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The Nanton Bomber Command Museum is hosting an event this weekend, which will honour the Indigenous air crew that fought in the Second World War. According to the Museum Curator, Karl Kjarsgaard, the ...
What it felt like for WWII Canadian bomber crews to take to the skies in a struggle of life and death, usually on cold, dark nighttime missions. ‘You never saw your friends die. They were just ...
American and Canadian aircraft conducted intercepts of a U.S. Air Force B-1B bomber over Alaska, the Alaskan NORAD Region and Alaskan Command announced on Monday, demonstrating U.S. and Canadian ...
A Personal Look at Bomber Command. The literary scholar Harold Bloom was paraphrasing Oscar Wilde when he said, “all bad poetry is sincere”. This book is, indeed, sincere and the author has a lot to ...
In his dad’s squadron – which operated from January 1943 to April 1945, 944 airmen were killed. Of those, 155 were Canadian. “I think that Bomber Command needs to be known.
The following is adapted from the essay “Flying in the Dark: The Canadian Bomber Command Experience and Meg Braem’s ‘Flight Risk,’ ” which accompanies Braem’s just-published play. In ...
The following is adapted from the essay “Flying in the Dark: The Canadian Bomber Command Experience and Meg Braem’s ‘Flight Risk,’ ” which accompanies Braem’s just-published play. In ...
Using their own recollections and those of their families, as well as records from the Bomber Command Museum of Canada, the BBC is retelling the story of how their plane went down, ...
In a restored Lancaster bomber, Canada’s wartime history takes flight again. ... Of the 125,000 airmen who served in the Royal Bomber Command, 55,573 didn’t come home.
Read about the 2025 a charity ride-in to the International Bomber Command Centre in Lincoln, which honours 80 years of Operation Manna in WW2, here with MCN.
More than 530 motorcycles descended on Lincoln’s International Bomber Command Centre (IBCC) on May 18 for the annual InSpire Ride charity event, raising over £2500 for good causes in the process.
The following is adapted from the essay “Flying in the Dark: The Canadian Bomber Command Experience and Meg Braem’s ‘Flight Risk,’ ” which accompanies Braem’s just-published play. In the opening lines ...
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