Christoff, Christopher (Sergeant)

Evader 1944-June-13

Male Head

Birth Date: unkown date

Born:

Parents:

Spouse:

Home: Oba, Ontario

Enlistment:

Enlistment Date: unkown date

Service

RCAF

Unit

432 (B) Sqn- Squadron
Saeviter Ad Lucem Ferociously toward the light

Base

RAF East Moor

Rank

Sergeant

Position

Air Gunner (Mid-Upper)

Service Numbers

R/200321

Took off from East Moor at 22:04 to bomb rail communications in France.

Shot down (means not found) and crashed (crash location not found)

POWs: Pilot Officer Leslie Richard Lauzon RCAF J/19886 POW Stalag Luft L1, Barth Vogelsang, POW# 5469. WO Joseph Eugene Olivier RCAF R/130351 POW Stalag Luft L7 Bankau, POW# 318 Warrant Officer Class 2 Gordon Lloyd Wallis RCAF R/155734 POW Stalag Luft L7 Bankau, POW# 374. Sergeant John Alfred Cakebread RAF POW camp not listed.

Evaders includes Christoff: Warrant Officer Class 1 Walter Hodder RCAF R/104153 Evader.

Footprints on the Sands of Time, RAF Bomber Command Prisoners of War in Germany 1939-45 by Oliver Clutton-Brock page 243

Mission

Halifax B/A.Mk.III LW616

Bombing Cambrai France 1944-June-12 to 1944-June-13

432 (B) Sqn (RCAF) RAF East Moor

Battle of Normandy

671 aircraft- 348 Halifaxes, 285 Lancasters, 38 Mosquitoes-of 4, 5, 6 and 8 Groups to attack communications, mostly railways, at Amiens/St-Roch, Amiens/Longueau, Arras, Caen, Cambrai and Poitiers. (It is interesting to note that, with the exception of Caen, all of these targets were the sites of well-known battles of earlier wars and Caen was soon to be the scene of fierce fighting,)

Bomber Command's records state that the Poittiers attack by Group 5 was the most accurate of the night and that the 2 raids at Amiens and the raid at Arras w, of reasonable accuracy. The target at Cambrai was hit but many bombs also fell the town. The most scattered attack (also by 5 Group) was at Caen.

23 aircraft - 17 Halifaxes and 6 Lancasters - were lost from these raids; all these losses were from 4 and 6 Groups. A Canadian airman, Pilot Officer Andrew Charles Mynarski from Winnipeg, was awarded a posthumous Victoria Cross for bravery on the Cambrai raid. His Lancaster, of 419 Squadron, was attacked by night fighter and set on fire and the crew were ordered to abandon the aircraft. Mynarski was about to jump when he saw that the tail gunner was trapped in this turret and he went through fierce flames to help. The rear turret was so bac jammed that it could not be freed and the trapped gunner eventually waved Mynarski: away. By the time he left the aircraft, Mynarski's clothing and parachute were on fire and he died while being cared for by French civilians soon after he landed. The tail gunner was fortunate to survive the crash and his report on Mynarski's courage led to the award of the Victoria Cross. Pilot Officer Mynarski is buried in the srnall village cemetery at Meharicourt, east of Amiens.

source: The Bomber Command War Diaries, Martin Middlebrook and Chris Everitt

Halifax III aircraft LW 616 QO-R was shot down by flak during an operation to bomb the railyards at Cambrai, France. The Halifax crashed near Miraumont, France

Pilot Officer LR Lauzon (RCAF), Pilot Officer JE Oliver (RCAF), Pilot Officer GL Wallis (RCAF) Sergeant JW Beattie (RCAF) and Flying Officer J Cakebread (RAF) all survived and were taken as Prisoners of War

Warrant Officer Class 1 W Hodder (RCAF) and Sergeant C Christoff (RCAF) both survived and became Evaders

Hodder and Christoff sheltered in France until liberated by Allied Forces and returned to the UK in early September 1944

There were two 432 Squadron Halifax aircraft lost on this operation. Please see aircraft serial number MZ 601 QO-A for additional information

Most of this crew with the exception of Sergeant Cakebread had survived an operation 432 Squadron Halifax aircraft LW 615 QO-U, in which the bomber was heavily damaged by flak over Dusseldorf, Germany. The pilot, Pilot Officer Lauzon, nursed the stricken aircraft back to base at East Moor to safety. During the landing, the Flight Engineer, Sergeant RJ Miles (RAFVR) was injured and later taken to hospital. Unable to fly on the next operation, Sergeant Cakebread substituted for Sergeant Miles when Halifax LW 616 QO-R failed to return from Cambrai, France

Unvetted Source York Aircraft Stories

Unvetted Source Research of France-Crashes 39-45

Unvetted Source MI9 nos 2000 to 2499

Unvetted Source Halifax BIII LW616 [Royal Air Force Serial and Image Database]...

Unit Desciption

432 (B) Sqn Saeviter Ad Lucem ("Leaside")

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

The Squadron was the twelfth RCAF bomber squadron to be formed overseas in WWII. It was formed on May 1, 1943 at Skipton-on-Swale, Yorkshire, UK as a unit of No 6 (RCAF) Group of RAF Bomber Command: indeed, it was the first bomber squadron to be formed directly into No 6 Group. Using the squadron identification letters QO it flew Vickers Wellington Mk X medium bombers until it moved to East Moor, Yorkshire on 19th September 1943, when it re-equipped with Avro Lancaster Mk II aircraft. East Moor was part of No 62 (RCAF) Base. The squadron re-equipped with Handley Page Halifax Mk III aircraft in February 1944, and with Halifax Mk VII in July of that year, and continued with them until the squadron was disbanded at East Moor on May 15, 1945.

In the course of operations the squadron flew 246 missions, involving 3130 individual sorties, for the loss of 73 aircraft. 8980 tons of bombs were dropped. Awards to squadron members included 2 DSOs, 119 DFCs,1 Bar to DFC, 1 CGM, 20 DFMs and 1 Croix de Guerre (France). Battle Honours were: English Channel and North Sea 1943, Fortress Europe 1943-44, France and Germany 1944-45, Biscay Ports 1944, Ruhr 1943-45, Berlin 1943-44, German Ports 1943-45, Normandy 1944, Rhine, Biscay 1943.Moyes, Kostenuk and Griffin

Squadron History (Bomber Command Museum PDF)

Maps for Movements of 432 Squadron 1943-45

MAP 1: 432 Squadron Bases 1943-45 (marked in green). Right-click on image to display enlarged in new tab

432 Squadron History Summary 1943-45

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

The squadron was re-formed at Bagotville, Quebec as an All-Weather Fighter unit on 1 October 1954. The squadron flew Avro CF-100 Canuck aircraft on North American Air Defence until it was disbanded on 15 October 1961.