WO1(then FS) O'Connor had survived the crash of 419 Squadron Halifax DT 623 VR-S 1943-01-30 while returning from an operation over Lorient, France
O'Connor, James Michael Barry (Warrant Officer 2nd Class)
Killed in Action 1943-April-28

Birth Date: 1919
Born:
Parents: Son of James Phillip and Angel Loretto Barry O'Connor, of Sarnia, Ontario, Canada; husband of Helen Hood O'Connor.
Spouse: Husband of Helen Hood O'Connor.
Home: Sarnia, Ontario
Enlistment:
Enlistment Date: unkown date
Service
RCAF
Unit
419 (B) Sqn- Squadron
Moosa Aswayita Beware of Moose
Base
Middleton St George
Rank
Warrant Officer 2nd Class
Position
Bomb Aimer
Service Numbers
R/68264
Crew or Other Personnel
Halifax JB923
Mission
Halifax B/GR.Mk.II JB923
Minelaying Skaggerak Strait Norway 1943-April-28 to 1943-April-28
419 (B) Sqn (RCAF) Middleton St. George
Battle of the Ruhr
419 Moose Squadron (Moosa Aswayita) RAF Middleton St George. Halifax BII aircraft JB 929 VR-Q was shot down by night fighter pilot Leutnant Werner Speidel of the 10/NJG 3, flying a Ju 88 from Aalborg-West airfield in Denmark, while laying mines in the Skaggerak Strait, Norway. The bomber crashed at sea, 50 km northwest of Hjørring, Nordjylland, Denmark
Warrant Officer Class 2 GKA Smallwood (RCAF), Warrant Officer Class 2 JG Acker (RCAF), Warrant Officer Class 2 JM O'Connor (RCAF), Sergeant JA Allen (RCAF), FS RR Gourde (RCAF), FS LJ Murphy (RCAF), and FS JW Carley (RCAF) were all missing, presumed killed. They have no known graves and are all commemorated on the Runnymede War Memorial
Unit Desciption
419 (B) Sqn Moosa Aswayita ("Moose")
History of the Squadron during World War II (Aircraft: Wellington IC, III, Halifax II, Lancaster X)
419 (Bomber) Squadron formed at RAF Mildenhall, Suffolk, UK
in 1941 as part of No 3 Group of Bomber Command. It got its name from its first commanding officer, Wing Commander John "Moose" Fulton, DSO, DFC, AFC. The squadron operated Vickers Wellington, then Handley Page Halifax and finally Avro Lancaster bombers through the course of WWII, with the squadron code letters VR. It was the third RCAF bomber unit to be formed in England. It started operations in January 1942, converting almost immediately from Wellington Mk ICs to Wellington Mk IIIs and then moving north to Leeming, Yorkshire,
as part of 4 Group Bomber Command in August 1942. After short stays at Topcliffe
and Croft
, it moved to Middleton St. George, County Durham
in November 1942, from which it flew until the end of hostilities. Here in November 1942 it was re-equipped with Halifax Mk IIs, which it flew for the next 18 months on the night offensive against Germany. In January 1943 it joined the newly formed 6 (RCAF) Group of Bomber Command.
In April 1944 the squadron began to convert to the Avro Lancaster Mk X, which was produced in Canada and flown across the Atlantic. The squadron remained continuously on the offensive until 25 April 1945, when it flew its last sortie. Squadron personnel flew a total of 4,325 operational sorties during the war from Mannheim to Nuremberg, Milan to Berlin and Munich to Hanover, inflicting heavy damage on the enemy. On completion of the war in Germany, the squadron was earmarked to become part of the proposed "Tiger Force" to continue the war against Japan. However, the Japanese surrender in August 1945 led to the disbandment of the squadron in at Yarmouth, Nova Scotia
September 1945.
As a result of its wartime record, 419 Squadron became one of the most decorated units under the RCAF during the war. Over a span of roughly three-and-a-quarter years it logged 400 operational missions (342 bombing missions, 53 mining excursions, 3 leaflet raids and 1 "spoof") involving 4,325 sorties. A total of one hundred and twenty nine aircraft were lost on these operations. Members of the squadron accumulated 1 VC, 4 DSO's, 1 MC, 150 DFC's, 3 bars to DFC, 1 CGM, 35 DFM's: the VC was awarded posthumously to Flight Sergeant Andrew Mynarski for his attempts to help a fellow crew member escape from their burning aircraft. Battle Honours were: English Channel and North Sea 1942-44, Baltic 1942-44, Fortress Europe 1942-44, France and Germany 1944-45, Biscay Ports 1942-44, Ruhr 1942-45, Berlin 1943-44, German Ports 1942-45, Normandy 1944, Rhine, Biscay 1942; 1944. Wikipedia, Kostenuk and Griffin
Squadron History (Bomber Command Museum)
Maps for Movements of 419 Squadron 1941-45
MAP 1: 419 Squadron Movements Dec 1941-Aug-42 (right-click on image to display enlarged new tab)
|
MAP 2: 419 Squadron Movements Aug 1942-Jun 1945
|
MAP 3: 6 Group Bomber Bases 1943-1945
|
419 Squadron History Summary 1941-45
419 Squadron History Summary 1941-45 Page 2
History of the Squadron Post-WWII (Aircraft: Canuck, Silver Star, Freedom Fighter, Hornet)
The squadron was reactivated on 15 March 1954 at North Bay, Ontario
, as an all-weather fighter squadron flying the CF-100 Canuck. It moved to the NATO Air Division base at Baden-Soellingen, Germany
shortly after being formed. The squadron remained there until its disbandment in December 1962.
The squadron was again re-formed in December 1970, when it relocated to Cold Lake, Alberta
as No. 1 Canadian Forces Flight Training School. It initially flew the T-33 Silver Star but then transitioned to the Canadair CF-5 Freedom Fighter. The squadron was on full active duty in November 1975 but disbanded again 20 years later when the CF-5’s were retired in June 1995.
The squadron was again reactivated as 419 Tactical Fighter (Training) Squadron on 23 July 2000. The squadron has since conducted Phase IV of the NATO Flying Training Canada (NFTC) program for the air forces of Canada, Austria, Denmark, Italy, Hungary, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, the United Arab Emirates and the United Kingdom. This program trains basic jet pilots to become fighter pilots and prepares them for training on CF-188 class aircraft through instruction in Air-to-Air and Air-to-Ground combat tactics over a six month period.
Previous Events
1943-January-30 Flight Sergeant Survived
Halifax B/GR.Mk.IIVR@S |
419 B Sqn RCAF |
Halifax B/GR.Mk.II DT623
Bombing Lorient France 1943-January-29 to 1943-January-30
419 (B) Sqn (RCAF) Middleton St. George
419 Moose Squadron (Moosa Asawayita) RAF Middleton St George. Halifax BII aircraft DT 623 VR-S made a wheels up crash landing returning from operations over the dock area at Lorient, France
FS JMB O'Connor (RCAF), Flight Lieutenant AP Cranswick (RAF), Sergeant FE Johnston (RAF),Warrant Officer W McRobbie (RAF), FS D McKenzie (RAF), Pilot Officer JC Garton (RAF )and Flight Sergeant ILJ Howard (RAF) all survived, safe
Warrant Officer Class 2 JMB O'Connor would be missing, presumed killed 1943-04-28 in 419 Squadron Halifax JB 923 VR-Q while on a mine-laying sortie off the coast of Norway
WR Chorley notes that Flight Lieutenant Cranswick left 419 Sqn soon after for operations as a Pathfinder, where he became one of the premier bomber pilots in Bomber Command. He was killed July 4-5, 1944, as a Squadron Leader DSO while acting as Primary Visual Marker on an operation over France.