Joyce, David Dudley Plaister (Flying Officer)

Killed in Action 1942-June-02

Flying Officer David Dudley Plaister Joyce RCAF

Birth Date: 1919-May-25

Born: Buenos Aires, Argentina

Parents: Son of Dudley Vincent and Gladys Evelyn Joyce (nee Thomas), of Buenos Aires, Argentina. Brother of Joan and Honor.

Spouse:

Home: Buenos Aires, Argentina

Enlistment: Ottawa, Ontario

Enlistment Date: 1940-October-17

Service

RCAF

Unit

10 Sqn- Squadron (RAF)
Rem Acu Tangere To hit the mark

Base

Rank

Flying Officer

Position

Pilot

Service Numbers

J/4822

Target
Google MapEssen Germany
Final Burial
Google MapReichswald Forest War Cemetery
21 E 8
10 Squadron (Rem Acu Tangere). Halifax aircraft W 1098 was carrying 3 x 1,000 lbs. of general purpose bombs and 720 x 4 lbs. of incendiary bombs when it went down over enemy territory. Flying Officer Joyce maintained control of the aircraft long enough for his crew to get out but he stayed too long and he went down with the Halifax. One Canadian, FS K.R. Kettlewell, and five RAF members of the crew were all taken Prisoners of War.

Unit Desciption

10 Sqn Rem Acu Tangere (Blackburn's Own)

No 10 Squadron RFC was originally formed at Farnborough, Hampshire on January 1, 1915. It served on the Western Front in WWI, transferring to the RAF when the latter was formed in 1918. The squadron returned to England in February 1919 and was disbanded on December 31.

The squadron was re-formed as a heavy bomber unit in January 1928. A heavy-bomber unit, it flew Handley-Page Hyderabads, followed by Hinaidis and then Heyfords through the 1930s. By the time that WWII started, the squadron was equipped with Armstrong-Whitworth Whitley aircraft. Operating from Dishforth, Yorkshire, it took part in a number of leaflet raids over Germany, including being the first RAF aircraft to drop leaflets over Berlin on 1/2 October 1939. Detachments of the Squadron were based in France (Villeneuve) and Scotland (Kinloss), between October 1939 and March 1940, the latter being with Coastal Command. The squadron's first bombing raid was on the night of 19/20 March, 1940, attacking the German mining seaplane base at Hornum, on the island of Sylt. When Italy entered the war in June 1940, the squadron flew from Guernsey in the Channel Islands to attack targets in Italy.

In July 1940 the squadron moved to the nearby base of Leeming, Yorkshire, where it remained until August 1942. From December 1942 the squadron was re-equipped with Halifax aircraft. In the first quarter of 1942, There were detachments to Lossiemouth, Scotland, for operations against the battleship Tirpitz, which at that time was based near Trondheim, Norway. It was on one of these operations, on the night of 27/28 April that the squadron commander. W/C D.C.T. Bennett, was shot down, but he and his crew escaped to Sweden and were interned and subsequently returned to England. W/C (later Air Vice Marshal) Bennet subsequently was appointed to form and lead the Pathfinder Force, which became No. 8 Group of Bomber Command. From June 1942 a detachment of the squadron (16 aircraft and crews) moved to Palestine and then to Egypt, operating against Tobruk. This detachment then combined with No. 6/462 squadron to form No.462 (RAAF) Squadron in September 1942. The main No. 10 Squadron continued to operate with No. 4 Group, Bomber Command from Leeming at this time, but then moved to Melbourne, Yorkshire in August 1942, where it remained until May 1945. It was transferred to Transport Command on May 7, 1945 and disbanded on December 20 1947. It later was re-formed and flew Canberras and Victors.