Fraser, Peter Aird
Personal Information
| Rank | F/S |
| Forename(s) | Peter Aird |
| Surname | Fraser |
| Gender | M |
| Age | 22 |
| Date of Death | 30-07-1943 |
| Next of Kin | Son of Lt. Col. Keith Aird Fraser O.B.E. and Muriel Fraser of Killara New South Wales Australia. |
Aircraft Information
| Aircraft | Handley Page Halifax II |
| Serial Number | JB798 |
| Markings | EY-P |
Memorial Information
| Burial/Memorial Country | Germany |
| Burial/Memorial Place | Hamburg Cemetery |
| Grave Reference | Coll. grave 6A. B. 4-8. |
| Epitaph | FOR KING AND COUNTRY |
IBCC Memorial Information
| Phase | 2 |
| Panel Number | 166 |
Enlistment Information
| Service Number | 413756 |
| Service | Royal Australian Air Force |
| Group | 4 |
| Squadron | 78 |
| Squadron Motto | Nemo non paratus (Nobody unprepared) |
| Trade | Pilot |
| Country of Origin | Australia |
Other Memorials
| Location | Adjacent to Clubhouse, Breighton Airfield, East Yorkshire |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Memorial Type | Inscribed Marble Tablet |
| Memorial Text | Dedicated to all who served at this airfield and gave their lives during World War II |
| Location | External, All Saints Church, Bubwith, East Yorkshire |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Memorial Type | Stone Memorial, inscribed Metal Plaque |
| Memorial Text | 78 Sqn 4 Group Bomber Command Yorkshire 1939 - 1945 To All Who Served |
| Location | Internal, All Saints Church, Bubwith, East Yorkshire |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Memorial Type | Inscribed Wooden Board, Memorial Chapel featuring Cross made from Halifax wreckage |
| Memorial Text | The 78 Sqn Memorial in the Churchyard was dedicated by the Bishop of Selby on 7th September 1986. RAF Breighton, two miles from this church was the Sqn's home from June 1943 to May 1945 |
| Location | Outside "B" Hangar, RAF Benson, Oxfordshire |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Memorial Type | Memorial Stone & Inscribed Slate Plaque |
| Memorial Text | In proud memory of all who have lost their lives serving with 78 Sqn Royal Air Force "Nemo Non Paratus - Nobody Unprepared" |
| Location | Yorkshire Air Museum, Elvington, North Yorkshire |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Memorial Type | Memorial Gardens, Propeller, Inscribed Marble Tablets |
| Memorial Text | In everlasting homage to the courage of those who have found their winged victory through the skies of Yorkshire |
| Location | Yorkshire Air Museum, Elvington, North Yorkshire |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Memorial Type | Propeller Unit & Inscribed Marble Tablets |
| Memorial Text | They made the supreme sacrifice so that you & I may go in peace with freedom. 4 Group 1939 - 1945. |
| Location | Heslington Hall, York, North Yorkshire |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Memorial Type | Inscribed Metal Plaque |
| Memorial Text | Heslington Hall 1941 - 1945, 4 Gp Headquarters Bomber Command. In remembrance of those Air & Ground personnel who made the supreme sacrifice that we all may walk in peace with freedom |
Commonwealth War Graves Commission
The National Archives
| Record of Events (Operational Record Book) AIR 27/660/74 |
| Summary of Events (Operational Record Book) AIR 27/660/74 |
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 | 29-07-1943 |
| End Date | 30-07-1943 |
| Takeoff Station | Breighton |
| Day/Night Raid | Night (4% moon) |
| Operation | Hamburg. 787 aircraft 17 losses (2.2%). For the second consecutive raid Brig. Gen. Anderson the commander of the American 8th Air Force flew as an observer on this operation. PFF used H2S to mark the target but were approximately 3km east of the centre of the city but was at least concentrated leading to concentrated bombing with little creepback. This raid caused a firestorm resulting from very high summer temperatures and low humidity following a particularly dry spell. Most of the fire crews were in the west of the city following the raid of three nights earlier and few could make the journey to the new fires due to rubble blocking roads. The fires quickly joined into one mass of fire drawing so much oxygen into the area that it caused storm-force winds. The fire raged for over three hours after the raid and only subsided when all combustible material was consumed. Approximately 40000 civilian deaths mostly from asphyxiation resulting from lack of oxygen. The raid led to an exodus of over 1.2 million people fearing another raid. |
| Reason for Loss | Hit by flak and crashed at Bad Oldesloe SW of Lübeck. Germany |