Warrant Officer 1st Class Brown MiD was safe, back in the UK 1945-04-25
Footprints on the Sands of Time, RAF Bomber Command Prisoners of War in Germany 1939-45 by Oliver Clutton-Brock, page 253
Service
RCAF
Unit
425 (B) Sqn- Squadron
Je te plumerai I shall pluck you
Base
RAF Dishforth
Rank
Warrant Officer 1
Position
Navigator
Service Numbers
R/104832
PoW: 888
Warrant Officer 1st Class Brown MiD was safe, back in the UK 1945-04-25
Footprints on the Sands of Time, RAF Bomber Command Prisoners of War in Germany 1939-45 by Oliver Clutton-Brock, page 253
425 Alouette Squadron ((Je te plumerai) RAF Dishforth.
Wellington III aircraft BK 340 KW-T was shot down by a night fighter during an operation to bomb the Krupps Works factories in Essen, Germany. The bomber crashed at Westfriese Dijk, Aartswoud, Noord-Holland with the entire crew surviving and were taken prisoner.
Multiple sources credit the claim for this bomber loss to Leutnant Oscar Kostler of 10/NJG1 but there is also a claim from Feldwebel Hienz Vinke of 11/NJG1 for this same aircraft
Warrant Officer 1st Class Marie Joseph Alfred Jean Aumond (RCAF), Warrant Officer 1st Class Adrien Walter Brown (RCAF), Flight Sergeant Joseph Adrian Vincent Gauthier (RCAF), Sergeant Joseph Georges Gilles Claude Lamontagne (RCAF) and Warrant Officer 1st Class Joseph Arthur Roland Goulet (RCAF) all survived and were taken as Prisoners of War.
Warrant Officer 1st Class Aumond and Sergeant Goulet were both severely wounded and both were repatriated early, Aumond in October 1943 and Goulet in February 1945
Nachtjagd Combat Archive 1 January - 22 June, 1943 Part 1 by Theo Boiten, page 45
Royal Air Force Serial and Image Database
12/13 March 1943 425 Squadron Wellington III BK340 Sergeant Lamontagne
425 Squadron was formed at Dishforth, Yorkshire, UK
on June 25, 1942 as the RCAF's twenty-second squadron, and fifth bomber squadron, to be formed overseas in WWII. At the time it was part of No 4 Group, RAF Bomber Command. It was unique in being designated "French-Canadian" and every effort was made to find French Canadian airmen elsewhere in Bomber Command who could be transferred to the squadron. It became operational in October, 1942, flying Wellington Mk III aircraft with the squadron code letters KW. It transferred to No 6 (RCAF) Group, Bomber Command when that was formed on January 1, 1943, although remaining at Dishforth. In March, the squadron re-equipped with Wellington X's and from June to October operated from bases in Tunisia (Kairouan/Zina
and Hani East
airfields) in support of the Allied invasions of Sicily and Italy. In November 1943 the squadron returned briefly to Dishforth and re-equipped with Halifax III aircraft before moving to Tholthorpe, Yorkshire
in December, as part of No 62 (RCAF) Base of 6 Group. It remained at Tholthorpe until the end of the war in Europe. In May and June of 1945 it re-equipped with Lancaster X aircraft, in preparation for joining the Tiger Force for attacks on Japan. The surrender of Japan caused the disbandment of the Squadron at Debert, Nova Scotia
, on September 5, 1945.
Overall, the squadron flew 328 missions, involving 3694 sorties, in the course of which 9152 tons of bombs were dropped and 55 aircraft were lost. Squadron personnel gained 2 MBE's, 63 DFC's and 4 Bars to DFC, 2 GM's, 18 DFM's, 1 DFC(USA), and 4 MiD's. Battle Honours were:English Channel and North Sea 1943-45, Baltic 1944-45, Fortress Europe 1943-44, France and Germany 1944-45, Biscay Ports 1943-44, Ruhr 1943-45, Berlin 1944, German Ports 1943-45, Normandy 1944, Rhine, Biscay 1943-44, Sicily 1943, Italy 1943, Salerno. Wikipedia, Moyes, Kostenuk and Griffin
Squadron History (Bomber Command Museum PDF)
MAP 1: 425 Squadron Movements 1942-45 (right-click on image to display enlarged in new tab)
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MAP 2: 425 Squadron Movements 1942-45 (detail of Map 1)
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MAP 3: 425 Squadron Movements in North Africa 1943
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The squadron was re-formed as an All-Weather (Fighter) unit at St Hubert (Montreal), Quebec
on 1 October 1954. It flew CF-100 Canuck aircraft on North American air defence. Selected as one of five units to be re-equipped with CF-101 (Voodoo) aircraft, it was deactivated on 1 May 1961 pending delivery of the aircraft. Reactivated at Namao (Edmonton), Alberta
on 15 October 1961, the squadron initially received the trainer version of the CF-101 and served as a training unit to convert the remaining four squadrons to this aircraft. It afterwards moved to Bagotville, Quebec,
in July 1962, and was declared operational on 1 October when No. 3 All-Weather (Fighter) Operational Training Unit assumed responsibility for all future CF-101 training. On 1 February 1968 the squadron was integrated into the Canadian Armed Forces. From 1982, the Canadian Forces started to acquire CF-18 Hornets; 425 Sqn received them in 1985. In 2005, 433 Squadron was merged into 425 Squadron. 425 Tactical Fighter Squadron is an integral part of NORAD and of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). In peacetime, the squadron's fighters provide continuous surveillance of the East Coast of Canada. In addition, it must be ready for rapid deployment anywhere in the world in support of NATO or contingency operations.Wikipedia, Kostenuk & Griffin, and www.canada.ca/en/air-force/corporate/squadrons/425-squadron.html