Particuarly poignant listening to the tranquil sound of the nightingale against the feeling of fear that must have been felt by those men overhead. 11 of those aircraft never made it back.
JOHN HENRY STEPHENSON age 20 Sgt Air Gunner 218 Sqn, RAF - 19 May 1942 Son of John W. and Sarah J. Stephenson, of Keswick, Cumberland. Commemerated on the Runnymede Memorial. Stirling Mk.1. DJ977 delivered to No.218 Sqdn 22nd Aprl 1942. Airborne 23.16 on 19th May 1942 from Marham, 9 miles south east of Kings lynn on a operation to Mannheim. Lost without trace. All are commemorated on the Runnymede Memorial. F/S S.A.Coggin KIA Sgt R.P.M.Parker KIA Sgt J.H.Stephenson KIA Sgt P.H.Ward KIA Sgt T.McDonagh KIA F/S H.A.Worthington KIA F/S W.H.Goodrum KIA F/S F.N.Hanish KIA The Bomber Command Report for the raid : 19/20 May 1942 Mannheim 197 aircraft - 105 Wellingtons, 31 Stirlings, 29 Halifaxes, 15 Hampdens, 13 Lancasters, 4 Manchesters. 11 aircraft - 4 Halifaxes, 4 Stirlings, 3 Wellingtons - lost. 155 aircraft reported hitting Mannheim but most of the bombing photographs showed forest or open country. The Mannheim reports described the long delay before the attack developed, with aircraft at greater heights than in previous raids passing to and fro searching for the target. When the raid did begin, bombs approximately equivalent to no more than 10 aircraft loads fell in the city. A concentrated group of about 600 incendiaries in the harbour area on the Rhine burnt out 4 small industrial concerns - a blanket factory, a mineral-water factory, a chemical wholesalers and a timber merchants. Only light damage was caused elsewhere in the city.
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