Ronald Frank Lander was born in New Plymouth on 31 January 1921, the son of Arthur and Ada (nee Spurdle) Lander. He was educated at New Plymouth Boy’s High School before working as a teller for the Commercial Bank of Australia.
He joined the RNZAF in March 1941 and began his training. The following year he was promoted to Sergeant and sent to England for further training before being posted to 104 Squadron at Kabrit, Egypt in June 1942.
Later in the month he was Second Pilot of a Wellington aircraft which took off on a bombing strike but crashed shortly after leaving Kabrit Aerodrome, killing all on board except for one crew member. The accident, which occurred on 28 June 1942 was thought to have been caused by the failure of an engine due to a leak and then an uncontrollable dive subsequent to releasing the bombs at low altitude.
Ronald Lander is buried in the Fayid War Cemetery, Egypt. He was 21.
Please do not reproduce these images without permission from Puke Ariki.
Contact us for more information or you can order images online here.
The information on this website is provided for general research and reference only. While we try to keep content accurate and current, we make no guarantees about its completeness or correctness. It should not be considered a replacement for a LIM or a Property Report. Some content is supplied by third parties. Puke Ariki has not verified this content and users should check its accuracy before relying on it.The inclusion of a building on the website does not imply heritage status. See SCHED1 in the NPDC District Plan for a list of buildings that have rules about what can happen to or around them (administered by NPDC). See the New Zealand Heritage List for a list of buildings that are celebrated for their heritage significance but are not subject to rules (administered by Heritage New Zealand Pouhere Taonga). Should any corrections need to be made to the records or for more information please contact us.