The world-famous RAF squadron known as "The Dambusters" today arrived home from ... Current members of the 617 Squadron were at the forefront of the attack in Iraq on the 60th anniversary of ...
The items, which had been on display at the RAF Scampton Heritage Centre in Lincolnshire and had been expected to go for ...
In the Dambusters Raid, 42 per cent of the aircraft were lost and almost 40 per cent of the aircrew were killed ...
A gravestone honouring the Dambusters' dog - whose name is a racial slur - has been replaced. The 617 Squadron's mascot, a black Labrador, died on the day of its famous "bouncing bomb" raid on ...
A private collection of World War II Dambusters memorabilia tripled its pre-sale estimate of £8,000 - £10,000 to sell for £24 ...
The last surviving member of 617 Squadron to have taken part in the Dambusters raid, Squadron Leader George Leonard 'Johnny' Johnson died in 2022, aged 101. The last member of 617 Squadron ...
The above picture shows the airmen of the RAF's 617 'Dambusters' squadron kneeling in front of two F-35Bs with their World War II counterparts superimposed behind them. The black and white ...
The mission involving the Lancaster Bomber from 617 Squadron was later immortalised in The Dambusters film. Its bombs destroyed the Möhne Dam in Germany on 17 May 1943. Northamptonshire ...
The Dambusters raid involved 19 Lancaster bombers of 617 Squadron. Each had a crew of seven. Eight failed to return. Of the 133 highly skilled airmen who flew from RAF Scampton in Lincolnshire on ...
The Dambusters raid, codenamed Operation Chastise, was undertaken by the specially formed 617 Squadron in May 1943. As a boy Mr Warren, who went on to work as a photographer for the Coventry ...