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Veterans Affairs Canada - Canada Remembers
 
In memory of
Pilot Officer
 GORDON FREDERICK  HUMPHREY
who died on August 17, 1944

Military Service:
Service Number: J/89694
Age: 23
Force: Air Force
Unit: Royal Canadian Air Force
Division: 183 Sqdn.

Additional Information:
Son of Francis Gordon Humphrey and Helen Ann Humphrey, of Jasper, Ontario, Canada.

Commemorated on Page 340 of the
Second World War Book of Remembrance.
[CLICK HERE FOR AN IMAGE OF THIS PAGE]
[TO ORDER A COPY OF THIS PAGE CLICK HERE]

There is a digital photo collection relating to
GORDON FREDERICK  HUMPHREY .

[CLICK HERE TO VIEW PHOTOS]
[CLICK HERE TO ADD TO THE COLLECTION]


Burial Information:
Cemetery:
RUNNYMEDE MEMORIAL
Surrey, United Kingdom
Grave Reference: Panel 250.
Location: During the Second World War more than 116,000 men and women of the Air Forces of the British Commonwealth gave their lives in service. More than 17,000 of these were members of the Royal Canadian Air Force, or Canadians serving with the Royal Air Force. Approximately one-third of all who died have no known grave. Of these, 20,450 are commemorated by name on the Runnymede Memorial, which is situated at Englefield Green, near Egham, 32 kilometres by road west of London.

The design of the Runnymede Memorial is original and striking. On the crest of Cooper's Hill, overlooking the Thames, a square tower dominates a cloister, in the centre of which rests the Stone of Remembrance. The cloistered walks terminate in two lookouts, one facing towards Windsor, and the other towards London Airport at Heathrow. The names of the dead are inscribed on the stone reveals of the narrow windows in the cloisters and the lookouts. They include those of 3,050 Canadian airmen.

Above the three-arched entrance to the cloister is a great stone eagle with the Royal Air Force motto, "Per Ardua ad Astra". On each side is the inscription:

IN THIS CLOISTER ARE RECORDED THE NAMES OF TWENTY THOUSAND AIRMEN WHO HAVE NO KNOWN GRAVE. THEY DIED FOR FREEDOM IN RAID AND SORTIE OVER THE BRITISH ISLES AND THE LANDS AND SEAS OF NORTHERN AND WESTERN EUROPE

In the tower a vaulted shrine, which provides a quiet place for contemplation, contains illuminated verses by Paul H. Scott.


Information courtesy of the Commonwealth War Graves Commission.


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Updated: 2003-2-24