Morley, Robert Stinson

Killed in Action 1943-06-17

Birth Date: unkown date

Born:

Albert James Morley & Irene Ambler Morley, of Highland Creek, Ontario.

Home: Highland Creek, Ontario

Enlistment:

Enlistment Date: Unknown

Service

RCAF

Unit

61 (B) Sqn- Squadron (RAF)
Per Purum Tonantes Thundering through the clear air

Base

Rank

Flight Sergeant

Position

Flight Sergeant

Service Numbers

R/136408

61 Squadron (Per Puram Tunantes). Lancaster aircraft W 4789 failed to return from a trip to Berlin Germany.

Shot down (means not found) and crashed (crash location not found). There was only one crew survivor.

Killed:Sergeant Leslie Ernest Austin RAF KIA Runnymede Memorial Panel 141.Flight Sergeant John Keith Bond RAAF KIA Runnymede Memorial Panel 192.Sergeant Jim Corke RAF KIA Runnymede Memorial Panel 146.Sergeant William Richard Maunder RAF KIA Runnymede Memorial Panel 158.Flight Sergeant Colin Mcdowell Miller RAAF KIA Runnymede Memorial Panel 193.Flight Sergeant Douglas Clarke Morphett RAAF KIA Runnymede Memorial Panel 193.Sergeant Derek Bryan Pollitt RAF KIA Runnymede Memorial Panel 162.

POW:Sergeant Cecil Thomas Dudley RAF injured in crash and made a POW. Later died of wounds and buried at Rheinberg War Cemetery grave 1. B. 25.

Avro Lancaster

Avro Lancaster Mk. X RCAF Serial FM 213
Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum
VR A.jpg image not found

The Avro Lancaster is a British Second World War heavy bomber. It was designed and manufactured by Avro as a contemporary of the Handley Page Halifax, both bombers having been developed to the same specification, as well as the Short Stirling, all three aircraft being four-engined heavy bombers adopted by the Royal Air Force (RAF) during the same wartime era.

The Lancaster has its origins in the twin-engine Avro Manchester which had been developed during the late 1930s in response to the Air Ministry Specification P.13/36 for a capable medium bomber for "world-wide use". Originally developed as an evolution of the Manchester (which had proved troublesome in service and was retired in 1942), the Lancaster was designed by Roy Chadwick and powered by four Rolls-Royce Merlins and in one version, Bristol Hercules engines. It first saw service with RAF Bomber Command in 1942 and as the strategic bombing offensive over Europe gathered momentum, it was the main aircraft for the night-time bombing campaigns that followed. As increasing numbers of the type were produced, it became the principal heavy bomber used by the RAF, the Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF) and squadrons from other Commonwealth and European countries serving within the RAF, overshadowing the Halifax and Stirling. Wikipedia

YouTube Lancaster Bomber

Wikipedia Wikipedia

General Harold A Skaarup Web Page