Bailey, Norman

Personal Information

Rank F/O
Forename(s) Norman
Surname Bailey
Gender M
Age 29
Date of Death 29-07-1944
Next of Kin Son of Francis Bailey and Mabel Florence Bailey (née James), of Montral, Canada. Husband of Margaret Anna Bailey (née Morrison), of Montreal. Date of marriage 29 December 1938. Father of John Howard Bailey, born 29 January 1940.
BAILEY N

Aircraft Information

Aircraft Handley Page Halifax III
Serial Number MZ589
Markings SE-H

Memorial Information

Burial/Memorial Country United Kingdom
Burial/Memorial Place Runnymede Memorial
Grave Reference Panel 244.
Epitaph

IBCC Memorial Information

Phase 2
Panel Number 125

Enlistment Information

Service Number J/28860
Service Royal Canadian Air Force
Group 6
Squadron 431 (Iroquois)
Squadron Motto The hatiten ronteriios (Warriors of the air)
Trade Navigator
Country of Origin Canada

Other Memorials

Location Race Control Building, Croft Auto Circuit, North Yorkshire
Country United Kingdom
Memorial Type Inscribed Metal Plaque
Memorial Text In memory of those who served at RAF Croft, 1941-1945 including 419 Sqn RCAF
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Location Roadside Location, A167, Dalton on Tees, North Yorkshire
Country United Kingdom
Memorial Type Inscribed Stone Memorial topped with metal statue
Memorial Text In memory of those who served at RAF Croft, 1941-1945 including 419 Sqn RCAF
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Location Adjacent to A19, Burn, North Yorkshire
Country United Kingdom
Memorial Type Inscribed Memorial Stone
Memorial Text A memorial to all those who served on 431 Sqn RCAF at RCAF Burn, 1942-1943
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Location Village Green, Tholthorpe, North Yorkshire
Country United Kingdom
Memorial Type Memorial Stone with inscribed metal plaques & Maple Tree
Memorial Text In memory of all those who served at RCAF Tholthorpe during WW2 including 431 Sqn RCAF
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Location Old Control Tower, former airfield site, Tholthorpe, North Yorkshire
Country United Kingdom
Memorial Type Inscribed Metal Plaque
Memorial Text In memory of all those who served at RCAF Tholthorpe during WW2 including 431 Sqn RCAF
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Miscellaneous Information

Norman was born on 15 October 1914 at Montreal. His father was born in Rumney, Cardiff, and his mother also in Cardiff, Wales. He had two brothers, Marcus Henry and Geoffrey and his parents lived in McLynn Avenue, Montreal. His brother Geoffrey was a Sergeant in the RCAF, serving overseas and brother Marcus was a Lieutenant, in the Royal Victoria Rifles at Niagara. His schooling was at St. Laurent High where he took his General course between 1921-1927 and then Junior Matriculation between 1927-1931. He also attended a Technical School in Montreal. He was employed by the Phoenix Assurance Co, Ltd in Montreal where he worked up from a general clerk to an Insurance Inspector. Norman’s sporting interests were football and tennis but mainly he enjoyed playing golf.
Norman enlisted on 23 June 1942 in London, Ontario and after early training embarked from Halifax on 26 August 1943. He arrived in the U.K. and was at 3PRC on 2 September 1943, 9(0)AFU 19 October 1943, 22 OTU, 28 December 1943, 61 Base24 March 1944 and 1666CU on 2 April 1944. He arrived at 431 Squadron on 30 April 1944 and it was from here , three months later, that Norman sadly lost his life on 29 July 1944.

Commonwealth War Graves Commission

The National Archives

Fellow Servicemen

Please note that this list gives all the losses aboard the quoted aircraft and occasionally these may have occurred on an earlier date when the aircraft was not itself lost. Please check the dates of death carefully.

Last Operation Information

Start Date 28-07-1944
End Date 29-07-1944
Takeoff Station Croft
Day/Night Raid Night (56% moon)
Operation Hamburg. 307 aircraft. German night-fighters appeared on the return leg leading to 22 losses (7.2%). This was the first raid on Hamburg for a year and was not well concentrated. The Germans were unable to determine the aiming point from the bombing results. Most of the bombs fell on areas devastated during 1943.
Reason for Loss Lost without trace
 
 
 
 

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Casualty Pack

IBCC is delighted to introduce a unique facility to link the Losses Database to the relevant RAF Casualty Pack on the National Archives website. This project is the result of on-going collaboration between IBCC, the MOD Records Office and National Archives, Kew. This document describes what Casualty Packs are, when they were created, the process of making them available to the public and then goes on to describe the process by which you can view the contents of the packs. Casualty Packs (CPs) were created by the RAF whenever there was serious injury or loss of life associated with operational activity within the RAF. This includes operational flying losses, enemy action due to air raids, road accidents either on station or even off-station if they involved RAF vehicles. Deaths due to natural causes in service or accidents that did not involve RAF vehicles did not generally give rise to a CP.

CPs were originally given a unique reference number by the RAF. Each begins with the letter ‘P’ and is followed by six digits, then an oblique (forward slash) and the finally the year in which the incident took place- for example P396154/42.

The CPs are in the process of being made available to the general public as they are passed from the MOD Records Office, Portsmouth to National Archives, Kew. This process requires some rework to the files which is very time consuming, so the process of making them all available to National Archives will take several years. They are being made available in increasing date order.

Once CPs arrive at National Archives they are assigned a unique AIR81 number, so each CP has both a P-number and an AIR81 number. Both are searchable on the National Archives website under ‘Search the catalogue’ and both are included on the IBCC website.

The AIR81 reference on the IBCC website is a link to the file on the National Archives website. When you click on it, the relevant page will open in a new tab on your browser.

There is currently no plan to digitise AIR81 files, partly because they are fragile and partly because the information they contain can at times be sensitive, even harrowing, since they may contain exhumation reports and even photographs of corpses. Family members wishing to read the AIR81 files relating to their ancestors are advised to exercise caution and be guided by National Archives warnings where appropriate.

There are two means for accessing AIR81 files- to attend in person or to order a copy by post.

To attend in person, the attendee should first create a Reader’s Ticket. This can be done online by following this link: https://secure.nationalarchives.gov.uk/login/yourdetails. Then click on the AIR81 reference on the IBCC website and click Order in Advance. Enter your Reader’s Ticket number and state the date on which you intend to visit. National Archives will have the file ready for you when you arrive, saving you time. When you visit Kew, you must quote the Reader’s Ticket number and take along two forms of ID- one bearing your signature and one bearing your address. When you view the files, you are permitted to take photographs of each page, should you wish.

Alternatively, if you wish to order a copy by post, please be aware that there is a charge for this service based on the number of pages in the file. Click on the AIR81 reference on the IBCC website and then click Request a Copy. There is an £8.40 charge for National Archives staff to access the file and give you a quotation for the copying service. The process takes around 24 days to complete and can be expensive.

IBCC wishes to thank the staff at the MOD Records Office and National Archives for their engagement and assistance in making this facility available to our website users.