Flying Officer Baillie was BROTHER to Flight Sergeant Alex John Baillie (RCAF) Navigator, killed in action 1943-03-23 when #113 Squadron RCAF Hudson aircraft BW 620 crashed just after take-off for an operational patrol at Yarmouth, Nova Scotia
Cenotaph at Bellevue Cemetery, River John, Pictou County, Nova Scotia, CanadaBaillie, Ralph Cameron (Flying Officer)
Killed in Action 1943-July-30

Birth Date: 1922-June-28
Born: River John, Pictou County, Nova Scotia, Canada
Parents: Son of George William Baillie and Mary Myrtle Baillie (nee Cameron), of River John, Nova Scotia, Canada
Spouse:
Home: River John, Nova Scotia
Enlistment:
Enlistment Date: 1940-September-12
Service
RCAF
Unit
78 (B) Sqn- Squadron (RAF)
Nemo Non Paratus Nobody unprepared
Base
RAF Breighton
Rank
Flying Officer
Position
Bomb Aimer
Service Numbers
J/17942
Prev: R/73027
Target
Temporary Burial
Remains were later exhumed from this location and reburied
Crew or Other Personnel
Halifax JB798
Mission
Halifax B/GR.Mk.II JB798
Bombing Hamburg Germany 1943-July-29 to 1943-July-30
78 (B) Sqn (RAF) RAF Breighton
78 Squadron (Nemo Non Paratus) RAF Breighton. Halifax II aircraft JB 798 EY-P is believed to have been hit by flak while on an operation against targets in Hamburg, Germany. The Halifax crashed south-west of Lubeck at Bad Oldsloe, Germany, the 14th aircraft shot down on this, the 3rd raid on targets in Hamburg
FS WMT Hetherington (RCAF), Flying Officer RC Baillie (RCAF), FS GH Woodcock (RCAF), Sergeants T Campbell (RAF), WE Goodacre (RAFVR), JR Nicholls (RAFVR) and FS PA Fraser (RAAF) were all killed in action on their 6th operation
The Battle of Hamburg, Allied Bomber Forces Against a German City by Martin Middlebrook, Appendix 4, page 340
29/30.07.1943 No.78 Squadron Halifax II JB798 EY-P Flight Sergeant Peter...