Took off from Skipton-on-Swale at 22:22 in Halifax MK III (Sqn code BM-E Bomber Command) on an operation to Dusseldorf Germany.
First damaged by flak then downed by a night fighter and crashed near Walheim, 10 km SW of Aachen, Germany.
Killed: Pilot Officer John Arthur Bourgeault RCAF J/89284 pilot KIA (was unable to escape the damaged bomber before it crashed) Rheinberg War Cemetery, Germany, Plot 8. Row K. Grave 25.
POWs: Sergeant Derek Reginald Claude Bowerman RAF POW Stalag 357 Kopernikus (Poland) POW# 3575. Flying Officer James William Guignion RCAF J/25586 POW Stalag 6G (near Bonn, Germany) , POW# 11047. Sergeant Joseph Edouard Charles Roland Laframboise RCAF R/202087 POW Stalag Luft L3 Sagan & Belaria, POW# 4191. Warrant Officer Class 2 Thomas Alder Miller RCAF R/128889 POW Stalag Luft 6, Heydekrug., POW# 3597. Sergeant Joseph Jean Wilfrid Lucien Plante RCAF R/164776 POW Stalag Luft 6, Heydekrug, POW# 3596.
Evader: Dennstedt
Warrant Officer Class 2 Dennstedt had been hit by shell fragments before safely bailing from his aircraft, but then landed in a pine tree and was knocked unconscious. Badly scraped up and with facial wounds, he awoke suspended from his parachute harness listening to German troops below searching for him. Fortunately, he was not discovered by the troops and was later able to free himself from his harness and get down from the tree. He had also lost his boots during his descent, left with only socks on his feet. In spite of his wounds and lack of footwear, through sheer force of will and determination, and no small amount of luck, Dennstedt managed to walk out of Germany to the Belgian border alone. Once over the border into Belgium, Dennstedt was helped by brave locals and connected with various people in Resistance groups, continuing to evade capture, sometimes with other evaders but also at times on his own. After nearly being killed or captured in several confrontations with German troops, Warrant Officer Class 2 Dennsted's journey of escape and evasion finally ended nearly five months after it began when he was liberated by American Forces in Belgium and repatriated to UK 1944-09-09
William Dennstedt later wrote a book about his experiences as an evader entitled "A Journey Into the Unknown"
RAF Evaders, The Comprehensive Story of Thousands of Escapers and Their Escape Lines, Western Europe, 1940-1945 by Oliver Clutton-Brock page 361