|
Lancaster DV187,
PH-A of 12 Squadron RAF
____________________
These pages concerning
Lancaster DV187 have been added to the Lancaster ED627 site because its story is
closely related to Lancaster ED627 in that they were both shot down by
Hauptmann Ludwig Meister on the same morning,
28th August 1943
within about 30 minutes of each other.
______________________________
After the shooting down of Lancaster ED627,
Ludwig Meister and his crew consisting of Hannes Forke, navigator and Toni
Werzinski, mechanic continued following the bomber stream in their ME110
aircraft, serial number 3C+MJ
towards Nürnberg.
During this part of the flight, Ludwig Meister
suddenly found a four engine bomber returning from Nürnberg flying directly
towards him at the the same altitude. It was only by his lightning reaction and a violent manoeuvre of the
control stick of his aircraft that he averted a head on collision with the other
plane that would have resulted in the certain death of both aircraft crews.
During this patrol, Meister found another
Lancaster being coned by search lights and the pilot was taking evasive action
to try and get out of the lights. Meister and his crew attacked this aircraft
from above and set it on fire.
This aircraft was the Lancaster III,
DV187, PH-A of 12 Squadron.
The final moments of this aircraft are described
in a two part newspaper article published by the Main-Post newspaper in Germany and
are reproduced both in German and English with the kind permission of their
author Norbert Vollmann.
Please select language
English
Deutsch
Burial of the crew
Following the crash of Lancaster DV187, the German authorities recovered the
bodies of the crew, five were identifiable and two were not. They were buried in
the north eastern corner, to the left of the cross, in the Michelau im
Steoggerwald civil cemetery.
The photo's below show the grave that contains the bodies of the DV187 crew
and another six aircrew in the Michelau cemetery
The other three photo's show the same area of the cemetery as it is today
(July 2007) and the next photo is where the crew were re-interred in the
Durnbach War Cemetery after their bodies were exhumed by the Commonwealth War
Graves Commission in June 1948.
The photo's of the graves in the Michelau cemetery and the CWGC one were
supplied to me by Mr Trevor Cass, nephew of of Sgt. Norman Chew and the later
ones by Norbert Vollmann
Click on images to enlarge


© Norbert Vollmann 2007

Durnbach War Cemetery, 1948
Loss card for DV187

|