RAF Full Sutton was a Bomber Command station located in Yorkshire, 9 miles (14 kms) east of York.

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It opened in May 1944 as part of 4 Group when 77 Squadron took up residence equipped with Halifaxes. The station and 77 Squadron transferred to Transport Command at the end of the war.

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Terry Hancock]]>
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It opened in 1936 and by September 1939 RAF Finningley was in 5 Group with 7 Squadron and 76 Squadron with Hampdens but three weeks later both were replaced by 106 Squadron in a training role with Hampdens and Ansons. In February 1941 106 Squadron was replaced by 25 Operational Training Unit with Wellingtons and Manchesters. RAF Finningley transferred to 1 Group in February 1942 and training focussed on Wellingtons. In February 1943 18 Operational Training Unit moved in, also  with Wellingtons, and remained at the station until late 1944. It was replaced by the Bomber Command Instructors School with Lancasters, Halifaxes and Wellingtons. The site is now Doncaster Sheffield Airport.

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Nigel Moore]]> Terry Hancock]]>
RAF Faldingworth was a Bomber Command station located in Lincolnshire, 5 miles (8 kms) south-west from Market Rasen.

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It opened in July 1943 as part of 1 Group. It was first used by 1667 Heavy Conversion Unit with Halifaxes and Lancasters, remaining until February 1944. C Flight of 1 Lancaster Finishing School was located at the station from November 1943 to January 1944. Both training units were replaced by 300 Squadron, initially with Wellingtons but it quickly converted to Lancasters and remained at the station until after the end of the war.

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]]>
Terry Hancock]]> Nigel Moore]]>
RAF Elvington was a Bomber Command station located in Yorkshire, 5 miles (8 kms) south-east of York.

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It opened as part of 4 Group in October 1942 when 77 Squadron moved in with Whitleys but immediately converting to Halifaxes. It operated from the station until May 1944 when it was replaced by 346 Squadron and 347 Squadron, both also with Halifaxes. The site is now partly occupied by The Yorkshire Air Museum.

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Terry Hancock]]> Nigel Moore]]>
RAF East Moor was a Bomber Command station located in Yorkshire 8 miles (13 kms) north of York.

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It opened in June 1942 as part of 4 Group with the arrival of the Halifaxes of 158 Squadron, which stayed until October 1942. 429 Squadron moved in with Wellingtons and the squadron and station transferred to 6 Group in January 1943. 1679 Heavy Conversion Unit (HCU) joined the station in May 1943 with the radial-engined Lancaster Mk 2. 429 Squadron left in August 1943, replaced by 432 Squadron converting to Lancasters. 1679 HCU left in December 1943 and in January 1944 432 Squadron switched to Halifaxes. It was joined in June 1944 by 415 Squadron, also flying Halifaxes. Both squadrons remained at RAF East Moor until they were disbanded in May 1945.

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Clare Bennett]]> Julian Maslin]]> Nigel Moore]]> Terry Hancock]]>
RAF Driffield was a Bomber Command station located in Yorkshire, 12 miles (19 kms) north from Beverley.

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It opened in July 1936 and by September 1939 was in 4 Group and occupied by the Whitleys of 77 Squadron and 102 Squadron. Fighter Command used the station from January to April 1941 before it returned to Bomber Command 4 Group with 104 Squadron and, briefly, 405 Squadron, both flying Wellingtons. In February 1942 104 Squadron was renumbered 158 Squadron before moving out in June 1942. In the autumn of 1942 196 Squadron and 466 Squadron both formed at the station but moved out before becoming operational. Concrete runways were laid and the station re-opened in June 1944 with 466 Squadron returning with Halifaxes. 462 Squadron formed at the station with Halifaxes in August 1944 and stayed until December 1944 leaving 466 Squadron as sole resident until the end of the war.

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Malcom Young]]> Malcom Young]]> Gemma Clapton]]> Terry Hancock]]> Nigel Moore]]>
RAF Dishforth was a Bomber Command station located in Yorkshire, 3 miles (5 kms) north from Boroughbridge.

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It opened in September 1936 as part of 4 Group. In September 1939 10 Squadron and 78 Squadron, both with Whitleys, took up residence. 51 Squadron, also with Whitleys, replaced 78 Squadron in December 1939. 10 Squadron moved out in July 1940, replaced by the return of 78 Squadron which stayed until April 1942. 51 Squadron left in May 1942. In June 1942 425 Squadron and 426 Squadron were both formed with Wellingtons and they, and the station, were transferred to 6 Group in October 1942. The station was closed from May to November 1943 for the construction of hard runways. On re-opening the station was used for a month by the return of 425 Squadron, then with Halifaxes. Also in November 1943 1664 Heavy Conversion Unit with Halifaxes moved in and stayed until April 1945.

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Terry Hancock]]> Nigel Moore]]>
RAF Dalton was a Bomber Command station located in Yorkshire, 4 miles (6 kms) south of Thirsk.

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It opened in November 1941 as part of 4 Group and 102 Squadron moved in with Whitleys. The squadron converted to Halifaxes in January 1942 and left in June 1942. It was replaced briefly by the Halifaxes of 1652 Heavy Conversion Unit but in August the station was closed to extend the runways. On re-opening in November 1942 428 Squadron was formed with Wellingtons and it, and the station, transferred to 6 Group in January 1943. 424 Squadron Wellingtons stayed for two weeks in May 1943 before the Halifaxes of 1666 Heavy Conversion Unit arrived and 428 Squadron departed. The training unit left in October 1943 and the station became a relief landing ground.

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Terry Hancock]]> Nigel Moore]]>
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Construction began in 1916 and it opened in April 1916 as the Royal Naval Air Service’s principal training base for aeroplane and airship pilots. Cranwell became the Royal Air Force College in December 1919, and at the beginning of the Second World War most of the RAF’s senior officers and professional airman trained there. During the Second World War it became a flying training school, and other units including the Electrical and Wireless School were located at the station. The College returned in October 1946. Today the RAF College trains all officer cadets and 3 Flying Training School trains all non-pilot aircrew.

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Terry Hancock]]> Clare Bennett]]>
RAF Catfoss was located in in East Yorkshire, 3 miles (5 kms) west of Hornsea.

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It opened in January 1932 as a gunnery training station for aircraft using the nearby Skipsea range. At the start of World War Two it was used by 2 (Coastal) Operational Training Unit which trained Coastal Command crews in anti-shipping operations. Concrete runways were laid during 1943 and the training unit was replaced in February 1944 by the Central Gunnery School where many of Bomber Command’s Gunnery Leaders were trained.

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Terry Hancock]]>
RAF Carnaby was located in Yorkshire, 2 miles (3 kms) south-west from Bridlington.

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It opened in March 1944 as one of three emergency landing grounds in England for damaged returning aircraft, many of which were in Bomber Command. The station had one runway almost one and three-quarter miles long (2.7 km) and 250 yards (230 m) wide. The FIDO fog dispersal system was installed. More than 1400 bombers made an emergency landing at RAF Carnaby during the war.

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Terry Hancock]]> Nigel Moore]]>
RAF Burn was a Bomber Command station located in Yorkshire, 2 miles (3 kms) south of Selby.

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1653 Heavy Conversion Unit with B-24s used RAF Burn briefly before the station officially opened in November 1942 as part of 4 Group. 431 Squadron was formed with Wellingtons, staying until July 1943. The station remained non-operational until January 1944 when 578 Squadron with Halifaxes arrived. The squadron was disbanded in April 1945.

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Terry Hancock]]> Nigel Moore]]>
RAF Breighton was a Bomber Command station located in Yorkshire, 6 miles (10 kms) north-east of Selby.

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It opened in January 1942 as part of 1 Group. 460 Squadron moved in with Wellingtons. During the autumn of 1942 1656 Heavy Conversion Unit was formed with a mix of Halifaxes, Manchesters and Lancasters. In November 1942 460 Squadron converted to Lancasters and operated them until leaving in May 1943 when RAF Breighton transferred to 4 Group. 78 Squadron took up residence until the end of the war equipped with Halifaxes.

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Terry Hancock]]> Nigel Moore]]>
RAF Blyton was a Bomber Command station located in Lincolnshire, 4 miles (6 kms) north-east of Gainsborough.

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Construction began in 1942 and even before the station officially opened 18 Operational Training Unit (OTU) arrived with Wellingtons. RAF Blyton opened in November 1942 and 199 Squadron reformed with Wellingtons, remaining until February 1943 when it, and 18 OTU, moved out. They were replaced by 1662 Heavy Conversion Unit (HCU), initially with Manchesters, Halifaxes and Lancasters but by the end of 1943 only Halifaxes were in use. In November 1944 RAF Blyton and 1662 HCU transferred to 7 Group and re-equipped with Lancasters.

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Terry Hancock]]> Nigel Moore]]>

This item was sent to the IBCC Digital Archive already in digital form. No better quality copies are available.]]>
Great Britain- Royal Air Force]]> IBCC Digital Archive]]> Terry Hancock]]> eng]]> Text]]> Text. Log book and record book]]> Royal Air Force]]> Royal Air Force. Bomber Command]]> Canada]]> Germany]]> Great Britain]]> Manitoba]]> Germany--Gelsenkirchen]]> Germany--Hamburg]]> Germany--Krefeld]]> England--Lincolnshire]]> England--Nottinghamshire]]> England--Oxfordshire]]> 1943-06-21]]> 1943-06-24]]> 1943-07-29]]> 1943-08-02]]> 1943-08-10]]> 1943-08-15]]> 1943-08-17]]>
Great Britain. Royal Air Force]]> IBCC Digital Archive]]> Terry Hancock]]> Pending review]]> eng]]> Text]]> Text. Log book and record book]]> Royal Air Force]]> Royal Air Force. Bomber Command]]> Denmark]]> Germany]]> Great Britain]]> Atlantic Ocean--Baltic Sea]]> England--Cumbria]]> England--Derbyshire]]> England--Norfolk]]> Germany--Augsburg]]> Germany--Bochum]]> Germany--Dortmund-Ems Canal]]> Germany--Dresden]]> Germany--Duisburg]]> Germany--Essen]]> Germany--Frankfurt am Main]]> Germany--Mönchengladbach]]> Germany--Hamburg]]> Germany--Kamen]]> Germany--Karlsruhe]]> Germany--Kiel]]> Germany--Ludwigshafen am Rhein]]> Germany--Magdeburg]]> Germany--Mannheim]]> Germany--Merseburg]]> Germany--Münster in Westfalen]]> Germany--Neuss]]> Germany--Nuremberg]]> Germany--Siegen]]> Germany--Stuttgart]]> Germany--Ulm]]> Germany--Wiesbaden]]> Germany--Wesel (North Rhine-Westphalia)]]> Germany--Hannover]]> Germany--Freiburg im Breisgau]]> Germany--Ruhr (Region)]]> 1944-10-07]]> 1944-10-09]]> 1944-10-11]]> 1944-10-19]]> 1944-10-25]]> 1944-10-26]]> 1944-11-01]]> 1944-11-04]]> 1944-11-18]]> 1944-11-21]]> 1944-11-28]]> 1944-11-30]]> 1944-12-02]]> 1944-12-04]]> 1944-12-12]]> 1944-12-15]]> 1944-12-17]]> 1944-12-21]]> 1944-12-24]]> 1945-01-05]]> 1945-01-07]]> 1945-01-08]]> 1945-01-14]]> 1945-01-16]]> 1945-01-22]]> 1945-01-28]]> 1945-01-29]]> 1945-02-01]]> 1945-02-02]]> 1945-02-03]]> 1945-02-13]]> 1945-02-14]]> 1945-02-15]]> 1945-02-20]]> 1945-02-21]]> 1945-02-23]]> 1945-02-24]]> 1945-02-28]]> 1945-02-29]]> 1945-03-03]]> 1945-03-07]]> 1945-03-13]]> 1945-03-23]]> 1945-03-24]]> 1945-04-02]]> 1945-04-03]]> 1945-04-08]]> 1945-04-09]]> 1945-04-13]]> 1945-04-14]]> 1945-04-15]]> 1945-04-16]]> 1945-05-17]]> His pilots on operations were Sergeant Galloway, Sergeant Topping, Sergeant Osbourne, Pilot Officer Wareing, Flying Officer Altmann, Pilot Officer Robson, Squadron Leader Grylls and Flight Lieutenant Spencer.]]> Great Britain. Royal Air Force]]> IBCC Digital Archive]]> Terry Hancock]]> eng]]> Text]]> Text. Log book and record book]]> Royal Air Force]]> Royal Air Force. Bomber Command]]> France]]> Germany]]> Great Britain]]> Atlantic Ocean--North Sea]]> Atlantic Ocean--Kattegat (Baltic Sea)]]> Belgium--Antwerp]]> England--Leicestershire]]> England--Lincolnshire]]> England--Nottinghamshire]]> England--Oxfordshire]]> England--Yorkshire]]> France--Annecy]]> France--Brest]]> France--Brest]]> France--Caen]]> France--Chalindrey]]> France--Clermont-Ferrand]]> France--Etaples]]> France--Lorient]]> France--Mailly-le-Camp]]> France--Nevers]]> France--Paris]]> France--Tours]]> Germany--Berlin]]> Germany--Braunschweig]]> Germany--Bremen]]> Germany--Cologne]]> Germany--Duisburg]]> Germany--Düsseldorf]]> Germany--Essen]]> Germany--Hamburg]]> Germany--Kiel]]> Germany--Mannheim]]> Germany--Wesseling]]> Scotland--Dumfries and Galloway]]> Belgium]]> Germany--Ruhr (Region)]]> Europe--Elbe River]]> France--Saint-Nazaire]]> 1940]]> 1941]]> 1942]]> 1943]]> 1944]]> 1945]]> 1940-11-27]]> 1940-11-29]]> 1940-12-04]]> 1940-12-10]]> 1940-12-22]]> 1940-12-29]]> 1941-01-03]]> 1941-01-05]]> 1941-01-09]]> 1941-01-12]]> 1941-02-04]]> 1941-02-05]]> 1941-03-03]]> 1941-03-04]]> 1941-03-12]]> 1941-03-18]]> 1941-03-20]]> 1941-03-21]]> 1941-04-04]]> 1941-04-05]]> 1941-04-07]]> 1941-04-08]]> 1941-04-17]]> 1941-04-18]]> 1941-04-20]]> 1941-04-23]]> 1941-04-24]]> 1941-04-27]]> 1941-04-28]]> 1941-04-29]]> 1941-04-30]]> 1941-05-04]]> 1941-05-05]]> 1941-05-15]]> 1941-05-16]]> 1941-05-18]]> 1941-05-19]]> 1941-05-23]]> 1941-05-24]]> 1941-05-26]]> 1941-05-27]]> 1941-06-02]]> 1941-06-03]]> 1941-06-11]]> 1941-06-12]]> 1941-06-13]]> 1941-06-14]]> 1941-06-15]]> 1941-06-16]]> 1941-06-17]]> 1941-06-18]]> 1941-06-21]]> 1941-06-22]]> 1941-06-27]]> 1941-06-28]]> 1941-07-24]]> 1941-08-08]]> 1942-05-30]]> 1942-05-31]]> 1942-06-01]]> 1942-06-02]]> 1944-04-22]]> 1944-04-23]]> 1944-04-29]]> 1944-05-01]]> 1944-05-02]]> 1944-05-03]]> 1944-05-04]]> 1944-05-08]]> 1944-05-09]]> 1944-05-10]]> 1944-05-21]]> 1944-05-22]]> 1944-05-23]]> 1944-05-24]]> 1944-05-25]]> 1944-05-27]]> 1944-05-28]]> 1944-05-31]]> 1944-06-01]]> 1944-06-05]]> 1944-06-07]]> 1944-06-08]]> 1944-06-09]]> 1944-06-10]]> 1944-06-12]]> 1944-06-13]]> 1944-06-14]]> 1944-06-15]]> 1944-06-16]]> 1944-06-17]]> 1944-06-21]]> 1944-06-22]]> 1944-06-24]]> 1944-06-25]]> 1944-07-12]]> 1944-07-13]]> 1944-07-14]]> 1944-07-15]]> 1944-07-16]]> 1944-07-18]]> 1944-07-19]]> Detailing his flying training and operations flown as navigator. He was stationed at RAAF Mount Gambier (2 AOS), RAAF Port Pirie (2 B&GS, 3 AOS), RAF West Freugh (4 OAFU), RAF Church Broughton (27 OTU), RAF Riccall (1658 HCU) and RAF Driffield (466 [RAAF] Squadron). Aircraft flown in were Anson, Battle, Wellington and Halifax. Targets were Mainz, Wanne-Eickel, Gelsenkirchen, Goch, Kamen, Essen, Wangerooge and two illegible. He flew six night and four day operations with 466 Squadron making a total of 10. His pilots on operations were Pilot Officer Shelton and Flight Lieutenant McDonald.

This item was sent to the IBCC Digital Archive already in digital form. No better quality copies are available.
]]>
Great Britain. Royal Air Force]]> IBCC Digital Archive]]> Terry Hancock]]> eng]]> Text]]> Text. Log book and record book]]> Royal Australian Air Force]]> Royal Air Force]]> Royal Air Force. Bomber Command]]> Australia]]> Germany]]> Great Britain]]> Germany--Essen]]> Germany--Gelsenkirchen]]> Germany--Goch]]> Germany--Kamen]]> Germany--Mainz (Rhineland-Palatinate)]]> Germany--Wangerooge Island]]> Germany--Wanne-Eickel]]> Germany--Ruhr (Region)]]> 1943]]> 1944]]> 1945]]> 1945-01-01]]> 1945-01-02]]> 1945-01-03]]> 1945-01-04]]> 1945-01-07]]> 1945-01-08]]> 1945-01-20]]> 1945-01-21]]> 1945-01-23]]> 1945-01-24]]> 1945-01-27]]> 1945-03-03]]> 1945-03-04]]> 1945-04-25]]> 1945-06-07]]> 1945-07-05]]>
Great Britain. Royal Air Force]]> IBCC Digital Archive]]> Terry Hancock]]> Pending review]]> eng]]> Text]]> Text. Log book and record book]]> Royal Air Force]]> Austria]]> Great Britain]]> Italy]]> Egypt]]> Austria--Innsbruck]]> Austria--Villach]]> Italy--Brescia]]> Italy--Padua]]> Italy--Trento]]> Italy--Verona]]> Italy--Vicenza]]> Wales--Glamorgan]]> North Africa]]> Slovenia]]> Slovenia--Črnomelj]]> 1945-03-11]]> 1945-03-12]]> 1945-03-15]]> 1945-03-18]]> 1945-03-19]]> 1945-03-22]]> 1945-03-25]]> 1945-04-02]]> 1945-04-04]]> 1945-04-08]]> 1945-04-10]]> 1945-04-12]]> 1945-04-25]]> Aircraft flown in were Proctor, Canberra, Meteor T7, Oxford, Anson, Valiant, Lincoln, Devon, Victor, Vulcan, Super G Constellation, Varsity, Hastings, Meteor F8, Whirlwind and Superfortress KB-50J;]]> Great Britain. Royal Air Force]]> IBCC Digital Archive]]> Terry Hancock]]> Pending review]]> eng]]> Text]]> Text. Log book and record book]]> Royal Air Force]]> Great Britain]]> England--Cambridgeshire]]> England--Hampshire]]> England--Lincolnshire]]> England--Norfolk]]> England--Warwickshire]]> England--Worcestershire]]> 1952]]> 1953]]> 1954]]> 1955]]> 1956]]> 1957]]> 1958]]> 1959]]> Aircraft flown in were Valiant and Anson.]]> Great Britain. Royal Air Force]]> IBCC Digital Archive]]> Terry Hancock]]> Pending review]]> eng]]> Text]]> Text. Log book and record book]]> Royal Air Force]]> Great Britain]]> England--Norfolk]]> 1950]]> 1951]]> 1952]]> 1953]]> 1954]]> 1955]]> 1956]]> 1957]]> 1958]]> 1959]]> 1960]]> 1961]]> 1962]]> Aircraft flown in were Valiant, Argosy, Beverley, Hunter T7, Belvedere, Twin Pioneer, Andover, Shackleton MR2, Whirlwind, Wessex, Dakota, Nimrod, Puma, Basset, Jaguar T2, Pembroke, Hercules, Harrier T2, Lancaster, Chipmunk, Scout, Buccaneer, Lightning T5, Phantom, Gazelle, Hawk, Tornado GR1, HS 125, Jet Provost T5, Jetstream, F-111, Airtourer, Sea King, Victor K2, Bulldog, Chinook, VC-10 and Squirrel.
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Great Britain. Royal Air Force]]> IBCC Digital Archive]]> Terry Hancock]]> Pending review]]> eng]]> Text]]> Text. Log book and record book]]> Royal Air Force]]> Great Britain]]> Yemen (Republic)]]> England--Buckinghamshire]]> England--Warwickshire]]> Yemen (Republic)--Aden]]> England--Sussex]]>
Great Britain. Royal Air Force]]> IBCC Digital Archive]]> Terry Hancock]]> Cara Walmsley]]> eng]]> Text]]> Text. Log book and record book]]> Royal Air Force]]> Royal Air Force. Bomber Command]]> Royal Australian Air Force]]> Canada]]> Great Britain]]> Poland]]> Alberta--Edmonton]]> England--Staffordshire]]> England--Lincolnshire]]> England--Yorkshire]]> Germany--Chemnitz]]> Germany--Cologne]]> Germany--Dortmund]]> Germany--Dresden]]> Germany--Duisburg]]> Germany--Hanau]]> Germany--Mannheim]]> Germany--Pforzheim]]> Germany--Wiesbaden]]> Poland--Police (Województwo Zachodniopomorskie)]]> Scotland--Prestwick]]> Germany--Nuremberg]]> Alberta]]> Germany]]> Germany--Ruhr (Region)]]> 1944]]> 1945]]> 1945-02-01]]> 1945-02-02]]> 1945-02-03]]> 1945-02-08]]> 1945-02-09]]> 1945-02-12]]> 1945-02-13]]> 1945-02-14]]> 1945-02-15]]> 1945-02-20]]> 1945-02-21]]> 1945-02-22]]> 1945-02-23]]> 1945-02-24]]> 1945-03-01]]> 1945-03-02]]> 1945-03-05]]> 1945-03-06]]> 1945-03-15]]> 1945-03-16]]> 1945-03-17]]> 1945-03-18]]> 1945-03-22]]> 1945-03-23]]> 1945-03-26]]> 1945-04-04]]> 1945-04-05]]> 1945-04-09]]> 1945-04-10]]> Great Britain. Royal Air Force]]> IBCC Digital Archive]]> Terry Hancock]]> eng]]> Text]]> Text. Log book and record book]]> Royal Air Force]]> Royal Air Force. Bomber Command]]> Germany]]> Great Britain]]> Netherlands]]> England--Lincolnshire]]> England--Nottinghamshire]]> Germany--Bremen]]> Germany--Helgoland]]> Germany--Plauen]]> Germany--Potsdam]]> Netherlands--Hague]]> Wales--Vale of Glamorgan]]> 1945-04-10]]> 1945-04-14]]> 1945-04-18]]> 1945-04-22]]> 1945-04-30]]> 1945-04-11]]> 1945-04-15]]> Great Britain. Royal Air Force]]> IBCC Digital Archive]]> David Leitch]]> Terry Hancock]]> eng]]> Text]]> Text. Log book and record book]]> Royal Air Force]]> Royal Air Force. Bomber Command]]> Germany]]> Great Britain]]> Atlantic Ocean--Baltic Sea]]> England--Cambridgeshire]]> England--Norfolk]]> England--Nottinghamshire]]> England--Wiltshire]]> Scotland--Moray]]> Wales--Anglesey]]> Germany--Bochum]]> Germany--Chemnitz]]> Germany--Cologne]]> Germany--Dessau (Dessau)]]> Germany--Dortmund]]> Germany--Dresden]]> Germany--Duisburg]]> Germany--Essen]]> Germany--Hattingen]]> Germany--Kiel]]> Germany--Krefeld]]> Germany--Ludwigshafen am Rhein]]> Germany--Marl (North Rhine-Westphalia)]]> Germany--Münster in Westfalen]]> Germany--Neuss]]> Germany--Nuremberg]]> Germany--Potsdam]]> Germany--Rheydt]]> Germany--Salzbergen]]> Germany--Salzgitter]]> Germany--Siegen]]> Germany--Trier]]> Germany--Wesel (North Rhine-Westphalia)]]> Germany--Wiesbaden]]> Germany--Wuppertal]]> Germany--Ruhr (Region)]]> 1943]]> 1944-12-16]]> 1944-12-21]]> 1944-12-23]]> 1944-12-27]]> 1944-12-28]]> 1944-12-31]]> 1945-01-02]]> 1945-01-05]]> 1945-01-06]]> 1945-01-22]]> 1945-02-02]]> 1945-02-03]]> 1945-02-08]]> 1945-02-13]]> 1945-02-14]]> 1945-02-15]]> 1945-02-18]]> 1945-02-19]]> 1945-03-02]]> 1945-03-06]]> 1945-03-07]]> 1945-03-08]]> 1945-03-11]]> 1945-03-14]]> 1945-03-17]]> 1945-03-18]]> 1945-03-21]]> 1945-03-24]]> 1945-04-13]]> 1945-04-14]]> 1945-04-15]]>