A Lancashire airman
whose plane was shot down 63 years ago was buried with
full military honours on Tuesday.
The remains of six
servicemen, including Norman Nuttall from Blackburn,
were discovered during an excavation of a Dutch field
last year.
A military burial was
held for the Second World War bomber crew in the town of
Bergen.

(Picture courtesy of Co
Maarschalkerweerd)
Members of the RAF's
Queen's Colour Squadron were at the service where Sgt
Nuttall was finally laid to rest.
'Tremendous shock'
Sgt Nuttall's
stepbrother, Kenneth, said: "I only learned that his
remains had been found quite recently and it was a
tremendous shock."
Mr Nuttall, from
Mevagissey, Cornwall, said he knew his stepbrother had
been shot down, but not the exact location.
He said: "I'd wondered
about it for a long time and did think he might have
bailed out over the sea.
"I am still trying to
come to terms with this news - I don't think I've quite
reconciled myself to his body being found."

(Picture courtesy of Co
Maarschalkerweerd)
Single coffin
The remains of five
other airmen - three from Britain and two from New
Zealand - were discovered during excavation in the area.
It also uncovered parts
of the RAF crew's Stirling N3654 aircraft.
Tuesday's burial is in
line with the families' wishes that the men be given a
full military burial on the anniversary of the crash in
May 1941.
All six crewmen will be
buried in a single coffin with a separate headstone each
at Bergen's General Cemetery.

(Picture courtesy of Co
Maarschalkerweerd)
Memorial to be
unveiled
They will be laid to
rest near the grave of aircraft pilot Wing Commander
Herbert Dale, from Preston, Lancashire, whose body was
found shortly after the crash.
The people of nearby
Opmeer, the site of the aircraft crash, will later
unveil a memorial to all seven airmen.
The Stirling N3654 of
Number 15 Squadron was on its way from RAF Alconbury,
Cambridgeshire, for a raid on Berlin on the fateful
night when it was shot down by a German night fighter.
It crashed into a field
500 yards from Opmeer, near Bergen, killing all seven
men on board.
As well as Sgt Nuttall,
the British officers were from Gainsborough,
Lincolnshire; Gillingham, Kent and Stroud in
Gloucestershire.