Reid was a 21-year-old acting
flight lieutenant, serving in 61 Squadron when he took part in the raid on Düsseldorf,
Germany, for which he was awarded his VC. On the night of 3 November 1943, while still underway to the target area in Düsseldorf, the windscreen of Reid's Lancaster (serial LM360) was shattered by rounds from an attacking
Messerschmitt Bf 110 night fighter, badly damaging the cockpit and rear gun turret. In spite of multiple injuries Reid continued on his mission, though was again attacked shortly afterwards by a
Focke-Wulf Fw 190, killing his navigator and fatally wounding the
wireless operator. Reid himself was further wounded, as was the
flight engineer. A section of the Lancaster's starboard tailplane had also been shot away. Reid again decided to carry on, saying later in an interview that his main reason for pressing on was that turning back would have involved flying through or across the following bomber stream, with the danger of mid-air collision. Reaching the target, Reid released his bomb load and set course for home. Plotting a course back to Syerston, without a navigator, Reid gratefully noticed the searchlights of
RAF Shipdham, a USAAF-operated base in
Norfolk. Despite his wounds and loss of blood, Reid successfully landed his plane, though its damaged undercarriage collapsed and the aircraft slid along the runway. The wireless operator died in Shipdham's medical centre but five of the crew survived. Reid was awarded the VC on 14 December 1943, with the citation reading: ==617 Squadron==