12/13 July 1943
Turin
|
|
|
|
90
Bomber Command airmen were to lose their lives on this
operation and 10 were destined to become prisoners of
war.
I
visited the Public Record Office and viewed as many other
squadrons record books as possible to try and understand
more about this operation and what my grandfather and
his crew may have experienced on that fateful night.
Squadron
Reports and Comments
|
7
Squadron Base
- Oakington, Cambridgeshire 8
Group PFF
|
|
4 aircraft dispatched - Missing 0
|
|
Comments
|
|
9
Squadron Base
- Bardney, Lincolnshire 5
Group
|
|
11 aircraft dispatched - Missing 0
|
|
Comments
After
bombing target, the flight was to continue to one
of bases in North Africa from where a return journey
was being made later
|
|
44
Squadron Base
- Dunhome Lodge, Lincolnshire 5
Group
|
|
?
aircraft dispatched - Missing 1
|
|
+ W/C J D Nettleton VC
+ F/O A R Ludlow
+ Sgt J E Money
+ Sgt D E A Seager
+ F/O K S Juniper
+ F/L D Cramp
+ F/L I M Wood RAAF
+ F/O F I Calcutt
|
|
Comments
"Violent
thunderstorms - severe icing"
Route
believed to be Dungeness - Cayeaux - Lake Annecy
- Turin
"Weather
was not as forecast, front was larger and of much
greater depth than estimated, tops up to more than
20,000 ft with icing at 19,000 ft."
"Concentration
after Bay of Biscay good"
|
|
49
Squadron Base
- Fiskerton, Lincolnshire 5
Group
|
|
12
aircraft dispatched - Missing 1
|
|
+ F/O J G Millar AFM
+ Sgt P A U Goodyear
+ F/S J W Gillin RCAF
+ F/O G Lockie
+ Sgt H G J H Read
+ Sgt D W Bettinson
+ Sgt R Burnett
|
|
Comments
"Route
rather long but free from flak"
[F/L Taylor]
"Slight
icing most of way over France and The Alps and electric
storms frequent in South of France"
[P/O Anderson]
"Weather
conditions over France difficult. Flew in cloud
for two and a half hours"
[P/O Tolchard]
"No
opposition on route home except French coast"
[W/O Morrison]
|
|
50
Squadron Base
- Skellingthorpe, Lincolnshire 5
Group
|
|
12
aircraft dispatched - Missing 1
|
|
+ P/O E J Burnett
+ P/O T Stenhouse
+ Sgt F O'Carroll
+ P/O A J Holloway
+ Sgt J E A P Manning
+ Sgt J T Wilson
+ Sgt G Batey
+ Sgt S H Rayner
|
|
Comments
|
|
57
Squadron Base
- Scampton, Lincolnshire 5
Group
|
|
15
aircraft dispatched - Missing 1
|
|
+ F/S J Pickett RNZAF
+ Sgt C E P Still
+ Sgt G C Crew
+ Sgt W H C Doran
+ Sgt G Haywood
+ Sgt E E Goldstraw
+ Sgt J A Carpenter
|
|
Comments
1
aircraft cancelled - 1 returned early - 2 aircraft
landed in North Africa [Sgt Scott & F/O Levy]
- 1 missing [F/S Pickett and crew]
|
|
61
Squadron Base
- Syerston, Nottinghamshire 5
Group
|
|
14
aircraft dispatched - Missing 0
|
|
Comments
|
|
83
Squadron Base
- Wyton, Huntingdonshire 8
Group PFF
|
|
14
aircraft dispatched - Missing 0
|
|
Comments
This
was an extremely long and arduous trip, but a pleasant
change from bashing the Ruhr
P/O
Mason was hit by flak and engine u/s (port outer)
soon after leaving the target and trouble later
with another engine off Bay of Biscay
G/Capt
Graham first trip with this squadron and he was
attacked by a Ju 88 on homeward route west of Brest
the only sighting out of the whole attack
W/Cdr
Shaw was attacked by a series of flak ships, but
by skilful evasive action evaded trouble
|
|
97
Squadron Base
- Bourn, Cambridgeshire 8
Group PFF
|
|
14
aircraft dispatched - Missing 0
|
|
Comments
[From
the Summary Form 540]
This
was an extremely long and arduous trip, but a pleasant
change from bashing the Ruhr
P/O
Mason was hit by flak and engine u/s (port outer)
soon after leaving the target and trouble later
with another engine off Bay of Biscay
G/Capt
Graham first trip with this squadron and he was
attacked by a Ju 88 on homeward route west of Brest
the only sighting out of the whole attack
W/Cdr
Shaw was attacked by a series of flak ships, but
by skilful evasive action evaded trouble
|
|
100
Squadron Base
- Grimsby, Lincolnshire 1
Group
|
|
23
aircraft dispatched - Missing 2
|
|
pow
F/S A G Sadler
pow Sgt J Egleston
pow Sgt M J Maloney
pow Sgt W E Broxup
pow Sgt R A A Howe
pow Sgt R R W Parker
pow Sgt A Burton RAAF
|
+
F/S W R Caldwell
+ Sgt G T Causer
+ Sgt F Barnes
+ F/O W E Leddiman
+ Sgt F W Holmes
+ Sgt C H Glover
+ Sgt J A Firth RCAF |
|
Comments
Squadron's
longest operational flight of 1970 miles
"Icing
troubles caused engine failures landed on 3 engines"
[W/O
C.E. White]
|
|
Individual
Crew Details
100
Squadron - Lancaster III EE183 HW-P
| Pilot |
F/S
A G Sadler |
| Nav |
Sgt
M J Maloney |
| W/O |
Sgt
R A A Howe |
| B/A |
Sgt
W E Broxup |
| F/E |
Sgt
J Egleston |
| M/U |
Sgt
R R W Parker |
| R/G |
Sgt
A Burton RAAF |
|

[L
to R] Bob
Parker, Mike Maloney, Tony Sadler, Reg Howe
J
Egleston, Alec Burton, Ted Broxup
|
|
F/S
Sadler and crew were shot down over Brest in North
West France. On the return trip they had experienced
a very severe electrical storm over the Alps which
had caused all instruments to go haywire. They had
came down to 1,000 ft. over what they thought was
home but was in fact France. The aircraft came under
heavy fire and two engines were destroyed and the
third was on fire. F/S Sadler gave the order to
bale out but the rear gunner, Sgt Burton RAAF was
trapped in his turret. They decision was made to
crash-land and they came down on a German Fighter
Base near Brest. All the crew survived and became
prisoners of war. F/S Sadler was sent to Stalag
Luft III, Sgt Burton and Sgt Egleston was sent to
Stalag Muhlberg-Elbe and the rest were sent to Stalag
Kopernikus.
Many
thanks to Mike Sadler for this information.
Below
is Bob Parker's letter
|
|
Letter
to the Sadler family from Bob Parker - Mid Upper
Gunner - Many thanks to Bob for allowing me to publish
this
"At
Gainsborough we did our training on Lancasters and
shortly after we were posted to 100 Squadron at
Waltham near Grimsby in Lincolnshire. As a member
of a bomber crew we were very close, as were all
crews. We went most places together and were almost
like a family. I found Tony to be a quiet, calm
person and easy to get along with. I understand
that you have your fathers log book and so you will
know that while we were at 100 Squadron we completed
five operations and were shot down on the sixth.
I believe that at that time six operations was the
average. Some aircrew were very fortunate and completed
a tour, some did not return from their first operation.
As you can see, it was a lottery as to who survived
and who did not. On two of our earlier operations
we were hit but not seriously. As to our last raid
which took place on the 12-13 July 1943 I will try
to recount events.
We were briefed to fly down towards the south of
France and then to turn towards Italy flying just
south of Switzerland and to return again westwards
through the south of France and out to sea in the
north Atlantic where we were to turn northward on
DR compass and to land in Cornwall near to the Lizard.
We were also ordered to drop down to 1000 feet as
we left the French coast. We were routed as I described
in order that we would avoid the fighter belt thus
minimizing attack from them. The evening of the
12 July was warm and clear and as we flew on our
first leg the weather remained very good. This part
of the flight was uneventful as were the early stages
of the second leg. When we reached the Alps we ran
into a very heavy storm with a great deal of cloud
and lightening. As the visibility was so bad, Tony
considered losing altitude, but the Alps below he
decided that it was too much of a risk. Due to the
poor conditions we had a very close encounter with
Mt. Blanc, narrowly missing the mountain. Having
passed over the Alps the weather cleared and the
visibility was excellent.
The Italian flak was very ineffective and caused
no problems and we made our bombing run in to the
target, released our bombs and turned away for home.
The railway marshalling yards were the prime target
to disrupt the rail traffic, which was transporting
troops and arms to the south where our troops were
landing in Sicily. We returned over the Alps and
into France and continued on into the north Atlantic
where we turned on DR compass onto our last leg,
heading as we thought towards the coast of Cornwall.
Unfortunately, due to the severe storms that we
had passed through our instruments had been effected
and instead of heading home as we thought, we were
in fact flying towards the French coast. There were
a number of aircraft effected by the violent storms
that night. When we arrived at the coast Tony asked
the bomb aimer for a visual fix, but at a maximum
height of 1000 feet it is very difficult when there
are no outstanding land features to be seen and
one cannot see a sufficient amount of the coastline
to compare.
We flew on for approx 5 minutes, when a heavy machine
gun opened fire briefly from astern and the tracer
passed between the tail plane and the wing on the
port side. We did not know at the time, but we were
flying towards the port of Brest which was one of
the most heavily defended. For a minute or two things
were quiet while we were looking for the airfield.
Suddenly guns began firing upon us from all directions,
machine guns, cannon and light flak, far too many
to count. First one engine caught fire and it was
feathered and went out. Then the front gun turret
was hit and oil from the hydraulics covered the
pilots screen. The plane was being hit all over
and the tip of the starboard wing was hit and approx
2 feet from the tip was bent up almost at right
angles. The rear gunner called that he had been
hit and could not move.
As Tony could not see through his windscreen he
asked me to look for a suitable place to bring the
plane down. It was too low to bail out at 1000 feet
or less and bearing in mind that the rear gunner
could not move he had no alternative.
Fortunately, I saw an airfield slightly to starboard
and I talked him on to it, when he could see it
by flying with his head partly out of the side window.
While this was going on a third engine caught fire
but this was left running to give sufficient power
and to help control the plane. I forgot to mention
that if one was flying over a restricted area in
England, one should lower the undercarriage to indicate
that one was friendly, Tony had lowered the wheels
which subsequently probably saved our lives. While
Tony was making his approach we were continuously
fired upon and tracers could be seen passing through
the fuselage, and continued to do so as we were
trundling over the grass runway and until just before
we came to a halt. We had landed on a German fighter
airfield. We were welcomed by a number of Luftwaffe
personnel and escorted off the field to what we
believed was their pilots mess.
Tony was wounded in the ankle I believe it was fractured
and bleeding badly, I helped him to their mess as
he could not walk on it. The engineer was badly
wounded in both legs and was stretchered off. The
bomb aimer was wounded in the leg. The navigator
received a leg wound. The wireless operator had
a head wound. The rear gunner had wounds to his
back and burns to his face and hands and was stretchered
off. I was extremely fortunate in that I escaped
scot free, as even the mascot we carried lost its
nose. If it had not been for a lot of luck, an extremely
good aircraft and a great deal of skill from Tony,
I am sure that few if any of us would have survived.
I seem to remember that approx 200 planes took part
in the raid and some 13 were shot down, a few in
the area of Brest.
The following day I was taken under armed guard
by two NCO's by rail into Germany to an interrogation
camp. The bomb aimer, navigator and wireless operator
arrived a day or two later. The four of us were
later transported by rail to a POW camp Lithuania,
Stalag Luft VI. Tony arrived some few weeks later
but the remaining two were sent to another POW camp.
A short time later Tony's commission came through
and he was transported to the officer's camp at
Sagan, the camp from where the great escape took
place and the 50 officers were shot."
|
|
Individual
Crew Details
100
Squadron - Lancaster III ED561 HW-F
| Pilot |
F/S
W R Caldwell |
| Nav |
Sgt
G T Causer |
| W/O |
Sgt
F Barnes |
| B/A |
F/O
W E Leddiman |
| F/E |
Sgt
F W Holmes |
| M/U |
Sgt
C H Glover |
| R/G |
Sgt
J A Firth RAAF |
|
William
'Bill' Caldwell - Back Row, Centre
|
|
The
following information was sent to me by Emma Lester,
her great uncle was William 'Bill' Caldwell.
|
Bill
Caldwell and crew took off from Grimsby at
10:18pm and joined 294 other Lancasters taking
off from various bases in England.
Approximately
2 hours later - presumably en route to the
target - the crew were flying over the Champagne-Ardenne
region of France near Romilly-sur-Seine which
is about 100 miles east of Paris when they
found themselves under heavy attack from flak.
Their
Lancaster took a direct hit and crashed near
the town of St Oulph tragically killing all
on board.
|

|
|
|
101
Squadron Base
- Ludford Magna, Lincolnshire 1
Group
|
|
19
aircraft dispatched - Missing 0
|
|
Comments
"plenty
of static and icing en route"
|
|
103
Squadron Base
- Elsham Wolds, Lincolnshire 1
Group
|
|
19
aircraft dispatched - Missing 1
|
|
+ F/S H R Graham RCAF
+ Sgt L Cervi
+ Sgt B W Walls
+ P/O E H Hawkins
+ Sgt G E Trowsdale
+ Sgt N G Tippin
+ Sgt R McG Watts RAAF
|
|
Comments
Return
part of journey was done in daylight in enemy waters
|
|
106
Squadron Base
- Syerston, Nottinghamshire 5
Group
|
|
?
aircraft dispatched - Missing 1
|
|
+ P/O C Hayley
+ Sgt E Horton
+ F/O M O Hovinen RCAF
+ Sgt H W Millar
+ Sgt K G Rathbone
+ Sgt R W Ball
+ Sgt H C Hambling
|
|
Comments
[From
the Summary Form 540]
"Thirteen
aircraft were detailed for an attack on TURIN -
a rather adventurous attack in view of the short
period of darkness. Weather was at times very bad,
the crews having to fight their way through thick
cloud and violent storms. One crew, unable to cross
the Alps, jettisoned their bombs, but eleven others
carried out an attack although not all could claim
success. Several photographs were taken. One aircraft
(captain, P/O Hayley) sent a message "We are
being attacked by fighters" but nothing further
was heard and the aircraft did not return.
"Encountered
icing and lightning on return journey, otherwise
trip without incident "
[P/O
V L Cole]
"Pilot's
and Navigator's A.S.I. froze up and aircraft unable
to climb above cloud. Attempted to reach target
by going round high cu. nim. cloud but three attempts
were abortive. All instruments u/s through icing
and although climbing was left as late as possible
aircraft would not climb sufficiently to get safely
through the Alps. Misson abandoned, bombs jettisoned"
[F/L A H Crowe]
"Hit
by heavy flak at La Rochelle, flew on only three
engines"
[P/O W Perry]
"Encountered
electrical storm on return journey with very heavy
cloud, navigation was difficult and the aircraft
became off track. Came out over Paris where the
aircraft was greeted with heavy flak."
[F/S F Brown]
Many
thanks to Chris James whose father, Sgt R A James
DFC flew 23 sorties as a flight engineer in 106
Squadron.
|
|
156
Squadron Base
- Warboys, Huntingdonshire 8
Group PFF
|
|
21
aircraft dispatched - Missing 1
|
|
+ P/O J J Hewerdine RAAF
+ Sgt T E Dickens
+ Sgt L W Dallimore
+ Sgt J A Walker
+ Sgt J F W Cullum
+ Sgt H H G Sicklemore
+ Sgt J Archibald
|
|
Comments
"A/C
was hit by H/F over NANTES at 0429 hrs and was damaged
in the nose"
[F/O J C Prichard]
"Over
the sea at pos. 4710N 0440W light and heavy flak
was fired through cloud at our A/C"
[F/O A M Lutz]
|
|
207
Squadron Base
- Langar, Nottinghamshire 5
Group
|
|
?
aircraft dispatched - Missing 1
|
|
+ P/O H Badge
+ Sgt R Wood
+ F/L A C Jepps
+ Sgt A C Wright
+ Sgt E Higgins
+ F/S R O C Brett RAAF
+ Sgt J A Spence
|
|
Comments
Unfortunately
the ORB copy at the Public Record Office is very
indistinct
This
aircraft was believed to have strayed into Swiss
airspace and was shot down by flak crashing on Mount
Gramount
|
|
460
Squadron Base
- Binbrook, Lincolnshire 1
Group
|
|
22
aircraft dispatched - Missing 0
|
|
Comments
"On
landing the pilot stated 'A good attack but the
weather with some icing and thunderstorms made it
rather a sticky trip'"
[F/S G.J. Oakeshott]
"Arduous
flying conditions"
"There
was much icing en route. When 20 miles N.E. of Limoges
at 0335 hrs while in cloud icing was quite severe.
Port outer engine started to spark and then caught
fire - it had to be cut after fire had been extinguished.
The rest of the journey was made on three engines
but height was maintained at 10,000 ft."
[F/O F.N. Robinson]
|
|
467
Squadron Base -
Bottesford, Leicestershire 5
Group
|
|
?
aircraft dispatched - Missing 3
|
|
+
F/O
G D Mitchell RAAF
+ Sgt B K H Evans
+ P/O H R St. George RAAF
+ F/O W H Morgan
+ F/S J M Maher RAAF
+ F/S H B Bolger RAAF
+ F/S A D Terry RAAF
|
+
F/L R W A Gibbs
+ Sgt E A Roper
+ F/O S G Norris
+ F/O J E Pearce
+ Sgt D J Banks
+ P/O S O C Tate
+ Sgt D A Chisholm |
|
+ P/O C A Chapman RAAF
+ Sgt J Greenwood
+ Sgt A E Michaels
+ Sgt N C Smith
+ Sgt P Donlevy
+ F/S W Bruce
+ Sgt W S Buchanan
|
|
Comments
[From
the Summary Form 540]
We're
not superstitious but this was a dark and dismal 13th
for the Squadron, for we lost 3 valuable crews namely
F/L GIBBS, F/O MITCHELL and F/SGT CHAPMAN. F/SGT CHAPMAN
arrived back from the target O.K. but turning in to
land the tail appeared to break off and the aircraft
crashed a short distance from the 'drome. All members
of the crew were killed instantly and none of the
Squadron personnel who were at the scene of the disaster
could do anything. F/L GIBBS and F/O MITCHELL are
missing from the raid, and the Squadron feels very
much the loss of 3 such fine types of crews. F/L GIBBS
was acting as a Flight Commander at the time.
"After
just crossing FRENCH coast were hit by accurate predicted
flak causing 18 holes outside stdb engine and bomb
doors. From there weather very bad and had to fly
in cloud to ALPS where there were electric storms"
[F/S G F Tillotson]
"On
return journey noticed a Lancaster firing Verey signals
: he was low on the water and appeared to be in difficulties.
We called him up on R/T and he requested that we should
stay with him until he reached ENGLAND as he was short
of petrol and might have to ditch , but he managed
to make a safe landing on the first 'drome"
[P/O J Good]
|
|
619
Squadron Base -
Woodhall Spa, Lincolnshire 5
Group
|
|
11
aircraft dispatched - Missing 0
|
|
Comments
[From
the Summary Form 540]
A
Ju 88 was shot down (claim confirmed) by a/c "E"
- Pilot F/L S E J Jones - Mid Upper Gunner Sgt G Cook
- Rear Gunner P/O P Cartwright DFM
|
|
|
|
|
|
|