The last surviving Dambuster has died at the age of 101.
George Leonard ‘Johnny’ Johnson was the last surviving original member of the famous ‘Dambusters’ raid of 1943.
He died peacefully at his care home in Westbury on Trym, Bristol, surrounded by his family.
The retired Royal Air Force officer rose to fame as a bomb aimer during Operation Chastise, which was tasked with attacking German dams during the Second World War.
Mr Johnson was aged just 22 when, as part of the RAF’s 617 Squadron, he took part in the raid.

The last surviving Dambuster has died at the age of 101. George Leonard ‘Johnny’ Johnson was the last surviving original member of the famous ‘Dambusters’ raid of 1943. Above: He was awarded an MBE by the Queen in 2017 after a long-running campaign backed by TV presenter Carol Vorderman

Mr Johnson was aged just 23 when, as part of the RAF’s 617 Squadron, he took part in the raid, which targeted dams in the Ruhr Valley in the industrial heart of Germany with bouncing bombs. Above: Mr Johnson (front left), with his Lancaster Bomber crew in 1943
The attacks with bouncing bombs released thousands of tonnes of water into areas in the Ruhr Valley which were crucial to Germany’s war effort.
It was Mr Johnson’s job to target the Sorpe Dam in the raid, and he demanded nine dummy runs to ensure he hit his target.
The operation has gone down in history as being among the most successful aerial assaults of the Second World War.
Johnson joined the RAF in June 1940, just over a year after the start of the Second World War.
Before taking part in the Dambusters raid, he met his wife, Gwynn, who passed away in 2005.
Johnson’s first mission was in August 1942 and, in November of that year, he completed training to be a bomb aimer.
He completed a tour with 97 Squadron and then transferred to 617 Squadron for the highly secret Operation Chastise, which took place on the night of May 16-17 in 1943.
Drawing on hand-picked crews from Britain, the US, Canada, New Zealand and Australia, the squadron’s mission was to damage several dams in Germany’s Ruhr valley that provided a vital source of power to the country’s industrial region
The bouncing bombs themselves were developed by aircraft engineer Barnes Wallis.

The attacks released thousands of tonnes of water into areas which were crucial to Germany’s war effort. It was Johnson’s job to target the Sorpe Dam in the raid, and he demanded nine dummy runs to ensure he hit his target. Above: The damage inflicted on the Eder dam
What made it so dangerous was that, to be successful, the Dambusters had to fly at a height of 60ft, so the specially-adapted mines they were carrying – codenamed Upkeep – would bounce over the water before hitting the dams’ walls and sinking 30ft.
The mines would then explode, causing the dams’ walls to be breached and releasing millions of tonnes of water into the valleys below.
The Dambusters trained by flying over the Derwent reservoir and a dam in the Lake District.
On the night of May 16 1943, 19 Lancaster bombers, led by Wing Commander Guy Gibson, set off for Germany with the aim of destroying the Mohne, the Eder and the Sorpe dams.
The bombs they were carrying weighed four tonnes each.
Their mission was hailed a success after two of the dams, the Eder and the Mohne, were breached, releasing 300 million tonnes of water.
With the Sorpe dam, it was decided because of the way it had been built that that it needed to be targeted directly, rather than with bouncing bombs.

Mr Johnson, who was born the village of Hameringham, near Horncastle, Lincolnshire, in 1921, now lives at a care home in Bristol
Johnson’s team were given no time to practice but he still had to hit the dam’s wall. Much to his crew’s annoyance, he therefore insisted that that they fly over the dam nine times before dropping the bomb on the tenth.
The team did hit the dam, but it wasn’t breached. However, the water released by the two breached dams damaged 92 Nazi factories and destroyed a further 12.
Overall, 133 Allied aircrew took part – 90 from the RAF, 29 from the Royal Canadian Air Force, 12 from the Royal Australian Air Force and two from the Royal New Zealand Air Force.
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A total of 53 servicemen lost their lives and another three were taken captive.
The squadron’s bravery earned it 33 decorations, including the Victoria Cross for Wing Commander Gibson.
It was also credited with providing a major boost for the morale of troops, and in 1955 led to the film The Dam Busters, starring Sir Michael Redgrave.

Archive photo of Squadron Leader Johnny Johnson – the last of the Dambusters – holding up a news paper reporting on the dam raid

Johnson was decorated with the Distinguished Flying Medal at Buckingham Palace and served out the rest of the war in training positions
After the mission, Johnson flew on 18 more operations with 617 Squadron up until April 1944, when his commanding officer Flight Lieutenant Joe McCarthy discovered Johnson’s wife was pregnant and insisted he stand down.
Johnson was decorated with the Distinguished Flying Medal at Buckingham Palace and served out the rest of the war in training positions.
He then qualified as a navigator and stayed in the RAF until 1962, when he retired as a Squadron Leader.
Johnson then retrained as a teacher and worked in primary schools and later in adult education.
He was awarded an MBE by the Queen in 2017 after a long-running campaign backed by TV presenter Carol Vorderman.
Johnson remained in the RAF until 1962 and had risen to the rank of Squadron Leader by the time of his retirement.
Johnson became a primary school teacher and had three children – son Morgan and daughters Susan and Jenny – with his wife Gwyn.
His death comes after Squadron Leader Lawrence ‘Benny’ Goodman’, the last surviving pilot from the Dambusters squadron, died in July last year.

The Daily Mail’s report of the Dambusters raid told how ‘two mighty walls of water were… rolling irresistibly down the Ruhr and Eder valleys’