Enter any website URL to analyze its complete technology stack

Executive Summary for 75nzsquadron.wordpress.com

1273 Response Time (ms)
200 HTTP Status
30 Scripts
48 Images
33 Links
HTTP/1.1 Protocol

SEO & Content Analysis

Basic Information
Page Title
75(nz)squadron | About my father and the aircrews of 75(NZ) Squadron RAF – the largest online resource for 75(NZ) Squadron RAF in the world
Meta Description
Sometime on Wednesday the 21st of July 1943, 14 young men arrived at an airfield in Cambridgeshire. By the end of the following month, 2 would have left, 1 would be a prisoner of war and 6 would be dead. The 5 that remained would be at the airfield for another 3 months. One of…
HTML Language
en
Robots.txt Present
Sitemap Present
total_urls: 1001 products: 1
SEO Meta Tags
content-type: text/html; charset=UTF-8
Page Content
About my father and the aircrews of 75(NZ) Squadron RAF – the largest online resource for 75(NZ) Squadron RAF in the worldA portrait of Dad, I believe taken after he was commissioned in late 1943.Sometime on Wednesday the 21st of July 1943, 14 young men arrived at an airfield in Cambridgeshire. By the end of the following month, 2 would have left, 1 would be a prisoner of war and 6 would be dead. The 5 that remained would be at the airfield for another 3 months. One of those 5 was my father. This is his story, the story of the boys he flew with, of those that arrived before them and those that arrived after them.My father was Robert Douglas ‘Jock’ Sommerville and the airfield was Mepal, the home of 75(NZ) Squadron RAF.On the 29th August 2011 my father died. I knew he had flown in the war, but when sitting down to write a eulogy for his funeral service, I realised I knew nothing about that time in his life. Probably as a way of dealing with his loss I decided to start to try to find out about this period of Bob’s life and perhaps, why he had never spoken about it.So far, its been an amazing journey. I have come into contact with so many people and it is their interest and generosity that has built the blog to the point where its currently is.Starting with a simple desire to find out more about my own Father, it rapidly grew to provide information for relatives of other airmen in the Squadron and it is this constant contact that has let it grow beyond anything I could have imagined.As time has progressed and my understanding of the Squadron has become clearer, I have found my efforts splitting between maintaining the blog and answering inquiries and trying to order and make sense of the Squadron records. A significant activity I have started is to transfer the Squadron Operational Record Books into a searchable database – by doing this, we will be able to see every airman who flew in every crew, in every Operation flown during the War. It will take a few years to complete, but will ultimately provide a definitive record of those that flew with 75(NZ) Squadron RAF.I now know that ‘Jock’ had, based on his brevet of an Air Bomber, the second highest  total in the Squadron on War Ops – it took me 3 years to find this out and it was something, in truth, he never knew and would probably have not cared to know, if he had been told. But, as his son, it’s something that makes me incredibly proud of him as a man and as my Father.I have no doubt that things will have to change once the database is complete. My original intention was to start with a website, but perhaps the task of starting from scratch was, at the time, simply too big a task. A dedicated website is now an inevitability – but the blog section of this WordPress site will stay come what may – it’s where this incredible journey began.The blog has so far proved to me that there is still a deep respect and desire to know the stories of our Fathers, Grandfathers, and Uncles and it is this task that they have entrusted to us. We must all ensure that their stories are told and never forgotten and most importantly I believe, that these stories of 75(NZ) Squadron and the braves boys that flew in it are held for younger generations to discover and understand.If you read this and either have an interest in 75(NZ) Squadron RAF, or have a story about a relative who flew with the squadron, please contact me, the stories of these brave boys need to be told and understood before they are lost forever.You can contact me atinfo@75nzsquadron.commany thanks for your interest and care.Simon;

Network & Infrastructure

DNS & Hosting
IP Address
192.0.78.12
Reverse DNS
Not detected
SSL/TLS Certificate
Issuer
CN=E8, O=Let's Encrypt, C=US
Protocol Tls13
Expires In 65 days
HSTS Enabled

Technology Stack

Content Management Systems
WordPress WordPress (robots.txt)
JavaScript Frameworks
Ember
CSS Frameworks
Tailwind CSS
Server Technologies
Generator: WordPress.com PHP (inferred from WordPress)

Services & Integrations

Analytics & Tracking
Google Analytics GA4
E-commerce Platforms
PrestaShop

CDN & Media Providers

Web Fonts
Google Fonts

Dynamic Analysis & Security

Dynamic JavaScript Analysis
Angular (Data Attributes) Bootstrap (CSS Classes) ES6+ JavaScript Features jQuery (CDN Detection) Single Page Application (SPA) - Suspected Web Server: nginx
Security Headers
HSTS
Server Headers
nginx

Resource Analysis

External Resource Hosts
0.gravatar.com
1.gravatar.com
2.gravatar.com
4.bp.blogspot.com
75nzsquadron.files.wordpress.com
75nzsquadron.wordpress.com
fonts-api.wp.com
fonts.gstatic.com
gmpg.org
i0.wp.com
ih1.redbubble.net
public-api.wordpress.com
s0.wp.com
s1.wp.com
s2.wp.com
stats.wp.com
widgets.wp.com
wordpress.com
wp.me
www.users.greenbee.net
... and 2 more hosts
UI Frameworks & Libraries
Bootstrap (Class Names) D3.js Ionic (Class Names) Swiper Vuetify (Class Names)

Analysis Errors

Analysis Warnings & Errors
The following issues occurred during analysis:
  • Reverse DNS failed: No such host is known.
Analysis Complete

Analyzed 75nzsquadron.wordpress.com with 4 technologies detected across 7 categories

Analysis completed in 1273 ms • 2026-03-23 09:26:44 UTC