Eagle Biography
William "Bill" Reid, V. C.
Bill Reid earned one of only 32 Victoria Crosses awarded for heroism in the air during
World War II. The son of a blacksmith, Reid was born 21 December 1921 at Baillieston,
Glasgow, Scotland. After completing his studies at the Coatbridge Secondary School, he
briefly studied metallurgy before he joined the Royal Air Force. In the summer of 1941,
he reported to the Initial Training Wing at Newquay, Cornwall, in the west of England.
He was soon transferred to Moncton, New Brunswick, Canada, and then was on his way to
No. 2 British Flying Training School in California. At Lancaster, in the high desert,
Reid first flew the Stearman PT-13 Kaydet, then the Vultee BT-13 "
Vibrator," and finally the North American AT-6 Texan. After 200 hours in
the air, he received his wings and a commission on 18 June 1942 and then returned to
England.
He trained further in the Airspeed Oxford and the Vickers-Armstrongs
Wellington and then became an instructor pilot. Finally on 6 September 1943,
Reid reported to his first operational unit, No. 61 Squadron at Syerston, Newark,
England. He flew nine combat missions and then, on 3 November 1943, climbed aboard Avro
Lancaster, LM 360, for his most famous flight. During a 600-bomber night raid
against Düsseldorf in Germany's Ruhr industrial heartland, Luftwaffe fighters
crippled Reid's Lancaster and wounded him in his head, hands, and shoulders.
Wrapping his arms around the steering column, he continued on and dropped all bombs on
target. In and out of consciousness, with two crewmen dead, he navigated by the Pole
Star and fought to fly the Lancaster across the North Sea and back to England.
After five weeks recovering, Reid was posted to No. 617 Squadron at Woodhall Spa in
January 1944. He flew his first combat mission with the famed "Dambusters" on
18 April 1944 against a rail marshalling yard near Paris. On D-Day, he dropped "
window" anti-radar foil against German air defenses. Reid flew many missions using
12,000 or 14,000 pound "Tallboy" bombs against V-1 rocket installations and
E-boat and U-boat pens. On a mission against a V-weapon storage dump on 31 July 1944, an
errant bomb from another bomber struck Reid's Lancaster and severed its control cables.
The aircraft entered a steep dive, pinned him to his seat, and then broke apart.
Reid
was thrown clear and got a good parachute! Landing in German-held France, he was
captured and made prisoner first at Stalag Luft III and later at Stalag Luft
IV until May 1945. He left the Royal Air Force in early 1946 and entered college.
In 1949 after graduation from West of Scotland Agricultural College, he began a career
in agricultural management. He retired in 1988 and lives with his wife, Violet, in
Scotland.
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2000
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During World War II, about 16,000 aircrew destined to fly in the Royal Air Force (RAF) and Royal Navy trained in the United States. There were four separate programs that often mixed cadets from the United Kingdom with those from the United States. In one program, six British Flying Training Schools (BFTS) were established in Florida, Texas, Oklahoma, Arizona, and California. Bill Reid trained at an airfield near Lancaster, California. He was one of 4,000 RAF pilots trained at a BFTS in a program known as an "All Through School."
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