Squadron Leader Fowlow had previously been employed by the Royal Bank of Canada from September 22, 1938 at the Wolfville, Nova Scotia branch, enlisting in the RCAF from here August 22, 1940
Fowlow, Norman Ralph (Squadron Leader)
Killed in Action 1944-May-19

Birth Date: 1921-August-09
Born: Hodge's Cove Newfoundland
Parents: Son of the Reverend Ralph George Fowlow, and of Annie Elizabeth (nee Gruchy) Fowlow
Spouse: Husband of Elsie M (nee Ogilvie) Fowlow, of San Francisco, California, U.S.A.
Home: Windsor, Nova Scotia
Enlistment: Halifax, Nova Scotia
Enlistment Date: 1940-August-22
Service
RCAF
Unit
411 (F) Sqn- Squadron
Inimicus Inimico Hostile to an Enemy
Base
RAF Tangmere
Rank
Squadron Leader
Position
Pilot
Service Numbers
J/15095
Mission
Spitfire LF Mk IX MK834
Bombing 1944-May-19 to 1944-May-19
411 (F) Sqn (RCAF) RAF Tangmere
Born 1921 in Hodges Cove, Newfoundland. Enlisted in Halifax, Nova Scotia 22 August 1940. Commissioned 1941. Trained at No1 ITS (graduated 14 December 1940), No11 EFTS (graduated 28 January 1941) and No 2 SFTS (graduated 4 April 1941). Killed in action 19 May 1944
411 Grizzly Bear Squadron (Inimicus inimico) RAF Tangmere. Spitfire LF IX aircraft MK 834 shot down by flak while dive bombing the Railway Crossing at Hazebrough, France, in which Squadron Leader N R Fowlow DFC (RCAF) was killed in action. Fowlow had commenced his diving attack from10,000 feet carrying a 500 lb bomb, but at about 7,000 feet his aircraft was hit by heavy flak exploding the bomb and killing him instantly
Squadron Leader Fowlow DFC had been shot down at sea and rescued, severely wounded, 1942-05-18 while serving with 611 Squadron RAF in Malta. Back in Europe, he later shot down three enemy aircraft while flying with 403 Squadron and one while flying with 421 Squadron
FOWLOW, Squadron Leader Norman Ralph (J15095) - Distinguished Flying Cross - No.421 Squadron. Award effective 9 September 1943 as per London Gazette dated 24 September 1943 and AFRO 2386/43 dated 19 November 1943. The citation reads - "This officer has taken part in a very large number of sorties and has proved himself to be a skillful and courageous fighter. He has destroyed four and shared in the destruction of another enemy aircraft." Detail provided by Hugh Halliday, Orleans, Ontario
Aces High Volume 1 by Christopher Shores and Clive Williams pages 266-7
Canadian Wing Commanders by George Brown and Michel Lavigne pages 81, 137, 152
Royal Air Force Serial and Image Database
Search for France - Crashes 39-45
Squadron Leader "Norm" Fowlow DFC I World War II New...
Spitfire pilots and aircraft database - Squadron Leader Norman Ralph FOWLOW RCAF
Unit Desciption
411 (F) Sqn Inimicus Inimico ("Grizzly Bear")
History of the Squadron during World War II (Aircraft: Spitfire Mks. IIA,VB, IXB, IXE, XVI, XIV)
The squadron was the sixth of the RCAF's squadrons to be formed overseas in WWII. It was the fourth fighter squadron to be so formed. It was established at Digby, Lincolnshire, England
on June 16, 1941. It flew Spitfire aircraft in the defence of Great Britain, formed part of the Canadian Kenley Wing within No. 11 Group, Fighter Command, and after D-Day moved to France on June 19, 1944, in a fighter and ground support role. It then supported the Allied armies, moving through France, the Low Countries and Germany. It was one of four RCAF day fighter units retained in Germany as part of the British Air Forces of Occupation before being disbanded at Utersen, Germany
on March 21, 1946.
In the course of hostilities, the squadron flew 10,747 sorties for the loss of 48 aircraft and pilots, of whom 4 were killed, 4 wounded, 19 presumed dead. The squadron claimed 84 enemy aircraft destroyed, 3 probably destroyed and 44 damaged. On the ground, they claimed 367 motor vehicles and 26 locomotives. The squadron had 5 aces (shot down 5 or more enemy aircraft), of which Flight Lieutenant R.J. Audet DFC & Bar accounted for 5 enemy aircraft within 2 minutes in a single sortie on Dec 29 1944. He was killed on March 5, 1945, by which time his score had mounted to 11.5, including 2 Me 262 jets. Other aces were: Flight Lieutenant H.C. Trainor DFC & Bar, Flight Lieutenant J.J. Boyle DFC, Squadron Leader E.G. Lapp DFC, and Flying Officer M.G. Graham DFC. Overall, the squadron was awarded 1 DSO, 2 MBE, 2 Bars to DFC, 19 DFCs and 1 MiD. Battle Honours were: Defence of Britain 1941-44, English Channel and North Sea 1942-43, Fortress Europe 1941-44: Dieppe, France and Germany 1944-45: Normandy 1944, Arnhem, Rhine. Wikipedia, Kostenuk and Griffin
Maps for Movements of 411 Squadron 1941-46
MAP 1: 411Squadron Movements 1941-44 (right-click on image to display enlarged in new tab)
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MAP 2: 411 Squadron Movements Detail of Map 1
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MAP 3: 411 Squadron Movements in Europe 1944-46
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411 Squadron History Summary 1941-46
411 Squadron History Summary 1941-46 Page 2
411 Squadron History Summary 1941-46 Page 3
History of the Squadron Post-WWII (Aircraft: Harvard II, Chipmunk, Vampire III, Silver Star, Sabre 5, Expeditor, Otter, Kiowa)
411 Squadron was reformed as an auxiliary fighter squadron at RCAF Station Downsview Ontario
on 1 October 1950, and was known as the ‘County of York’ squadron. With North American Harvards and de Havilland Chipmunks as trainers the squadron operated the de Havilland Vampire III until 1956, then transitioned to the Canadair Sabre Mark V, with the Canadair Silver Star used as a trainer.
In October 1958, 411 was moved from Air Defence Command to Air Transport Command, and became a light transport squadron flying the Beech Expeditor C-45. The squadron adopted a Search and Rescue (SAR) role in spring of 1960 with the acquisition of the DHC-3 Otter. The Expeditor was retired in 1966.
On 1 February 1968 the squadron was integrated into the Canadian Armed Forces as No. 411 “County of York†Air Reserve Squadron. In 1969, 411 Squadron was transferred from Air Transport Command to 10 Tactical Air Group, and the squadron's primary role changed to the support of army operations. It continued to hold a secondary SAR role, and to do mapping surveys and sovereignty flights in the Canadian arctic. In 1981, the Otter was retired and the squadron transitioned to the CH-136 Kiowa (OH-58) helicopter, which it operated in a reconnaissance and tactical support role. The squadron finally disbanded on 1 Jan 1998.