Find your ancestors in Airmen Died In The Second World War, 1939-1946

If your ancestor was one of nearly 129,000 service personnel who died whilst serving under Royal Air Force control or with their own national air services during the Second World War, expect to find their details here.

These are records of close to 129,000 airmen and airwomen who died while under Royal Air Force control or with their own national air services during the Second World War. The data has been meticulously collated by our friends at The Naval & Military Press

Typically expect to find the following information in these records:

  • First name(s)
  • Last name
  • Service number
  • Rank
  • Function
  • Service
  • Base
  • Command
  • Unit
  • Aircraft type
  • Aircraft serial number
  • Date of death
  • Cause of death
  • Age at death
  • Native of
  • Place of burial or where commemorated
  • Honours and awards
  • Additional notes

Discover more about these records

Compiled by Chris Hobson, and licensed from The Naval & Military Press, this is the first comprehensive and detailed record to be published of all British, Commonwealth, Dominion and European Allied airmen who died while under Royal Air Force control or with their own national air services during the Second World War.

Nearly 129,000 airmen and airwomen are commemorated in this collection, with details including their unit, base, place of residence, cause of their death where known, and aircraft types and serial numbers.

The casualties range from the newly-recruited airmen who died while still in training to the air marshals; from the Battle of Britain fighter pilots to the veteran bomber crews; and all those who were killed in accidents while training.

Personnel from the British, Australian, Canadian, Indian, New Zealand, Rhodesian and South African air and naval air services are listed together with those from the European Allied air services of Belgium, Czechoslovakia, France, Greece, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland, the United States and Yugoslavia who served with the Royal Air Force. Also included are locally recruited airmen in Africa, the Middle East and Asia.