The Lost Dambuster Lancaster (Hardback)
The Story of 617 Squadron’s Attack on Hitler’s V2 Rocket Site
Imprint: Air World
Pages: 248
Illustrations: 60 mono illustrations
ISBN: 9781036132361
Published: 5th November 2025
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In the late afternoon of 24 June 1944, eighteen aircraft from 617 Squadron, led to fame by Wing Commander Guy Gibson during the attack on the dams raid in May 1943, took off from their base at Woodhall Spa. Their target was the vast V2 rocket site at Wizernes in the Pas de Calais. Known today as La Coupole, this bunker complex had been built to serve as a reinforced launch site for the V2s that Hitler hoped would terrorise the British population.
Once their target had been marked, the Lancasters dropped Tallboy bombs. Bomb bursts were recorded all around the target. The Dambusters, however, did not go unchallenged. One of the attackers, Lancaster DV403, flown by Flight Lieutenant John Edward DFC and coded KC-G, was hit by flak. The flight engineer, Flying Officer W.J. King DFC, died instantly. One of the Lancaster’s engines stuttered and the aircraft began to burn.
Edward valiantly tried to hold course long enough for the rest of the crew to answer the ‘Abracadabra’ call to bale out. A Resistance worker saw crew members falling ‘like candles’ below their parachutes.
Moments later DV403 hit the growing crops in nearby French fields. The Lancaster carried, unusually, eight crew. The pilot, engineer, and all three gunners were dead.
In the chaos of the moment, the courage of one member of the French Resistance, surveyor André Schamp, stood out. He assisted a wounded crewman, while also checking for other survivors.
The story of DV403 has been recently honoured in France on the 80th anniversary, with an exhibition, lectures and a wayside interpretation board compiled by the authors, who have encouraged strong involvement of crewmen’s families in the evolving narrative. This is the story of their fate that night, as well as of 617 Squadron’s attack on the V2 site as a whole.
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"I learnt much about the raid and, of course, about the eight men (there were three air gunners), who took off from RAF Woodhall Spa in Lancaster DV 403, carrying a Tallboy bomb. The authors have the ability to stir the reader’s emotions about the losses as well as to impart information and have succeeded in memorialising this mixed Royal Air Force and Royal Canadian Air Force crew."
British Modern Military History Society
As featured in
The International Second World War History Network Newsletter - 7th December 2025
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620 CKRM - The Voice of Saskatchewan
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St John's College
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About Trevor Kerry
TREVOR KERRY has researched DV403’s story for ten years, and talked to aeronautics, history, and U3A groups nationwide. He was Branch Secretary and Deputy Chairman of the Royal Aeronautical Society, RAF Cranwell. An internationally published educationist, with professorial appointments at Lincoln and Bishop Grosseteste Universities, he is a member of the Royal Society of St George.
About Gaëtan Sagot
GAËTAN SAGOT is an amateur historian, with his roots in Leulinghem. He has studied the life of resistance worker André Schamp, who gave first aid to survivors of DV403’s crash. Gaëtan curated local history exhibitions. In 2024, he organised an 80th anniversary event concerning the DV403 crash and the installation of an interpretation board at the crash site.






