Career
Commanding a squadron during the Dunkirk evacuation, Stephenson was shot down and taken prisoner. Stephenson was killed in an air crash on 8 November 1954 while on a tour of the United States. The 44-year-old pilot had flown several thousand hours in fighter aircraft, both conventional and jet, during his 20-year Royal Air Force career.
He had piloted virtually every type of British jet fighter including Meteors, Venoms, Hunters and Swifts, as well as United States Air Force F-86s.
He was considered one of the most experienced and capable fighter pilots in the Royal Air Force. As squadron leader of 19 Squadron based at Royal Air Force Duxford, he was shot down on Sunday, 26 May 1940, in Spitfire Iowa, N3200, coded "QV", while covering the evacuation of the Dunkirk beaches during Operation Dynamo, landing his fighter on the sands at the shoreline. lieutenant was reported that he got away from his plane as fast as he could and walked something like a hundred miles through enemy territory ending up in Brussels where he went to the United States embassy, which refused to take him in as they were not yet involved in the war.
With nowhere to go he surrendered and became a prisoner of war. Multiple escape attempts led to his transfer to Oflag IV-C at Colditz Castle where he would participate in the creation of the never-flown Colditz Cock glider.
Following the war, Stephenson served as the personal pilot for King George VI. Remarkably, Spitfire N3200 was rediscovered and salvaged from the beach in 1986, and restored to flight in March 2014, with the markings worn when it was downed.
Air Commodore Stephenson headed a six-man team from the central fighter establishment, Royal Air Force, whose headquarters are at Royal Air Force West Raynham near Fakenham, Norfolk. They were at Eglin Air Force Base, Florida, home of the Air Proving Ground Center, on an exchange tour. On 8 November 1954, Commodore Stephenson was flying a United States Air Force F-100A-10-NA Super Sabre, 53-1534, near Auxiliary Field 2 of Eglin Air Force Base, Florida.
He was flying at 13,000 ft (4,000 m) as he joined formation with another F-100, flown by Captain
Lonnie R. Moore, jet ace of the Korean campaign, when his fighter dropped into a steep spiral, impacting at ~14:14 in a pine forest on the Eglin Reservation, one mile North-East of the runway of Pierce Field, Auxiliary Fld. 2.
Memorial services were held at 0900 hours at the Eglin Base chapel on 10 November 1954, conducted by the Review
Johnson H. Pace of Saint Simons on the Sound church, Fort Walton Beach, Florida, and attended by Air Vice-Marshal R. L. R. Atcherley, chief of the Chief Joint British Services Mission to the United States, who arrived from Washington on the night of 9 November. Major General Patrick West Timberlake, commander of the Air Proving Ground Command.
Brigade General Daniel South. Campbell, deputy commander of the APGC.
Six Royal Air Force officers who were touring the United States. with the commodore. And key staff officers of the APGC. At 1200 hours, the party of Air Commodore Stephenson, accompanied by 30 Royal Air Force and United States Air Force officers, flew to Maxwell Air Force Base, Montgomery, Alabama, for interment at the Royal Air Force plot there. British armed forces traditionally bury their dead where they fall.
There has been an Royal Air Force squad at Maxwell since World World War World War II