Owen, Roger

Killed in Action 1943-01-09

Birth Date: 1923

Born:

MORRIS LLEWELYN OWEN, AND OF ANNIE OWEN, OF WORCESTER

Home:

Enlistment:

Enlistment Date: Unknown

Service

RAFVR

Unit

158 (B) Sqn- Squadron (RAF)
Strength In Unity

Base

Rufforth

Rank

Flight Sergeant

Position

Flight Sergeant

Service Numbers

117490

Halifax B.Mk.II W7751

Bombing 1943-January-09 to 1943-January-09

158 (B) Sqn (RAF)

Failed to Return, Gardening ops,believed crashed near Esbjerg, Denmark, 9.1.43

Claim by Gunther Rogge 12/NJG3 - Near Tarp 7km North of Esbjerg airfield at 18:26.Note: Coned by searchlights and also claimed by 2/M Flak Abt 204 and 2/lei Flak Abt 742 (Halifax 7km North of Esbjerg airfield 18:25) Claim by Lt Rogge not listed in OKL/RLM 12/NJG3.Confirmed Abschussubersicht rejected and victory credited to Flak on 12 March 1943.(Nachtjagd Combat Archive 1943 Part 1 - Theo Boiten.

On its way to the target W7751 was hit by flak from 2.lei.Flakabt. 742 near Esbjerg and crashed at 18:26 hours at Bryndum killing six of the crew.They were Air Bomber Sergeant Ian K. Crawford RAFVR, Air Gnr. Sergeant Herbert I. Goodwill RAFVR, Pilot Sergeant Joseph E.R. Lavigne RCAF, Navigator/Bomber Sergeant Peter F.E. Newman RAFVR, Wireless operator SGT Douglas Mann RCAF and Pilot Flight Sergeant Roger Owen RAFVR. They were laid to rest in Fovrfelt cemetery, Esbjerg on 14/1-1943.

The rear gunner Sergeant Peter Skinner was nearly unhurt while Flt.Engr. Sergeant Sidney Llewellyn was badly hurt. They were both taken to Esbjerg hospital by taxi driver Jacob Nielsen. In the car was also a German officer who sat pointing his pistol at the flyers. Llewellyn died from his wounds on 15/1 and was laid to rest in Fovrfelt cemetery on 19/1-1943

Skinner was taken to Dulag Luft in Oberursel near Frankfurt for interrogation. When this had finished he was sent to Stalag VIIIB Lamsdorf where he stayed until January 1945 when the prisoners were sent on a march to the west away from the advancing Russian troops. In April they reached the area of Magdeburg and on 11/4 Skinner and three comrades managed to get away from the marching column and hid in a barn. Three days later American troops arrived and on 16/4 Skinner returned to England. Source "Air War Over DenmarK",http://www.flensted.eu.com/19430002.shtml

Handley Page Halifax

(RAF Photo, 1942)(Source Harold A Skaarup Web Page)A Royal Air Force Handley Page Halifax Mk. II Series I (Serial No. W7676), coded TL-P, of No. 35 Squadron, RAF, based at Linton-on-Ouse, Yorkshire in the UK, being piloted by Flight Lieutenant Reginald Lane, (later Lieutenant-General, RCAF), over the English countryside. Flt Lt Lane and his crew flew twelve operations in W7676, which failed to return from a raid on Nuremberg on the night of 28/29 August 1942, when it was being flown by Flt Sgt D. John and crew.

The Handley Page Halifax is a British Royal Air Force (RAF) four-engined heavy bomber of the Second World War. It was developed by Handley Page to the same specification as the contemporary twin-engine Avro Manchester.

The Halifax has its origins in the twin-engine HP56 proposal of the late 1930s, produced in response to the British Air Ministry's Specification P.13/36 for a capable medium bomber for "world-wide use." The HP56 was ordered as a backup to the Avro 679, both aircraft being designed to use the underperforming Rolls-Royce Vulture engine. The Handley Page design was altered at the Ministry to a four-engine arrangement powered by the Rolls-Royce Merlin engine; the rival Avro 679 was produced as the twin-engine Avro Manchester which, while regarded as unsuccessful mainly due to the Vulture engine, was a direct predecessor of the famed Avro Lancaster. Both the Lancaster and the Halifax would emerge as capable four-engined strategic bombers, thousands of which would be built and operated by the RAF and several other services during the War.

On 25 October 1939, the Halifax performed its maiden flight, and it entered service with the RAF on 13 November 1940. It quickly became a major component of Bomber Command, performing routine strategic bombing missions against the Axis Powers, many of them at night. Arthur Harris, the Air Officer Commanding-in-Chief of Bomber Command, described the Halifax as inferior to the rival Lancaster (in part due to its smaller payload) though this opinion was not shared by many of the crews that flew it, particularly for the MkIII variant. Nevertheless, production of the Halifax continued until April 1945. During their service with Bomber Command, Halifaxes flew a total of 82,773 operations and dropped 224,207 tons of bombs, while 1,833 aircraft were lost. The Halifax was also flown in large numbers by other Allied and Commonwealth nations, such as the Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF), Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF), Free French Air Force and Polish forces.Wikipedia

YouTube Halifax Heavy Bomber WWII

unvetted Source Harold A Skaarup Web Page

Wikipedia Wikipedia Halifax Bomber

Museum National Air Force Museum of Canada