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Hadley Page Halifax II
SN: W1048
Current Location: RAF Museum Hendon, London, England
Aircraft was built by English Electric at Samelsbury. It was assigned to No. 102 Squadron RAF Topcliffe on 27 March 1942. It was sent to No. 35 Squadron at RAF Linton-On-Louse on 09 April 1942. On 27 April 1942 it was one of 31 Halifax's that flew a bombing mission against the German Battleship Tirpitz. At 0300 hours the aircraft sustained FLAK damage while making its bomb run on the Tirpitz, setting the starboard engine on fire. Pilot Don MacIntyre was able to make a successful wheels up landing on the frozen Lake Hoklingen, Norway. 12 hours later the aircraft sank through the ice.
The crew on this mission was:
Pilot - Plt Off Don P MacIntyre
SIC - Observer Plt Off Ian Hewitt (Also operated as Bombardier and Navigator)
1st WOP - Sgt Dave Perry
2nd WOP - Sgt Pierre Blanchet (Mid upper gunner.)
Tail Gunner - Sgt Ron Wilson
Flight Engineer Sgt Vic Stevens
The six member crew survived with the only injury being to Sgt Stevens who broke his ankle during the crash. He was helped over the 150 yards of ice to the shore by the others and was later taken POW and hospitalized by the Germans. The rest of the crew, aided by Norwegian resistance, reached neutral Sweden after a three-day hike. Hewitt and MacIntyre were repatriated to England after a few weeks. Perry, Blanchet and Wilson after about a year. During his time in Sweden, Wilson rented an apartment and worked in Sweden.
In 1971 it was discovered, and it was recovered from the bottom of the lake 30 June 1973.
SN: W1048
Current Location: RAF Museum Hendon, London, England
Aircraft was built by English Electric at Samelsbury. It was assigned to No. 102 Squadron RAF Topcliffe on 27 March 1942. It was sent to No. 35 Squadron at RAF Linton-On-Louse on 09 April 1942. On 27 April 1942 it was one of 31 Halifax's that flew a bombing mission against the German Battleship Tirpitz. At 0300 hours the aircraft sustained FLAK damage while making its bomb run on the Tirpitz, setting the starboard engine on fire. Pilot Don MacIntyre was able to make a successful wheels up landing on the frozen Lake Hoklingen, Norway. 12 hours later the aircraft sank through the ice.
The crew on this mission was:
Pilot - Plt Off Don P MacIntyre
SIC - Observer Plt Off Ian Hewitt (Also operated as Bombardier and Navigator)
1st WOP - Sgt Dave Perry
2nd WOP - Sgt Pierre Blanchet (Mid upper gunner.)
Tail Gunner - Sgt Ron Wilson
Flight Engineer Sgt Vic Stevens
The six member crew survived with the only injury being to Sgt Stevens who broke his ankle during the crash. He was helped over the 150 yards of ice to the shore by the others and was later taken POW and hospitalized by the Germans. The rest of the crew, aided by Norwegian resistance, reached neutral Sweden after a three-day hike. Hewitt and MacIntyre were repatriated to England after a few weeks. Perry, Blanchet and Wilson after about a year. During his time in Sweden, Wilson rented an apartment and worked in Sweden.
In 1971 it was discovered, and it was recovered from the bottom of the lake 30 June 1973.