Francis Neville Sloss

Corporal Francis Neville Sloss died on 18th June 1943 in a training accident on board the Mk I Avro Lancaster I ED439 OL-N in Lincolnshire.

Corporal

Francis Neville Sloss

1544915

Corporal Francis Neville Sloss of Bangor, Co. Down served as Technician, part of the ground crew with R.A.F. 83 (Pathfinder) Squadron in 1943.

Corporal Francis Neville Sloss (1544915) served in the Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve during the Second World War. He was the son of Francis Alexander Sloss and Alice Mary Frances Violet Sloss of Bangor, Co. Down.

Sloss was a Wireless Technician, part of the ground crew in R.A.F. 83 (Pathfinder) Squadron. On 18th June 1943, he was an Observer on Avro Lancaster I ED439 OL-N when it crashed at Highgate Farm, Swaton, Lincolnshire, England. He was 19 years old.

The Lancaster’s Pilot was Australian Flight Sergeant Max Kieran Cummings. The crew was new to R.A.F. 83 (Pathfinder) Squadron at R.A.F. Wyton, Cambridgeshire, England. Recently posted from R.A.F. 467 Squadron at R.A.F. Bottesford, Leicestershire, England, they completed a night raid on Cologne, Germany the previous night.

Lancaster ED439 Crash

At 1010hrs on 18th June 1943, Cummings’ crew took off for “daytime bombing practice”. Research suggests the crew tested new equipment as Sloss was one of two technicians joining the regular crew. Eyewitnesses report the Lancaster dived from low cloud into the farm near Scredington. The plane clipped the roof of an unoccupied farmhouse before crashing into the fields behind. It struck a copse of trees and burst into flames.

Locals arrived to offer help but the flames and debris suggested there was little they could do. Ammunition from the plane began to explode creating further danger for those on the ground.

Neil Trotter was a 7-year-old pupil at a nearby primary school and saw the plane pass low overhead. He remembered seeing an open escape hatch with an airman debating whether to bale out. His mother was one of the first on the scene at the crash site while his father served on an R.A.F. base nearby.

Remembering the crew of Lancaster ED439

Last Name First Name(s) Rank Role Information
Cummings Max Kieran Flight Sergeant Pilot R.A.A.F. 408904
Wilcox Francis William Sergeant Navigator R.A.F. 537936
Luker Henry Whitfield Sergeant Flight Engineer R.A.A.F. 6765
Roughley John Sergeant Bomb Aimer R.A.F. 1431821
Cheshire Harry William Sergeant Wireless Operator R.A.F. 1336708
Woodcock Norman Sergeant Mid-Upper Gunner R.A.F. 1588938
Taylor Robert Allan Flight Sergeant Rear Gunner R.C.A.F. R/113958
Bond Thomas John Corporal Instrument Technician R.A.F. 1024724
Sloss Francis Neville Corporal Wireless Technician R.A.F. 1544915

Francis Neville Sloss’ grave is in Section 1D, Grave 17 of Bangor Cemetery, Bangor, Co. Down. His headstone bears the inscription:

At the going down of the sun, and in the morning, we will remember them.

His name is also on a memorial plaque in Scredington Parish Church, Lincolnshire, England. The church unveiled the memorial on 16th June 2013, 70 years after the incident. Two years of research and planning preceded the unveiling. Rev Chris Harrington, Archdeacon of Lincoln Tim Barker, and Canon Peter Hill led the service. Relatives of those killed attended the ceremony where cadets laid wreaths for each of those lost. There followed a flypast from the Lancaster, Spitfire, and Hurricane of the Battle of Britain Memorial Flight. On 19th June 2016, local residents joined Cadets of No. 2160 (Sleaford) Squadron and No. 17 (Coningsby) Squadron for a memorial service in the church.