoner of War Early Release 1942-July-24

Male Head

Birth Date: unkown date

Born:

Parents:

Spouse:

Home: Toronto, Ontario

Enlistment:

Enlistment Date: unkown date

Service

RCAF

Unit

9 (B) Sqn- Squadron (RAF)
Per Noctem Volamus Through out the night we fly

Base

RAF Honington

Rank

Warrant Officer 2

Position

Observer/Air Gunner (Nose)

Service Numbers

R/105057
PoW: 6451

The Winnipeg Tribune November 9, 1943

The Geneva Convention made provision for the repatriation of all Prisoners of War, even during hostilities. It was only possible for the British and Germans to reach agreement over the seriously ill and disabled. For the majority of the 40,000 British servicemen who were taken prisoner in 1939 and 1940, the war was to be a very long and dispiriting experience. Negotiations, conducted through the Red Cross, over the repatriation of seriously wounded men, had begun in late 1940. They did not progress very far because there were far fewer German men in this category than British. It was only after substantial numbers of Germans were taken prisoner in the Desert campaign of 1942 that the talks resumed. The actual exchange of prisoners did not take place until October 1943. Ullapool Museum, Ullapool, Scotland

Unvetted Source The Manchester Guardian, 1943-October-19 page 5

  1. Warrant Officer Edward Bradley Argue
  2. Warrant Officer Marie Joseph Alfred Jean Aumond
  3. Flight Lieutenant Donald Charles Dougall DFC
  4. Sergeant Howard Wallace Fullard
  5. Flight Lieutenant Ross Raymond Gillespie
  6. Flight Lieutenant William Minto MacKay
  7. Flight Lieutenant Donald Robert Morrison, DFC, DFM
  8. Flight Sergeant John Bayman Nickerson
  9. Warrant Officer James Alexander Smith
  10. Warrant Officer Jack Arthur Westwood
  11. Warrant Officer Walter Gordon Wilcox

Footprints on the Sands of Time, RAF Bomber Command Prisoners of War in Germany 1939-45 by Oliver Clutton-Brock, page 432

Mission

Wellington Mk. III Z1577

Bombing Duisburg Germany 1942-July-24 to 1942-July-24

9 (B) Sqn (RAF) RAF Honington

9 Squadron (Per Noctem Volemus), RAF Honington. Wellington III aircraft Z 1577 WS-T was shot down by heavy flak during an operation against targets in Duisburg, Germany and crashed near Wetten, Kevelaer, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Germany

Wireless Operator/Air Gunner, Flight Sergeant Alfred Frank Chilvers Ratcliff (RCAF) and Pilot, Flying Officer Henry Ernest Brown (RAFVR) were killed in action

Pilot Officer George Burton Smith (RCAF), Sergeant Jack Arthur Westwood (RCAF), Sergeant Alfred Frank Chilvers Ratcliff (RCAF) and Pilot Officer Norman Jefferies (RAFVR) all survived to become Prisoners of War. However, the severely wounded Sergeant Ratcliff would die from his wounds while a prisoner

Unvetted Source Royal Air Force Serial and Image Database

Unvetted Source Aviation Safety Network