Eagle Biography
Russell Bannock
Russell Bannock saved the lives of many Londoners during World War II by downing 19 of
Hitler's "secret weapons," the V-1 "buzz bomb." Bannock was born in November 1919
in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. was Canada's second-highest-scoring ace of World War II and
is credited with saving hundreds of innocent civilian lives in London England by downing
19 German V1 Buzz Bombs before they could reach their targets. He also saved the
lives of numerous Allied bomber crews by shooting down 11 Luftwaffe night fighters. Wing
Commander Bannock was born on 01 November 1919 in Edmonton, Alberta Canada. His flying
career started in 1938 when he obtained his private pilot's license.
Four months later he
had completed his commercial license and in 1939 he joined the RCAF as a pilot officer.
His flying training began at Vancouver on the de Havilland Gypsy Moth, an open
cockpit biplane, complete with a leather helmet. He then proceeded to Camp Borden Ontario,
to fly the North American Harvard and the Ferry Battle training aircraft. After
winning his pilot wings Bannock was to join 112 Squadron with 1 Canadian Air Division in
England but, after France unexpectedly fell to the Germans, he was reassigned for three
years as an instructor pilot in Canada. He was then assigned to Greenwood Nova Scotia, to
fly the de Havilland Mosquito fighter - a very fast, twin 1,230 Hp Rolls Royce
powered plywood fighter bomber, equipped with four 20 Millimeter cannons and four 303
machine guns. He was quickly reassigned to 418 Squadron at Holmsley England in 1944 to fly
the Mosquito Mark IV in the day and night intruder role. Three days after
arriving in theater Bannock scored his first kill - an Me-110 on final approach for
landing at Avord France. He eventually shot down eleven enemy aircraft.
On 19 June 1944,
Squadron Leader Bannock scored his first V-1 "Dootle Bug" victory over the
English Channel. Within three weeks he downed ten, and eventually killed nineteen of the
terror weapons by the end of WW II. After completing 35 missions, Bannock convinced the
RCAF to allow him to stay in Europe for a second tour of duty and was given command of 406
Squadron at Hunsdon England, who had the airborne radar equipped Mark 30 Mosquito
. Wing Commander Bannock received his second Distinguished Flying Cross when he
successfully brought his Mosquito home on one engine the night of 27 September 1944, after
debris from two aircraft he had just destroyed caused one of his engines to catch fire.
Gunfire from an Me-109 forced him to descend to treetop level where he limped back across
the channel to home base. On 17 August 1945 Bannock won the Distinguished Service Order
for his outstanding leadership and combat record. Following the war, Russel became a sales
director, Test Pilot and eventually President & CEO of de Havilland Aircraft of Canada
Limited.
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Wing Commander Bannock is seen in his Mark 30 Mosquito shooting down
a German V-1 "Buzz Bomb" over the English Channel in 1945.
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