Service militaire
Lieu de l’enterrement/commemoration
Fils de Alexander et Polly Barabonoff, de White Beech, Saskatchewan.
Commémoré sur le Mémorial de St. Donat et le Mémorial du Liberator III ARC.
Galerie numérique de Sous-officier breveté de 2e classe Joseph Alexander Barabonoff
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Galerie numérique de
Sous-officier breveté de 2e classe Joseph Alexander Barabonoff
This newspaper clipping appeared in a 1946 edition of "The Guardian" newspaper, Charlottetown, PEI. The airplane mentioned in the article was a Liberator aircraft # 3701 enroute from Gander, Newfoundland to Dorval, Quebec. It crashed and burned on the west side of a foothill of Black Mountain in Quebec. There is a Memorial Cairn on Black Mountain that was erected in memory of the twenty four gallant lads who lost their lives there.
Galerie numérique de
Sous-officier breveté de 2e classe Joseph Alexander Barabonoff
Warrant Officer Class II JOSEPH ALEXANDER BARABONOFF is commemorated on this panel of the Ottawa Memorial. He is one of 24 members of the RCAF, who were killed when the Liberator bomber in which they were flying from Gander, Newfoundland to Dorval, Quebec, crashed into Black Mountain, near St. Donat, Quebec on October 20, 1943. The plane wreckage was not found until June 1946. All of the airmen listed on this panel died in this crash.
Galerie numérique de
Sous-officier breveté de 2e classe Joseph Alexander Barabonoff
Galerie d'images
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This newspaper clipping appeared in a 1946 edition of "The Guardian" newspaper, Charlottetown, PEI. The airplane mentioned in the article was a Liberator aircraft # 3701 enroute from Gander, Newfoundland to Dorval, Quebec. It crashed and burned on the west side of a foothill of Black Mountain in Quebec. There is a Memorial Cairn on Black Mountain that was erected in memory of the twenty four gallant lads who lost their lives there.
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A picture of the memorial plaque erected at the site of the crash that took the lives of 24 Canadians.
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Warrant Officer Class II JOSEPH ALEXANDER BARABONOFF is commemorated on this panel of the Ottawa Memorial. He is one of 24 members of the RCAF, who were killed when the Liberator bomber in which they were flying from Gander, Newfoundland to Dorval, Quebec, crashed into Black Mountain, near St. Donat, Quebec on October 20, 1943. The plane wreckage was not found until June 1946. All of the airmen listed on this panel died in this crash.
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List of airmen killed in this plane crash. Source: Globe and Mail, November 4, 1943.
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Dedicatory inscription at the Ottawa Memorial
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The Ottawa Memorial
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Submitted for the project, Operation Picture Me
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Submitted for the project, Operation Picture Me
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Submitted for the project, Operation Picture Me
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Submitted for the project, Operation Picture Me
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Submitted for the project, Operation Picture Me
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Submitted for the project, Operation Picture Me
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Submitted for the project, Operation Picture Me
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Submitted for the project, Operation Picture Me
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Submitted for the project, Operation Picture Me
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Submitted for the project, Operation Picture Me
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Remembered on the pages of the Ottawa Journal. Submitted for the project, Operation Picture Me
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From the Toronto Star October 1943. Submitted for the project Operation Picture Me
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From the Toronto Star October 1943. Submitted for the project Operation Picture Me
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Ottawa Memorial ... In honoured memory of the men and women of the Air Forces of the British Commonwealth and Empire who gave their lives in Canada, in the United States of America and in neighbouring lands and seas and who have no known grave.
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Warrant Officer Class II Joseph Barabonoff is also commemorated on the Ottawa Memorial, Ottawa, ON.
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From a World War 2 issue of the Vancouver Province c.1943. Submitted for the project Operation Picture Me
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From a World War 2 issue of the Vancouver Province c.1943. Submitted for the project Operation Picture Me
Dans les livres du souvenir
Inscription commémorative sur la :
Page 134 du Livre du Souvenir de la Seconde Guerre mondiale.
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Télécharger cette page
CIMETIÈRE CATHOLIQUE DE ST-DONAT Quebec, Canada
Pour plus d’informations, visitez la Commission des sépultures de guerre du Commonwealth (site disponible en anglais seulement).
L’image du coquelicot est une marque déposée de la Légion royale canadienne (Direction nationale) et est utilisée avec sa permission. Cliquez ici pour en savoir plus sur le coquelicot.
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