Kerr, Richard Alexander
Personal Information
Rank | P/O |
Forename(s) | Richard Alexander |
Surname | Kerr |
Gender | M |
Age | 23 |
Date of Death | 21-01-1944 |
Next of Kin | Son of Ernest Wilson Kerr and Nora Emma Kerr (née Whiltome), of Cosmo, Alberta, Canada. |
Aircraft Information
Aircraft | Handley Page Halifax V |
Serial Number | LK699 |
Markings | WL-Z |
Memorial Information
Burial/Memorial Country | Germany |
Burial/Memorial Place | Berlin 1939-1945 War Cemetery |
Grave Reference | 6. F. 10. |
Epitaph |
IBCC Memorial Information
Phase | 2 |
Panel Number | 193 |
Enlistment Information
Service Number | J/85910 |
Service | Royal Canadian Air Force |
Group | 6 |
Squadron | 434 (Bluenose) |
Squadron Motto | In excelsis vincimus (We conquer in the heights) |
Trade | Pilot |
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 |
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 |
Location | Village Green, Tholthorpe, North Yorkshire |
Country | United Kingdom |
Memorial Type | Memorial Stone with inscribed Metal Plaque and Maple Tree |
Memorial Text | A memorial to those Canadians who served at RCAF Tholthorpe during WW2, including 434 Sqn RCAF |
Location | Former Control Tower, old Tholthorpe airfield site, North Yorkshire |
Country | United Kingdom |
Memorial Type | Inscribed Metal Plaque |
Memorial Text | A memorial to those Canadians who served at RCAF Tholthorpe during WW2, including 434 Sqn RCAF |
Miscellaneous Information
Richard was born on 10 November 1920 at Cosmo, Alberta. Both parents were born in England, his father in Bristol and he worked as a farmer. He had a brother John Ernest and a sister Dorothy Elizabeth. The schools he attended were: Cosmo, Alberta from 1927-1936 and a High School Correspondence school course during 1936-1938. He was then at Eastwood & Garneau, Edmonton, Alberta 1938-1940 where he attained grade 12. The sports Richard was interested in were hockey, softball, tennis and swimming. During 1940-1941 he worked for his father on his farm at Cosmo and then worked as a clerk at G.W. Jones in the general store at Sangudo, Alberta from 1941 until enlisting on 1 December 1941. |
After initial training, Richard embarked from Canada for the U.K. on 26 January 1943, arriving in the U.K. at 3PRC on 5 February 1943. He then went to 14 (P)AFU on 4 May 1943, 24 OTU on 13 July 1943, 1664 CU 7 October 1943 and 434 Squadron on 1 December 1943. It was from there that Richard lost his life the following year on 21 January 1944. |
Commonwealth War Graves Commission
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 | 21-01-1944 |
End Date | 22-01-1944 |
Takeoff Station | Croft |
Day/Night Raid | Night (18% moon) |
Operation | Magdeburg- the first major raid on this target. 648 aircraft, 57 losses (8.8%). The Halifax loss rate was especially high at 15.6%. The German controller tracked the bomber stream across the North Sea and many night-fighters were already in the stream before it reached the German coast (using the newly developed Tame Boar methodology). The controller was slow in identifying Magdeburg as the target but this was of little consequence as the fighters were able to stay in the stream for the duration of the approach. Despite the high loss rate, this was not a successful attack. Stronger tail winds than anticipated placed some of the stream over the target before Zero Hour and dropped their bomb load anyway, making the target marking much less effective. German decoy markers exacerbated the situation. No local report is available but it is thought that most of the bombs fell outside of the city. |
Reason for Loss | Crashed near Helmstedt, Germany |