Raymond Hesselyn

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Raymond_Hesselyn an entity of type: Thing

Raymond Brown Hesselyn, MBE, DFC, DFM & Bar (13 March 1921 – 14 November 1963) was a New Zealand fighter pilot and flying ace of the Second World War, credited with the destruction of at least 18 enemy aircraft while flying with the Royal Air Force over Europe and the Mediterranean. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Raymond Hesselyn
rdf:langString Raymond Brown Hesselyn
rdf:langString 'Hess'
rdf:langString Raymond Brown Hesselyn
rdf:langString RAF Hospital Uxbridge, England
rdf:langString Dunedin, New Zealand
xsd:integer 12705009
xsd:integer 1096411102
xsd:integer 1940
rdf:langString New Zealand
rdf:langString United Kingdom
rdf:langString Second World War * Channel Front * Siege of Malta
xsd:date 1921-03-13
xsd:date 1963-11-14
rdf:langString 'Hess'
rdf:langString Raymond Brown Hesselyn, MBE, DFC, DFM & Bar (13 March 1921 – 14 November 1963) was a New Zealand fighter pilot and flying ace of the Second World War, credited with the destruction of at least 18 enemy aircraft while flying with the Royal Air Force over Europe and the Mediterranean. Born in Dunedin, Hesselyn joined the Royal New Zealand Air Force in 1940 and completed his flight training the following year. He was sent to Europe to serve with the Royal Air Force. Initially flying operations on the Channel Front, he was later sent to Malta as a reinforcement for the island's aerial defences. Flying with No. 249 Squadron, Hesselyn's first 12 victories were claimed during the defence of Malta in the period from March to July 1942. Repatriated to England for a rest, he later collaborated in the writing of Spitfires over Malta, a book about his experiences on the island. Returning to flight operations after a period of instructing duties, he flew a number of operations on the Channel Front with No. 222 Squadron before he was shot down and made a prisoner of war in October 1943. Liberated in 1945, he transferred to the Royal Air Force two years later and attained the rank of squadron leader before his death in 1963 of stomach cancer, aged 42.
rdf:langString Co-author of Spitfires Over Malta
rdf:langString Hillingdon and Uxbridge Cemetery, Hillingdon, England
xsd:string United Kingdom
xsd:string New Zealand
xsd:gYear 1963
xsd:gYear 1940
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 27057
xsd:string No. 41 Squadron(1951–1952)

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