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Sunday, 30 March 2014

Log-book corroboration

Jim Ives' last flying duty before his posting away from 625 Squadron in December 1943 was on a fighter affiliation exercise, sharing the pilot's duties with F/Sgt Reg Price RCAF (December 5th, Lancaster DV364, 1hr.25mins, day). I recently ran across Mr Frank Sutton's flying log-book


which neatly mirrors entries in F/Sgt Price's and cousin Jim's own log-books.


Of current interest too are Frank Sutton's notes concerning losses on the Nuremberg raid of 30th/31st March 1944 :- 'THIS TRIP WAS SHEER HELL – N/Fs ATTACKING IN STRENGTH' – LOST 96 A/C'.

Significant, don't you think, that our aircrews knew exactly how bad losses were.


 back:- Sgt Les Knowles, P/O Jack Conley RAAF, F/Sgt Harry Powter
 front:-  P/O Frank Sutton, P/O Reg Price RCAF, P/O Dudley Ball RAAF, absent F/Sgt Jim Harris

Sunday, 16 March 2014

many thanks anonymous emailer

Many thanks, sincerely, to the emailer who sent the information about ND360 and crew, especially for the photo of Jimmie Ives's inscription on the Runnymede Memorial, tablet 214.

Your email also serves to flag-up a fact recently pointed out to me by 'web-man the boy genius' – that cousin Jim does not have his own dedicated page on the website. This will be remedied on the revised website (which is coming very soon). However – Jim's story and those of his crew-mates are detailed in 'Does Life Hold Any More in Store?' - of which copies are still available (this website is really an adjunct to the book). Please don't be put-off by Pay-pal - it is an easy and secure system, but if you want to pay by other means send me an email via the 'contact' page.





Four crew members of ND360 were commemorated on the Runnymede Memorial because their remains could not be identified.  As Lilian recounted to me - Jim's crowning glory was his bright auburn, wavy hair.

Exhumation reports identified remains interred in Plot 1, Row 6, Grave 14 of the cemetery at Doberitz-Elsgrund:-

2nd body in grave.
Description of body : Badly smashed, little remained.
Hair: Brown wavy hair.
Clothing:  None

Remarks:  Reinterred in British Cemetery HEERSTRASSE, BERLIN:
        Plot: 7  Row: F  Grave 15
After several years in the ground would auburn hair appear brown?  This is my best guess at Jimmie Ives's resting place.  An unknown Airman.

Saturday, 15 March 2014

'The best had gone and left only me'.


Flying Officer Douglas Chapman Dunn RAAF, known to his crew as 'Billy', celebrated his 22nd birthday in the middle of August 1943. After the war his bomb-aimer W/O Marshall Smith paid tribute to his skipper in a letter to Dunn's family which outlined what happened to Lancaster ED949 on the late evening of 30th January 1944.

Despite a fault which had rendered the rear-turret u/s F/O Dunn and crew pressed on with their sortie against the 'Big City'.

ED949 was attacked by a night-fighter about ten minutes short of Berlin, setting fire to the starboard wing and the bomb-bay. Bale-out had been ordered and when F/Sgt Smith exited the aircraft the Lancaster was in a shallow dive and conditions inside did not seem critical. However, local residents witnessed the blazing aircraft dive into the ground and explode on impact at Neuruppin Aerodrome.

F/Sgt Smith was captured and taken to the aerodrome and was 'profoundly shocked' to be informed that rear gunner 'Ned' Gloster was critically ill and not likely to survive and the rest of his crew-mates were dead.  The officials refused permission for Marshall Smith to see Gloster, who subsequently died.

F/O Douglas Chapman Dunn, RAAF 22yrs
Sgt. Frederick Adams 23yrs
F/O Frederick George Fidler 21yrs
Sgt. Andrew Leslie McConnell 23yrs
Sgt. Harry Deakin
and
F/Sgt. Edward Fitzgibbon Gloster, RAAF 20yrs 
were buried in a communal grave in Neuruppin cemetery with full military honours, a local evangelical parson officiated.

'It was an awful feeling to be the only one left and I often felt that I should have gone down with the rest, for the best had gone and left only me' – the heart rending words of the sole survivor from ED949 - W/O Marshall Smith – a Scotsman from South College Street, Elgin, Morayshire.

A thread appeared on a WW2 discussion forum in 2012 regarding this crew which prompted a contact from Paul Francis, nephew of navigator F/O Frederick Fidler. If Paul happens upon this piece, I would welcome anything he can tell about his uncle or the crew.

Monday, 10 March 2014

Herbert Cutler's camera


I hope Rod Collins won't mind me mentioning a thread from his fascinating website which is pertinent to these pages. I refer to the story of a camera given to Herbert Cutler – Officers' Mess barman at RAF Waltham as told by his grand-daughter Carol Blaylock. A young pilot handed his camera to Herbert for safe-keeping with the proviso that if he failed to return, the barman held onto the camera.

Sadly the young pilot did not come back and the camera has since been in Herbert's family for the best part of seventy years.

During my research I learnt that a nephew of 100 Squadron pilot P/O John 'Athel' Crabtree recalled that his mother (Athel's sister) had maintained that her brother had left his camera with someone for safe-keeping before flying on his final sortie – Berlin on the evening of 30th January 1944.

Are these two separate stories? - or one - viewed from two sides?

W/O Crabtree's commission to Pilot Officer had been effective from 27th January 1944, giving a very small window of opportunity to visit the Officers' Mess to toast his new status. Athel Crabtree had flown ND398 HW-B on the Berlin raids of 27th/28th and 28th/29th January, returning from the latter around breakfast time on Saturday morning (29th). With a stand-down declared for that evening it is likely that P/O Crabtree visited the mess that day.

If the camera had belonged to a 'regular customer', Herbert would possibly have recalled the pilot's name, however he was remembered just as a young pilot.

Did newly commissioned Athel Crabtree leave his camera with friendly mess steward Herbert Cutler before taking off from RAF Waltham for the last time?

John Athelstan Crabtree

Thursday, 6 March 2014

Canadian Lancaster’s forthcoming visit to U.K.


Just drawing your attention to the proposed visit to these shores of the Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum's Lancaster this coming August, to fly alongside the BBMF's Lanc.

Canada's considerable contribution to the Allied war effort is so often overlooked - as is that of Bomber Command, of course.

Two birds with one stone, as they say!

(photo given to me by the late J Douglas Hudson DFC, nav. 100 Squadron,
a truly inspirational gentleman)