Reginald N. Ross                                                                                   Updated: 04 MAR 2021

Airman: e777172.htm Surname: Ross Init: R N Rank: F/Sgt Service: RAF Sqdn: 419

P_link: p259.htm Plane: HAL JD456 Operation: Bomb G Crash_site: Sea S of Langeland

Crash_d: d150244 Buried_d: e777 C_link: e777.htm At_Next: NO KNOWN

Den 15. februar 1944 styrtede HAL JD456 i Østersøen syd for Langeland (måske omkring her) i forbindelse med et bombetogt til Berlin.
Ingen overlevende. (Kilde: p259MACR

Flight Sergeant Reginald Norman Ross, 21 år, var søn af Charles Henry og Maude Eva Ross, Stourport-on-Severn, Worcestershire, United Kingdom.
Hans navn er på Panel 222 på the Runnymede Memorial blandt mere end 20.000 navne på flyvere, der ikke har en kendt grav. (Kilde: CWGC)

2 flyvere fra HAL JD456 blev begravet i Magleby på Langeland og 1 i Aabenraa. 4 flyvere har ingen kendt grav.

Se Halifax Print * Halifax Mk III på YAM 2019 * folk bag en Halifax klar til en mission 7 flyvere.

On 15 February 1944 HAL JD456 crashed into the Baltic Sea south of Langeland (maybe about here) in connection with a bombing raid on Berlin.
No survivors. (Source: p259MACR

Flight Sergeant Reginald Norman Ross, 21, was the son of Charles Henry and Maude Eva Ross, of Stourport-on-Severn, Worcestershire, United Kingdom.
He is commemorated on the Runnymede Memorial, Panel 222, among more than 20,000 airmen who have no known grave. (Source: CWGC)
He is remembered on The Walls of Names at the International Bomber Command Centre, Phase 2, Panel 235.

2 airmen from
HAL JD456 were buried in Magleby, Langeland and 1 in Aabenraa. 4 airmen have no known grave.

See No. 419 (Moose) Squadron described by the Bomber Command Museum of.Canada. 419 Squadron RCAF 1941 to 1945 has Crew of Halifax JD456


Halifax * Halifax-BC Museum.Canada * Halifax-RAF Museum * Halifax-The Yorkshire Air Museum*Halifax Mk III at YAM 2019*Halifax Print*Halifax - Bless 'Em All.

Halifax II JD456 VR-B took off from RAF Middleton St. George at 17.04 hrs on 15 FEB 1944. (Source: Aircrew Remembered has this.)
   7 airmen.