Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Johnson in 2018, on the 75th anniversary of the dambuster raids (Getty) Lying on his stomach right in the Lancaster’s nose, George ...
In the hours before dawn on May 17, 1943, airmen from Britain and its commonwealth carried out an audacious low-level raid on Germany’s industrial heartland, the Ruhr region. They dropped specially ...
London — The last surviving crew member of a British Royal Air Force squadron that targeted Nazi Germany's industrial heartland in World War II has died aged 101, media said Thursday. George "Johnny" ...
The RAF officer was the last surviving original member of the squadron that took part in the famous bombing raid on German dams Sign Up to our exclusive picture archive and fascinating nostalgia ...
The oddest thing, thought Johnny Johnson—once it was nose up, and they were racing for the Dutch coast—was that there had been no one there. They had set off late on this mission, on May 16th 1943, ...
With the Royal Air Force, he took part in a morale-boosting strike on Nazi Germany’s industrial heartland, breaching dams and unleashing devastating floods. By Richard Goldstein In the hours before ...
George “Johnny” Johnson was the last survivor of the British Royal Air Force “Dambusters” who used specially designed bouncing bombs to breach German dams and flood German weapons factories during ...
FILE George "Johnny" Johnson, then aged 95, poses for a photo at his home in Bristol, England, Jan. 5, 2017. Johnson, the last known survivor of Britain’s daring World War II “Dambusters” raid on ...