During WW2, Australians in the RAAF and RAF were buried or memorialised in 66 countries. How did these men die? Can you assist? St Vincent. CARTER, GEOFFREY JOHN HAMILTON Sergeant 412229 45 TG RAF 12/04/1943
Trinidad & Tobago MORRIS, ALAN ARTHUR Pilot Officer 400280 53sq 28/09/1942 RISBEY, GEOFFREY THOMAS Flying Officer 400834 53sq 15/09/1942 WALKER, JACK WARING PAIX Flying Officer 401354 53sq 15/09/1942
Albania Albania POTTER, DENNIS HILTON Flight Sergeant 427021 624sq RAF 1/02/1944 TENNANT, EDWARD DRAKE STEELE Flight Sergeant 410105 624sq RAF 1/02/1944 WADDELL, PETER VICTOR Warrant Officer 401163 249sq RAF 30/03/1944
Baltimore IIIA FA314. Destroyed by fire after crashing at Georgetown, St Vincent during ferry flight Name: FAULKNER, LENNOX DANE Initials: L D Nationality: United Kingdom Rank: Captain Regiment/Service: Royal Air Force Transport Command Date of Death: 12/04/1943 Casualty Type: Commonwealth War Dead Cemetery: GEORGETOWN CEMETERY
Thanks Kyt. Good to know what happened. I do have some at Takoradi as well which will possibly fall into the same category. Cheers Geoff
Halifax on special duties flight but I can't find a serial Flt/Sgt. Edward Drake Steele Tennant R.A.A.F. Sgt. Francis Cecil Rudolph Burlfinger R.A.F.V.R. Sgt. George Gardner R.A.F.V.R. Flt/Sgt Dennis Hilton Potter R.A.A.F. F/O Ronald Edwin Stanley R.A.F.V.R. Sgt. James Leo Devine R.A.F.V.R.
The only info I have for Waddell is from the Australian roll of honour: Informal portrait of 401163 Warrant Officer (WO) Peter Victor Waddell of Melbourne, Vic, standing on the deck of the Polish steamer Narvick, which rescued him and seven other Australian sergeant pilots after the arcades was torpedoed. WO Waddell later served with 249 Squadron, RAF and was later lost on operations on 30 March 1944 over Albania. Photo here: AWM Collection Record: P03809.006 - Informal portrait of 401163 Warrant Officer (WO) Peter Victor Waddell of Melbourne, Vic, standing on the deck of the Polish steamer Narvick, which rescued him and seven other Australian sergeant ...
Algeria Algeria The name of this cemetery is or is not appropriate! BEALE, HERBERT ELDON Pilot Officer 403021 179sq 21/01/1943 23 Royal Australian Air Force Australian VII. F. 18. BONE WAR CEMETERY, ANNABA FREEMAN, REGINALD THOMAS ARTHUR Flight Sergeant 415777 458sq 27/11/1943 22 Royal Australian Air Force Australian I. C. 13. BONE WAR CEMETERY, ANNABA INGRAM, IAN ROSS Flying Officer 403343 225sq 29/11/1942 22 Royal Australian Air Force Australian VI. A. 16. BONE WAR CEMETERY, ANNABA MUSCHIALLI, LOUIS JAMES Flight Sergeant 410909 458sq 27/11/1943 21 Royal Australian Air Force Australian I. C. 16. BONE WAR CEMETERY, ANNABA REID, GORDON KEITH Flight Sergeant 422702 458sq 27/11/1943 21 Royal Australian Air Force Australian I. F. 4. BONE WAR CEMETERY, ANNABA RICHARDS, JACK Flight Sergeant 409851 458sq 27/11/1943 21 Royal Australian Air Force Australian I. F. 3. BONE WAR CEMETERY, ANNABA SANDILANDS, JOHN DOUGLAS Sergeant 402613 15 OTU 16/02/1942 26 Royal Australian Air Force Australian III. D. 7. BONE WAR CEMETERY, ANNABA STRANG, ALAN LESLIE Sergeant 400311 21 OTU 17/02/1942 22 Royal Australian Air Force Australian III. D. 13. BONE WAR CEMETERY, ANNABA WESTON, RONALD VICTOR Flying Officer 119195 255sq RAF 6/01/1943 28 Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve UK Coll. grave VIII. G. 1-13. BONE WAR CEMETERY, ANNABA WREN, WALTER ROBERT Sergeant 402433 15 OTU 16/02/1942 20 Royal Australian Air Force Australian III. D. 10. BONE WAR CEMETERY, ANNABA
15 September 1942. 53 Squadron. P/O. Risbey (RAAF) was circling low over Edinburgh Field, Trinidad, in Hudson V. AM727/D trying to land in a rain storm when the aircraft struck a tree and crashed, Risbey, P/O J W P. Walker (RAAF), Sgt A M. Parkin, Sgt N F. Brassington and AMM3C WM. Boots (USN) were all killed.
28 September 1942. 53 Squadron. Hudson V9105/K was lost on an air test on 28 September. The aircraft was found in the jungle three miles south of Rio Clara, Trinidad and had struck the ground in a vertical attitude. P/O A A. Mossis (RAAF), AMM3C G M. Nobes (USN), PFC J H. Fischer, PFC S L. Shipes and Pte Smith (USAAC) were all killed.
Azores Azores JOHNSON, JAMES GEOFFREY Pilot Officer 408252 220sq 4/12/1943 20 Royal Australian Air Force Australian Row A. Grave 6. LAJES WAR CEMETERY Azores Terceira-Praia RYAN, NEVILLE VINCENT Warrant Officer 422812 220sq 8/03/1945 20 Royal Australian Air Force Australian Row B. Grave 10. LAJES WAR CEMETERY Azores Terceira-Praia
Geoff, I can't actually put Johnson on this aircraft, don't have a crew list, but the date matches, might give you a lead. When the time came for a major service of 220 Squadrons Fortresses, every 800 hours, they were ferried to Thornaby. F/O. Desmond E. Morris lifted Fortress FK206 'K' off the planked runway at Lagens at 03:26 hrs in the early morning of 4 December 1943. Thirty seconds later the Fortress plunged into the Atlantic with the loss of all on board. The official likely cause was loss of control following the change from visual flight to instruments on a very black night. The bodies of three crew members were recovered - two Canadians and one Australian - to be buried in the civil cemetery at Angra and later moved to the Lajes War Cemetery. Extract from 'Unsung Sentinels' - R. Stitt. Regards Peter
St Vincent. CARTER, GEOFFREY JOHN HAMILTON Sergeant 412229 45 TG RAF 12/04/1943 Third crew member was the Navigator Sgt Douglas William Perry RAF from Braintree, Essex who died from his injuries on April 13th 1943. I live in St Vincent and operate an aircraft from an airfield about one mile from the place where Carter was killed. Having often seen his and Faulkners grave I have over time tried to piece together why their Baltimore FA314 came to crash on this distant small island. The Baltimore was being ferried from the USA to North Africa via the Southern Atlantic ferry route. It departed Nassau, Bahamas for Trinidad but seems to have experienced an engine failure and attempted a forced landing in a sugarcane field along the Atlantic coast of St Vincent. Accident records report they overshot and crashed. A very reliable witness years ago told me he watched them try to abort the landing and on applying power on the good engine crash into tall coconut trees alonside the beach. The aircraft caught fire and the crew lost their lives. My curiosity is the decision to land when there were airfields not too far away where an emergency landing could have been made. I suspect there may have been a fire on board that hastened the need to land. Only a suspicion but one witness very young at the time recalls seeing black smoke trailing and a local newspaper report may give a hint in that direction though censorship prevented them reporting too much. Hope this is a help to you, if interested there is a photograph of the wreck online at: A history of a local photographer, scroll down for the picture and newspaper report.
Hi Duncan, Thank you very much for the information, I really appreciate it. I collect photos of all the headstones of RAAF deaths during WW2 (11,037) as well. Is there any chance that you know someone there who could provide some photos of the three headstones and some cemetery shots? Cheers Geoff
I will be back in St Vincent around the 25th of this month so will take them myself and post them here. Carter and Faulkner (Canada) are in the Georgetown Cemetery while Perry (UK) is in the Kingstown Cemetery. There are other war graves there but to my knowledge not Australian. They comprise U Boat victims from 1942, RN accidents (HMS Essiquibo)and West India Regiment deaths. I spend a lot of time in Barbados where there is a very large military cemetery dating back to the early 1800's. If you know of any Australians lying there I would be happy to search for them and take photographs.
Hi Duncan, Thank you very much for the offer of photo's. I do not have any RAAF lads in Barbados as the only other ones in the Caribbean are at PORT OF SPAIN (ST. JAMES) MILITARY CEMETERY in Trinidad who were with 53sq RAF. One died on 28/09/1942 and the other two on 15/09/1942 . The number of "accidents" as a percentage of deaths was horrendous through the war. While not an exact figure for the RAAF, of 11,035 deaths that I have recorded, some 6,600? were classed as caused by flying battle or in action. The EATS programme in Canada for example (Empire Air Training Scheme) claimed 147 RAAF lives of which nearly all were accidents in training or accidents landing in bad weather on return from operations. Cheers Geoff
Geoff I was born and raised in Trinidad and in fact did my first solo flight at Edinburgh Field in Dec 68 (it was renamed Carlsen Field) which has since been dug up. If you do not as yet have pictures of the Trinidad headstones I can ask a good friend of mine to take them. Regards Duncan
Hi Duncan, I do not have the photos there so I would be most appreciative if you could arrange for your friend to take them for me. MORRIS, ALAN ARTHUR Pilot Officer 400280 53sq 28/09/1942 21 RAAF Eastern Portion. Grave 19. PORT OF SPAIN (ST. JAMES) MILITARY CEMETERY RISBEY, GEOFFREY THOMAS Flying Officer 400834 53sq 15/09/1942 22 RAAF Eastern Portion. Grave 23. PORT OF SPAIN (ST. JAMES) MILITARY CEMETERY WALKER, JACK WARING PAIX Flying Officer 401354 53sq 15/09/1942 23 RAAF Eastern Portion. Grave 22. PORT OF SPAIN (ST. JAMES) MILITARY CEMETERY Cheers Geoff