top of page

Commemorating the Dambusters: Operation Chastise 80th Anniversary

On the night of the 16th May 1943, 19 Lancaster bombers took off from Lincolnshire. Their targets were three dams in the industrial heart of Germany. 80 years on, The Dambusters raid is remembered as one of the most audacious, innovative, and courageous operations of the war. 

What was the Dambusters raid? 

The Dambusters raid was the brainchild of engineer and inventor Barnes Wallis. Wallis initially worked for Vickers, designing airships, aircraft, and bombs during the war. 

The dams in the Ruhr Valley – the industrial heartland of Germany – had long been viewed as important strategic targets for hydroelectric power, steel works, factories and for providing water to the industrial cities of the Ruhr. 

The dams were incredibly difficult to attack. They were well-defended and hard to hit with traditional bombing methods. In theory, they could be breached by charges placed against the dam walls under the water, but the Germans had already installed heavy torpedo nets to guard against a submerged attack. 

It was Barnes Wallis who hit upon the idea of ‘bouncing’ a bomb over the torpedo nets. 

After experimenting with marbles and a water tank, he proposed his idea: a specially designed bomb that would spin as it was released, causing it to skip along the water, over the defences until it met the dam wall. It would then sink before detonating, creating a breach in the dam wall. Water pressure and gravity would then do the rest. 

The new bomb, codenamed Upkeep, underwent testing, including the demolition of Nant-y-Gro Dam in Wales. Specially modified Avro Lancaster bombers were designed to carry the bombs, and the targets of the Mohne, Eder and Sorpe dams were selected. 

All that was needed now were the crews that would carry out the operation. 

Who were the Dambusters? 

The Dambusters raid - officially known as Operation Chastise - was the task of No. 5 Group RAF, who formed a new squadron for the operation. 617 Squadron was formed, under the command of Wing Commander Guy Gibson. 

At just 24 years old, Gibson was already an accomplished pilot and a veteran of more than 170 missions, dating back to the beginning of the war. 

The rest of the crews would be selected from the 5 Group squadrons. 

21 crews were selected, and the squadron was based at RAF Scampton, Lincolnshire. There was a large Commonwealth contingent, including airmen from the Royal Australian Air Force, the Royal Canadian Air Force, and the Royal New Zealand Air Force. 

The new squadron went through intensive training. The parameters of the mission were incredibly complex, with the crew instructed to fly at specific speeds and altitudes as they approached the dams, requiring immense skill and precision.

These preparations were incredibly important, highlighting vital issues that needed to be addressed for the mission to be a success. The usual barometric altimeters were not accurate enough for the precise level of flight required, so a cunning solution was required. 

Spotlights were mounted to the bottom of the Lancasters, angled so that when their beams intersected on the surface of the water, the crews would know they were flying at the right altitude.

This would prove to be a double-edged sword for the men of 617 Squadron; while they could now operate at the required altitude, the lights would make them even more vulnerable to anti-air fire, especially as most of the Lancasters’ armour was removed to save weight.

Despite two months of intensive training, the crews were only briefed on their true targets hours before they set off on the raid. 

The Dambusters Raid

The Outbound journey

The first of the 19 Dambuster aircraft took off for Germany at 21:28 on the evening of 16 May 1943.

The crew were split into three waves, taking different routes to the targets and attempting to avoid any large known concentrations of flak guns.

Despite the precautions, not all of the Lancasters reached their targets.

H-Harry and W-Willie suffered damage on the outbound journey and were forced to return to base. Y-York, made it to Germany but was unable to locate the target, and managed to return to Scampton with their mine still onboard.

B-Baker and E-Easy crashed after colliding with powerlines on the outbound journey. K-King and S-Sugar were shot down over the Netherlands, and C-Charlie was shot down over Germany.

 

Attacking the Dams

The Mohne Dam

The first wave arrived over the Mohne Dam arrived over the dam at around 12:30 in the morning of 17 May.

G-George, piloted by Gibson, was the first to attack the dam. He made a successful attack, but the bomb did not breach the dam. M-Mother was the next to attack but was caught by flak and crashed shortly after the attack, killing four of the crew.

It would take another three attacks before the dam was breached; the final blow delivered by J-Johnny, piloted by David Maltby.

In his book, Enemy Coast Ahead, Gibson wrote: “There was no doubt about it; there was a great breach 100 yards across, and the water, looking like stirred porridge in the moonlight, was gushing out and rolling into the Ruhr valley and towards the industrial centres of Germany’s Third Reich.”

The first dam had been breached, but the job was far from over. Aside from Gibson, those who had dropped their bombs set off for home; the rest headed for the Eder.

On the return journey, A-Apple was hit by anti-air fire over the Dutch coast. All seven of the crew, including Sergeant Lawrence Nichols who was celebrating his 33rd birthday on 17 May 1943, were killed and are now buried in Bergen General Cemetery

The Eder Dam

Gibson and the remaining aircraft arrived over the Eder to find far less flak than at the previous target, but a far more difficult attack route.

With only three mines left, each crew made multiple runs at the dam to ensure an accurate drop.

Despite this caution, Z-Zebra – piloted by Squadron Leader Henry Maudslay DFC – dropped their bomb too late, damaging their Lancaster in the resulting explosion. Z-Zebra turned for home but were shot down over Germany.

After multiple aborted attempts, Flight Lieutenant David Shannon DFC, flying L-Leather, dropped his mine in the right spot but the dam remained standing.

It was up to the Australian Les Knight. It was the last opportunity to attack the Eder that night, maybe ever.

Gibson wrote: “We were flying above him, and about 400 yards to the right, and saw his mine hit the water. We saw where it sank. We saw the tremendous earthquake which shook the base of the dam, and then, as if a gigantic hand had punched a hole through cardboard, the whole thing collapsed.”

With their primary targets destroyed – and no more mines left to use – the remaining Lancasters turned for home, racing against the rising sun.

Sorpe Dam

The Sorpe Dam, with its earthen embankments, was a tougher nut to crack.

Owing to the earlier losses, only three of the Lancasters of 617 squadron were able to attack. T-Tommy and F-Freddy managed to find and attack the Sorpe, which required a different method of attack than the other dams. Despite their best efforts, the dam remained standing.

Following the destruction of the Mohne and Eder dams, O-Orange was detailed to attack an alternative target, the Ennepe Dam - although conflicting war records suggest that they may have hit the nearby Bever Dam instead.

Regardless, no substantial damage was done to either dam and despite engine issues and the attention of German anti-aircraft fire, O-Orange returned home, the last of the Dambuster crews to do so. 

Was the Dambusters Raid a success?

 

On paper, Operation Chastise was a success. Two of the three main targets were destroyed and subsequent aerial photography revealed significant flooding throughout the Ruhr valley. 

The flooding did indeed damage factories, steel foundries and hydroelectric plants in the vicinity. 

At the time, many argued that conventional attacks should’ve been launched during the rebuilding period to capitalise on the initial damage and cause longer-lasting disruption in Germany’s industrial heartland. 

However, not only did the raid cause significant disruption to the German war effort, but the repair and rebuilding of the region took valuable manpower away from other regions, including the coastal defences in France. 

The raid did receive criticism, however – especially as a reported 1,600 civilians and prisoners of war were killed by the flooding. This, coupled with the high fatality rate amongst the crews, many argued that the raid had been a waste of life and resources. 

Nevertheless, the raid was a propaganda boon for the Allies, and the RAF in particular, showing that British ingenuity, skill and courage had hit a heavy blow against Nazi Germany in a war that had seen the Allies predominantly on the backfoot. 

Where are the Dambusters commemorated?

Of the 133 airmen who took part in Operation Chastise, only 48 would live to see the end of the war. 53 died during the mission itself and a further 32 died later in the war and are commemorated by the CWGC.

Runnymede Memorial is one of the largest CWGC sites in the UK, commemorating more than 20,000 men and women of the Commonwealth who died during World War Two and who have no known grave.

Known as the Air Forces Memorial, it is here that the men and women of the air forces of the Commonwealth are commemorated, including those from the Air Training Corps, Royal Air Forces Ferry Command and the Women’s Auxiliary Air Force.

Six of the Dambusters who died during the mission are commemorated here: the crew of K-King, piloted by the Canadian Pilot Office Vernon Byers, that was shot down on the outbound journey while crossing the Dutch coast. The seventh member of the crew, Flight Sergeant James McDowell is buried in Harlingen General Cemetery on the Dutch coast.

Six of the crew of J-Johnny are also commemorated on the war memorial. Her crew are credited with the breach of the Mohne Dam and survived operation chastise but would die on 15 September 1943, when returning home from a mission, they crashed into the sea.

Only Flight Lieutenant David Maltby’s body was recovered, and he is buried at Wickhambreaux (St. Andrew) Churchyard in Kent.

Reichswald Forest War Cemetery

27 Dambusters who died during Operation Chastise are buried at Reichswald Forest War Cemetery.

The crews of Z-Zebra, B-Baker, E-Easy and six of the crew of C-Charlie are buried here.

Only one of these four crews was able to attack their target during the raid, Z-Zebra attacked the Eder Dam but was then shot down on the return journey. The others were shot down or crashed en route to the targets.

Of the 28 airmen in these four Lancasters, only Sgt F Tees

Sergeant Freddie Tees survived and became a prisoner of war.

Reichswald Forest War Cemetery is the largest Commonwealth cemetery in Germany, with more than 7,500 burials. Close to 4000 of the burials here were members of one of the Allied Air Forces who died during the intensive attacks over Germany throughout the war. Many were brought here after the war’s conclusion from smaller sites across the country.

This includes another 6 airmen who were a part of Operation Chastise, making a total of 33 Dambusters buried at this site.

Many of the other WW2 casualties commemorated here are those who fell in the latter stages of the war, during the Allied push into Germany, and especially the crossing of the Rhine.

Rheinberg War Cemetery

Like Reichswald Forest, Rheinberg War Cemetery is predominantly made up of aircrew of the Allied air forces. More than 2,700 if the 3,330 servicemen commemorated here are airmen who were shot down or crashed while on operations over Germany. Many were originally buried elsewhere and then moved to the cemetery after the war.

Five of the crew of M-Mother are buried here.

Piloted by Flight Lieutenant John Hopgood, M-Mother was the second aircraft to attack the Mohne Dam but was caught by flak and then further damaged by the explosion of its own bomb.

Two of the crew managed to escape the plane before it crashed, living out the rest of the war as prisoners of war, but the rest of the crew perished in the crash.

A second Dambuster crew is also buried here. Y-York failed to attack any of the dams during Operation Chastise as they were unable to find their target. The crew would continue to operate together until a raid on Mannheim on 23 September 1943, during which they were attacked and killed by a German night fighter.

Burials across Europe

As well as these bigger concentrations of Operation Chastise burials, several the Dambusters are buried at smaller sites across Europe, both as a result of loses during the raid itself or as casualties of other operations.

The most well-known of the Dambusters, Wing Commander Guy Gibson VC, is buried at Steenbergen-En-Kruisland Roman Catholic Cemetery in the Netherlands.

Gibson survived the Dambusters raid and was then taken off duty and want on a series of publicity tours and a period of leave. Gibson returned to duty in 1944.

He was killed while on a bombing raid on Rheydt and Moenchen-Gladbach, Germany, on 19 September 1944, in which he was operating as the Master Bomber in a twin-engine De Havilland Mosquito.

Gibson crashed on the return journey, near Steenbergen. Both Gibson and his navigator Squadron Leader James Warwick were killed in the crash and were buried in the local cemetery. They are the only CWGC burials in this location.

One of the Dambusters is buried in Italy, at Cagliari St Michele Communal Cemetery. The cemetery at Cagliari, on the isle of Sardinia, is the final resting place of around 60 Commonwealth casualties – predominantly airmen – of whom 49 are identified.

Among them is Flight Lieutenant Robert Hay. Hay few as part of P-Peter, one of the aircraft that attacked the Mohne dam. He survived the attack on the dams, but was killed on 13 February 1944, during an attack on the Antheor Viaduct in southern France. The rest of the crew of P-Peter survived the war.

Commemorating the Dambusters

Each of the Dambusters that died during Operation Chastise or later in the war are commemorated at CWGC sites. Below is a full list of the men who took part in the raid and where they are commemorated.

 

NameOperation ChastiseDate of DeathCemetery or Memorial

AJ-GWg Cdr G P Gibson DSO & Bar DFC & BarSurvived Dams RaidKIA 20 September 1944Steenbergen-En-Kruisland Roman Catholic Cemetery

AJ-GSgt J PulfordSurvived Dams RaidKIA 13 February 1944Hull Northern Cemetery

AJ-GPlt Off H T TaerumSurvived Dams RaidKIA 16 September 1943Reichswald Forest War Cemetery

AJ-GFlt Lt R E G Hutchison DFCSurvived Dams RaidKIA 16 September 1943Reichswald Forest War Cemetery

AJ-GPlt Off F M Spafford DFMSurvived Dams RaidKIA 16 September 1943Reichswald Forest War Cemetery

AJ-GFlt Sgt G A DeeringSurvived Dams RaidKIA 16 September 1943Reichswald Forest War Cemetery

AJ-GFlt Lt R D Trevor-Roper DFMSurvived Dams RaidKIA 31 March 1944Durnbach War Cemetery

AJ-MFlt Lt J V Hopgood DFC & BarKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Rheinberg War Cemetery

AJ-MFlg Off K EarnshawKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Rheinberg War Cemetery

AJ-MSgt J W MinchinKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Rheinberg War Cemetery

AJ-MFlt Sgt J W FraserSurvived Dams Raid. PoW.Died Saltery Bay, British Columbia, Canada, 2 June 1962N/A

AJ-MSgt C C BrennanKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Rheinberg War Cemetery

AJ-MPlt Off G H F G Gregory DFMKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Rheinberg War Cemetery

AJ-MPlt Off A F Burcher DFMSurvived Dams Raid. PoW.Died Hobart, Tasmania, Australia, 9 August 1995N/A

AJ-PFlt Lt H B Martin DFCSurvived Dams RaidDied London, 3 November 1988N/A

AJ-PPlt Off I WhittakerSurvived Dams RaidDied Wendover, Buckinghamshire, 22 August 1979N/A

AJ-PFlt Lt J F Leggo DFCSurvived Dams RaidDied Brisbane, Australia, 11 November 1983N/A

AJ-PFlg Off L ChambersSurvived Dams RaidDied Karamea, New Zealand, 1 March 1985N/A

AJ-PFlt Lt R C Hay DFCSurvived Dams RaidKIA 13 February 1944Cagliari (St. Michele) Communal Cemetery

AJ-PPlt Off B T Foxlee DFMSurvived Dams RaidDied Nottingham, 6 March 1985N/A

AJ-PFlt Sgt T D SimpsonSurvived Dams RaidDied Hobart, Tasmania, Australia, 2 April 1998N/A

AJ-ASqn Ldr H M Young DFC & BarKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Bergen General Cemetery

AJ-ASgt D T HorsfallKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Bergen General Cemetery

AJ-AFlt Sgt C W RobertsKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Bergen General Cemetery

AJ-ASgt L W NicholsKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Bergen General Cemetery

AJ-AFlg Off V S MacCauslandKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Bergen General Cemetery

AJ-ASgt G A YeoKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Bergen General Cemetery

AJ-ASgt W IbbotsonKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Bergen General Cemetery

AJ-JFlt Lt D J H Maltby DFCSurvived Dams RaidKIA 15 September 1943Wickhambreaux (St. Andrew) Churchyard

AJ-JSgt W HattonSurvived Dams RaidKIA 15 September 1943Runnymede Memorial

AJ-JSgt V NicholsonSurvived Dams RaidKIA 15 September 1943Runnymede Memorial

AJ-JSgt A J B StoneSurvived Dams RaidKIA 15 September 1943Runnymede Memorial

AJ-JPlt Off J FortSurvived Dams RaidKIA 15 September 1943Runnymede Memorial

AJ-JSgt V HillSurvived Dams RaidKIA 15 September 1943Runnymede Memorial

AJ-JSgt H T SimmondsSurvived Dams RaidKIA 15 September 1943Runnymede Memorial

AJ-LFlt Lt D J Shannon DFCSurvived Dams RaidDied 8 April 1993, LondonN/A

AJ-LSgt R J HendersonSurvived Dams RaidDied 18 February 1961, Limassol, CyprusN/A

AJ-LFlg Off D R Walker DFCSurvived Dams RaidDied 17 November 2001, Blairmore, Alberta, CanadaN/A

AJ-LFlg Off B Goodale DFCSurvived Dams RaidDied 16 December 1977, Bury St Edmunds, SuffolkN/A

AJ-LFlt Sgt L J SumpterSurvived Dams RaidDied 30 November 1993, Luton, BedfordshireN/A

AJ-LSgt B JaggerSurvived Dams RaidKIA 30 April 1944Cambridge City Cemetery

AJ-LFlg Off J BuckleySurvived Dams RaidDied 6 May 1990, Bradford, YorkshireN/A

AJ-ZSqn Ldr H E Maudslay DFCKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Reichswald Forest War Cemetery

AJ-ZSgt J Marriott DFMKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Reichswald Forest War Cemetery

AJ-ZFlg Off R A Urquhart DFCKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Reichswald Forest War Cemetery

AJ-ZWO A P CottamKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Reichswald Forest War Cemetery

AJ-ZPlt Off M J D FullerKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Reichswald Forest War Cemetery

AJ-ZFlg Off W J Tytherleigh DFCKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Reichswald Forest War Cemetery

AJ-ZSgt N R BurrowsKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Reichswald Forest War Cemetery

AJ-BFlt Lt W Astell DFCKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Reichswald Forest War Cemetery

AJ-BSgt J KinnearKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Reichswald Forest War Cemetery

AJ-BPlt Off F A WileKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Reichswald Forest War Cemetery

AJ-BFlg Off D HopkinsonKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Reichswald Forest War Cemetery

AJ-BWrt Off A A GarshowitzKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Reichswald Forest War Cemetery

AJ-BFlt Sgt F A GarbasKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Reichswald Forest War Cemetery

AJ-BSgt R BolithoKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Reichswald Forest War Cemetery

AJ-NPlt Off L G KnightSurvived Dams RaidKIA 16 September 1943Den Ham General Cemetery

AJ-NSgt R E GraystonSurvived Dams RaidDied 15 April 2010, Woodhall Spa, LincolnshireN/A

AJ-NFlg Off H S HobdaySurvived Dams RaidDied 24 February 2000, Hindolveston, NorfolkN/A

AJ-NFlt Sgt R G T KellowSurvived Dams RaidDied 12 February 1988, Winnipeg, Manitoba, CanadaN/A

AJ-NFlg Off E C JohnsonSurvived Dams RaidDied 1 October 2002, Blackpool, LancashireN/A

AJ-NSgt F E SutherlandSurvived Dams RaidDied 21 January 2019, Rocky Mountain House, Alberta, CanadaN/A

AJ-NSgt H E O’BrienSurvived Dams RaidDied 12 September 1985, Edmonton, Alberta, CanadaN/A

AJ-EFlt Lt R N G Barlow DFCKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Reichswald Forest War Cemetery

AJ-EPlt Off S L WhillisKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Reichswald Forest War Cemetery

AJ-EFlg Off P S BurgessKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Reichswald Forest War Cemetery

AJ-EPlt Off A GillespieKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Reichswald Forest War Cemetery

AJ-EFlg Off H S GlinzKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Reichswald Forest War Cemetery

AJ-ESgt J R G LiddellKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Reichswald Forest War Cemetery

AJ-EFlg Off C R Williams DFCKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Reichswald Forest War Cemetery

AJ-WFlt Lt J L MunroSurvived Dams RaidDied 4 August 2015, Tauranga, North Island, New ZealandN/A

AJ-WSgt F E ApplebySurvived Dams RaidDied 15 September 1996, Eastbourne, SussexN/A

AJ-WFlg Off F G RumblesSurvived Dams RaidDied 26 February 1988, Port Elizabeth, South AfricaN/A

AJ-WWrt Off P E PigeonSurvived Dams RaidDied 25 March 1967, Williams Lake, British Columbia, CanadaN/A

AJ-WSgt J H ClaySurvived Dams RaidDied 6 August 1995, Gosforth, Tyne and WearN/A

AJ-WSgt W HowarthSurvived Dams RaidDied 12 January 1990, Oldham, LancashireN/A

AJ-WFlt Sgt H A WeeksSurvived Dams RaidDied 22 March 1992, Chilliwack, British Columbia, CanadaN/A

 

AJ-KPlt Off V W ByersKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Runnymede Memorial

 

AJ-KSgt A J TaylorKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Runnymede Memorial

 

AJ-KFlg Off J H WarnerKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Runnymede Memorial

 

AJ-KSgt J WilkinsonKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Runnymede Memorial

 

AJ-KPlt Off A N WhitakerKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Runnymede Memorial

 

AJ-KSgt C McA JarvieKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Runnymede Memorial

 

AJ-KFlt Sgt J McDowellKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Harlingen General Cemetery

 

AJ-HPlt Off G RiceSurvived Dams RaidDied 24 November 1981, Taunton, SomersetN/A

 

AJ-HSgt E C SmithSurvived Dams RaidKIA 20 December 1943Gosselies Communal Cemetery

 

AJ-HFlg Off R MacfarlaneSurvived Dams RaidKIA 20 December 1943Gosselies Communal Cemetery

 

AJ-HWrt Off C B GowrieSurvived Dams RaidKIA 20 December 1943Gosselies Communal Cemetery

 

AJ-HWrt Off J W ThrasherSurvived Dams RaidKIA 20 December 1943Gosselies Communal Cemetery

 

AJ-HSgt T W MaynardSurvived Dams RaidKIA 20 December 1943Gosselies Communal Cemetery

 

AJ-HSgt S BurnsSurvived Dams RaidKIA 21 December 1943Gosselies Communal Cemetery

 

AJ-TFlt Lt J C McCarthy DFCSurvived Dams RaidDied 6 September 1998, Virginia Beach, Virginia, USAN/A

 

AJ-TSgt W G RadcliffeSurvived Dams RaidDied 5 July 1952, British Columbia, CanadaN/A

 

AJ-TFlt Sgt D A MacLeanSurvived Dams RaidDied 16 July 1992, Toronto, CanadaN/A

 

AJ-TFlt Sgt L EatonSurvived Dams RaidDied 22 March 1974, ManchesterN/A

 

AJ-TSgt G L JohnsonSurvived Dams RaidDied 7 December 2022, BristolN/A

 

AJ-TSgt R BatsonSurvived Dams RaidDied 25 November 2006, Leeholme, Co DurhamN/A

 

AJ-TFlg Off D RodgerSurvived Dams RaidDied 1 September 2004, Sault Ste Marie, Ontario, CanadaN/A

 

AJ-CPlt Off W Ottley DFCKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Reichswald Forest War Cemetery

 

AJ-CSgt R MarsdenKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Reichswald Forest War Cemetery

 

AJ-CFlg Off J K Barrett DFCKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Reichswald Forest War Cemetery

 

AJ-CSgt J Guterman DFMKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Reichswald Forest War Cemetery

 

AJ-CFlt Sgt T B JohnstonKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Reichswald Forest War Cemetery

 

AJ-CSgt H J StrangeKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Reichswald Forest War Cemetery

 

AJ-CSgt F TeesSurvived Dams Raid. PoWDied 15 March 1982, Letchworth, HertfordshireN/A

 

AJ-SPlt Off L J Burpee DFMKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Bergen-Op-Zoom War Cemetery

 

AJ-SSgt G PeglerKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Bergen-Op-Zoom War Cemetery

 

AJ-SSgt T JayeKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Bergen-Op-Zoom War Cemetery

 

AJ-SPlt Off L G WellerKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Bergen-Op-Zoom War Cemetery

 

AJ-SFlt Sgt J L ArthurKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Bergen-Op-Zoom War Cemetery

 

AJ-SSgt W C A LongKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Bergen-Op-Zoom War Cemetery

 

AJ-SWrt Off J G BradyKilled on Dams RaidKIA 16/17 May 1943Bergen-Op-Zoom War Cemetery

 

AJ-FFlt Sgt K W BrownSurvived Dams RaidDied 23 December 2002, White Rock, British Columbia, CanadaN/A

 

AJ-FSgt H B FeneronSurvived Dams RaidDied 18 November 1993, Gerrards Cross, BuckinghamshireN/A

 

AJ-FSgt D P HealSurvived Dams RaidDied 7 February 1999, Southampton, HampshireN/A

 

AJ-FSgt H J HewstoneSurvived Dams RaidDied 28 May 1980, Havering, EssexN/A

 

AJ-FSgt S OanciaSurvived Dams RaidDied 6 May 1999, Carleton, Ontario, CanadaN/A

 

AJ-FSgt D AllatsonSurvived Dams RaidKIA 16 September 1943Reichswald Forest War Cemetery

 

AJ-FFlt Sgt G S McDonaldSurvived Dams RaidDied 13 May 2012, Vancouver, British Columbia, CanadaN/A

 

AJ-OFlt Sgt W C Townsend DFMSurvived Dams RaidDied 9 April 1991, Bromsgrove, WorcestershireN/A

 

AJ-OSgt D J D PowellSurvived Dams RaidKIA 16 September 1943Reichswald Forest War Cemetery

 

AJ-OPlt Off C L HowardSurvived Dams RaidDied 26 December 1989, Perth, Western AustraliaN/A

 

AJ-OFlt Sgt G A ChalmersSurvived Dams RaidDied 6 August 2002, Harrogate, YorkshireN/A

 

AJ-OSgt C E Franklin DFMSurvived Dams RaidDied 25 January 1975, BirminghamN/A

 

AJ-OSgt D E WebbSurvived Dams RaidDied 8 December 1996, Yarmouth, Isle of WightN/A

 

AJ-OSgt R WilkinsonSurvived Dams RaidDied 27 July 1980, Noble Park, Victoria, AustraliaN/A

 

AJ-YFlt Sgt C T AndersonSurvived Dams RaidKIA 23 September 1943Rheinberg War Cemetery

 

AJ-YSgt R C PatersonSurvived Dams RaidKIA 23 September 1943Rheinberg War Cemetery

 

AJ-YSgt J P NugentSurvived Dams RaidKIA 23 September 1943Rheinberg War Cemetery

 

AJ-YSgt W D BickleSurvived Dams RaidKIA 23 September 1943Rheinberg War Cemetery

 

AJ-YSgt G J GreenSurvived Dams RaidKIA 23 September 1943Rheinberg War Cemetery

 

AJ-YSgt E EwanSurvived Dams RaidKIA 23 September 1943Rheinberg War Cemetery

 

AJ-YSgt A W BuckSurvived Dams RaidKIA 23 September 1943Rheinberg War Cemetery

find out more here

https://www.cwgc.org/our-work/blog/commemorating-the-dambusters-operation-chastise-80th-anniversary/

bottom of page