Cantin, Raymond Roger Marcel (Pilot Officer)

Prisoner of War 1945-January-05

Male Head

Birth Date: 1917-November-30

Born:

Parents:

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Enlistment:

Enlistment Date: unkown date

Service

RCAF

Unit

425 (B) Sqn- Squadron
Je te plumerai I shall pluck you

Base

RAF Tholthorpe

Rank

Pilot Officer

Position

Wireless Operator/Air Gunner

Service Numbers

J/93684
Prev: R/194179
PoW: 7718

Took off from Tholthorpe at 16:23 in Halifax Mk III (Sqn code KW-E Bomber Command) on an operation to Hannover Germany.

Shot down by flak at 19:40 while approaching the Aiming Point and crashed near the town of Stolzenau some 16 km WNW of the Steinhuder Meer (lake)

Killed: Pilot Officer Joseph Yves Jean Claude Lamarre RCAF J/95374 KIA Hanover War Cemetery grave 16. E. 18. Pilot Officer Jean Adolphe Fernand Piche RCAF J/92868 KIA Hanover War Cemetery grave 10. E. 6.

POWs includes Cantin: Flight Sergeant Jean Thomas Raymond Cauchy RCAF R/177007 POW Stalag Luft L1 Barth Vogelsang. Flight Sergeant Joseph Alfred Cote RCAF R/94157 POW Stalag Luft L1 Barth Vogelsang. Sergeant Emmet Justin Faulkner RCAF R/184378 POW Stalag Luft L1 Barth Vogelsang. Flying Officer Joseph Jacques Paul Lesperance RCAF J/22202 POW Stalag Luft L1 Barth Vogelsang.

Pilot Officer Cantin was safe back in the UK 1945-05-12

Footprints on the Sands of Time, RAF Bomber Command Prisoners of War in Germany 1939-45 by Oliver Clutton-Brock page 260

Mission

Halifax B.Mk.III MZ860

Bombing Hannover Germany 1945-January-05 to 1945-January-05

425 (B) Sqn (RCAF) RAF Tholthorpe

425 Alouette Squadron (I shall pluck you) RAF Tholthorpe. Halifax BIII aircraft MZ 860 KW-E missing during operations over Hannover, Germany, shot down by night fighter pilot Hptm Werner Baake of Stab 1/NJG 1. The Halifax crashed 1 km east of Stolzenau, Lower Saxony, on the bank of the Weser River, Germany

Flight Sergeant JTR Cauchy (RCAF), Pilot Officer RRM Cantin (RCAF), Flight Sergeant JA Cote (RCAF), Flight Lieutenant JJP L'Esperance (RCAF), and Sergeant EJJ Faulkner (RCAF) all survived to be taken as Prisoners Of War

Pilot Officer JYJC Lamarre MiD (RCAF) and Pilot Officer JAF Piche (RCAF) also survived to reach the ground and were captured separately. Both of these airmen Prisoners of War were later murdered by German Gestapo or SS members

There were two more 425 Squadron Halifax III aircraft lost on this operation. Please see aircraft serials NR 178 KW-J and NP 999 KW-W for additional information on these aircraft and crews

Unvetted Source [Royal Air Force Serial and Image Database]...

Unvetted Source 05/06 011945 425 (Alouette) Squadron, RCAF Halifax III MZ860...

Unvetted Source Aviation Safety Network

Unvetted Source Daily Operations

Unvetted Source 425 Squadron Nose Art - Research done by Clarence Simonsen I RCAF...

Unit Desciption

425 (B) Sqn Je te plumerai ("Alouette")

History of the Squadron during World War II (Aircraft: Wellington III, X, Halifax III, Lancaster X)

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)

Maps for Movements of 425 Squadron 1942-45

MAP 1: 425 Squadron Movements 1942-45 (right-click on image to display enlarged in new tab)
MAP 2: 425 Squadron Movements 1942-45 (detail of Map 1)
MAP 3: 425 Squadron Movements in North Africa 1943
MAP 4: 6 Group Bomber Bases in Yorkshire and Durham, 1943-45

425 Squadron History Summary 1942-45

425 Squadron History Summary 1942-45 Page 2

History of the Squadron Post-WWII (Aircraft: Canuck, Voodoo, Hornet)

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