Flight Sergeant
Kenneth Gore

1920 - 21 October 1943

Leeds - Gieten


 


Kenneth Gore was born 1920 in Leeds, son of Bertie and Mabel Gore.

The Gore family came from Leeds and, as Christadelphians, were conscientious objectors. Ken had not joined this religion when, in the summer of 1939, he won a scholarship to read Classics at University College, Oxford. He matriculated at Oxford, occupied rooms and studied there, but was called up to serve in the RAF early in 1940.

He became an air gunner with 7 Squadron. He joined the crew of F/S Donald Watson, replacing Sgt James Hurst.

The crew consisted of:


7 Sqn RAF

Flight Sergeant Donald Moulton Watson, Pilot
Sergeant David Srac Ian Wilson, Engineer
Sergeant Frank Edward White, Navigator
Sergeant Ernest Charles Pocknell, Air Bomber
Sergeant Edwin Carter, Wireless Operator
Sergeant Leonard Walter Searle, Air Gunner

On the night of 20/21 October 1943, the crew was scheduled to fly an operation to Leipzig. This was F/S Gore's third mission with 7 Squadron. They were one of 73 Pathfinder crews that would lead the main force of 285 bombers. 20 year old pilot F/S Donald Watson piloted Lancaster JB175 MG-A. The plane was intercepted en route to Leipzig by Oblt. Schnaufer, who had taken off from airbase Quackenbrück, just over the Dutch/German border.

People of the town of Gieten heard the machine guns and the roar of engines. Several people witnessed the Lancaster crash at 19.20,  just outside the town of Gieten, near the Zwanemeer forest. The fuselage came down just behind the cemetery, the tail section some distance away, on one side of a road. A wing lay in a field on the other side of that road.

The village was saved from disaster as the bomb load, consisting of seven 500 pound bombs and one 4,000 pound 'cookie', failed to explode. The next day, one crew member was recovered 200 meters from the wreck and buried on the 22nd. The others were not recovered until 10 November as the Germans had a difficult time defusing the unexploded bombs still in the wreckage.

The whole crew perished in the crash. They are buried in Gieten. F/S Gore was 23.


(picture by Wim Bastiaanse)

Gieten, The Netherlands

See Also:
F/S Donald Watson
Sgt David Wilson
Sgt Frank White
Sgt Ernest Pocknell
Sgt Edwin Carter
Sgt Leonard Searle

Sources:
Mr. Paul Croft
Ab A. Jansen, Wespennest Leeuwarden, part II, Baarn 1976
Mr. Dave Cheetham
CWGC

7 Squadron Association

Acknowledgements:
Mr. Henk Alting
RAF Squadron crest © Crown Copyright is reproduced with the permission of the Controller of Her Majesty’s Stationery Office

Directions to Gieten General Cemetery


If you have any suggestions, comments or additional information, please contact me.

This website is dedicated to the men and women who died and/or are buried in The Netherlands during World War II.

 

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