Those who came through WW1 seldom spoke of their experiences, so
dreadful were they.
My father came into
this category. So, as children, we knew almost nothing about how he suffered
when fighting the Turks in Mesopotamia (now Iraq ). It was not until well after
his early death that his letters home from the battlefields about his
experiences and how he was shot, then found to be alive among the dead bodies,
and brought back to England
from the Middle East , did we know some details.
He never really recovered.
In my case, WW2 was a
much cleaner affair.
My children, I
believe, never enquired about my part in it – until now, when my younger son,
Pete, not only asked me about my experiences but wanted a printed account. I
think that most of what I now write is in my unpublished autobiography. But
here it is in essence, mainly for him.
A lot of what I did is
of little account, so I will tell only of my near contact with the enemy –
which wasn’t much.
Having crossed the
Atlantic in The Duchess of Richmond (which
was fairly safe as the ship was fast and submarine warfare still not a major
force), and reached the USA in 1940 as a
refugee, I was anxious to return to join the RAF to fight for my country. So,
when old enough, I boarded a Swedish vessel (Axel Yohnson) in New
York to sail north to Halifax , in Nova Scotia . There, in
1942, we were assembled as part of a convoy to cross the now far more dangerous
Atlantic .
Convoys are slow – as
slow as the slowest ship involved. So, at some 10 knots we set off with a
Canadian destroyer as escort. This escort left and we were on our own.
I awoke one morning to
find our few passengers and crew standing by the lifeboats. The convoy had been
attacked by U-boats during the night. There were now far fewer ships in the
convoy. I had slept through all the excitement as Nazi sub-mariners beneath the
waves nearby had been attacking us with considerable success. Although unseen,
I had now been a bit too near to the enemy for comfort, and unable to fight back.
Eventually a British destroyer appeared to see us into Liverpool .
I joined up almost
immediately on landing. It was 1942.
Instead of starting my
flying training right away I was told to return to civvy street until I could
be fitted into the system. As the weather was so bad in England ,
trainee pilots had to wait for vacancies in airfields abroad where the climate
was more conducive to elementary and advanced flying training.
To fill up this
waiting time I took a job as a farm labourer. Rationing was strict and food
scarce. So it seemed to me that working on the land might, in a small way, help
the national effort.
One day I was in
the middle of a field hoeing turnips or swedes or something, when I heard the
roar of approaching aero engines. And overhead, banking over the field so low
that I could see clearly the pilot’s and gunner’s faces, was a German JU 88
hugging the ground contours on its way to bomb the railway yards at Reading
nearby. Why the gunner didn’t just pop me off I don’t know. Perhaps being off
course he was too worried about navigation to bother. They did bomb Reading , but missed the
railway and killed many young people at a school. I later took a job as a prop
swinger to be nearer aeroplanes and gain some flying experience.
Now in the system,
I was posted to RAF Davidstow Moor in Cornwall
to be made aware of what was involved in operational flying. From this high
altitude airfield we flew Warwick
aircraft in Coastal Command. Slung beneath these rather cumbersome,
twin-engined aircraft was a specially-designed lifeboat. Our job was to fly
over the Bay of Biscay to drop the lifeboats
on their multiple parachutes near to aircrew who had bailed out and needed to
be rescued. My job in the second pilot’s seat was solely as another pair of
eyes. Whereas others were looking down to the sea, my job was to search the sky
for Focke-Wulf Condor aircraft. These fast, four-engined aeroplanes were
bristling with cannon (we only had the much smaller 303 Browning machine-guns)
and with mines in the bomb bay to attack Allied convoys at sea.
With wonderful
eyesight I saw one of these Nazi aircraft in the far distance. We were as
mincemeat had any of its crew seen us first. I switched on the intercom and
shouted: “Focke-Wulf….” when the communicating wires somehow parted. So the
crew had heard the warning call but had no idea of the enemy’s position or
distance. So I pointed it out to the Skipper by my side who alerted the rest.
There was considerable apprehension in that aircraft. We dived to just above
sea level and at full throttle headed back to base. And what was our reward? We
were guaranteed a fried egg. And I suppose we were also rewarded with our
lives.
Still waiting to go
abroad for my pilot’s training I was posted to RAF Skellingthorpe, near Lincoln . It was a bomber
airfield of Lancaster
aircraft. Evening after evening these magnificent aeroplanes and their crews
would fly to bomb Germany
– not always entirely with bombs but sometimes with added cargo such as fake
ration books, money, and other disrupting matter.
One day a Lancaster was to go on an engine test up to Scotland and back before leaving that night for Germany . As the
rear gunner was unavailable, would I like to fly in the rear turret? Would I?
You bet I would.
So, fully kitted
out, I found that, surprisingly, I had enough room to squeeze into the turret
in reasonable comfort. It would have been quite different had I been strapped
in there for many hours on end.
I was allowed to be
in the turret for take-off. And away we went. Despite my helmet the noise was
deafening. I could spin the turret around from side to side and raise and lower
my four, fully armed-up Browning 303 machine-guns. So, had an enemy aircraft
appeared from over the North Sea , I was fully
prepared (with no training, I might add) to have a go at shooting it down. It
never happened.
My only job in the
turret was to occasionally, when asked to on the intercom, tell the navigator
the drift. For this I lined up the guns on the landscape below and read the
number on a drift scale down on the right.
Returning to
Skellingthorpe all crew except the pilot had to leave their allotted stations
and gather amidships. The aircraft left as usual that evening. Many did not
return. And the rear gunner was the most vulnerable person aboard. It was not
unusual to have blood and parts of him hosed out of the rear turret on the
aeroplane’s return.
On leave in London we were in the
thick of it. Trains were brought to a standstill in a raid, searchlights swept
the sky, sometimes holding an enemy aircraft in their beams. Then anti-aircraft
guns would roar. The sound of bombs was commonplace. V1 Buzzbombs would fly
over at any hour. If the pulse jet engine was alive when the craft was overhead
you were safe. If its sinister and distinctive drumming noise stopped before it
reached you, it was a case of diving for any cover available. But I never got
out of the bath for any of them, even though one once stopped overhead in Victoria as I was bathing and hit Buckingham Palace
nearby.
The other nasty weapon
was the V2 rocket. When still waiting to go to America
I was stationed at RAF Hornchurch in Essex . I
had volunteered to mend bombed roofs in Plumstead on the other side of the
river. I had been given an hour’s training by a roofer and provided with the equipment
and a mate. With very poor quality slates we mended several roofs in such a
poor district that I remember a pretty girl smile, only for her to reveal a
mouth full of rotten teeth. It was when on a roof (the accumulated Victorian
slate dust and dirt was choking) when there was an explosion in the distance,
followed by a very strange rushing-of-air noise. It was one of the first V2
rockets to hit London .
At last I was sent to Oklahoma in the USA
(in Mauritania and crossing the submarine-infested Atlantic
for the third time) where, after primary and advanced training, I was awarded
my wings and a commission.
Few commissions
were awarded. But after crashing an aircraft (not my fault) and visited in
hospital by the Commanding Officer and Adjutant, who thought that I might want
to give up this flying business, I had my chance. “No sir,” I said, “I want to
get out of this bed and FLY.” I thought
I’d overdone it, but the C.O. on leaving the hospital, was heard to say:
“That’s just the kind of young man we want in the Air Force.”
I did sustain one
war wound. When having my wings pinned to my uniform by a Wing Commander who
had one arm in a sling, the pin on the wings penetrated my uniform’s material
and drew blood on my chest. I suppose this might be construed as “friendly
fire”.
It was the end of
the war in Europe . Fortunately we had enough
skilled pilots to fly for us in the Pacific Campaign. So I was grounded to
become a Photographic Intelligence officer.
So you see, my part in
the war was very minor and of not of great interest.
I often think that had
I been born but a year earlier I would almost certainly have lost my life,
probably as a bomber pilot. I was extremely lucky to have timed it so well.
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