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Volume 41 Number 2 October 2006 http://www.cahs.ca/torontochapter Canadian Aviation Historical Society Toronto Chapter Meeting October 21, 2006 Meeting starts at 1 PM -Under the GliderToronto Aerospace Museum, 65 Carl Hall Road, Toronto This meeting is jointly sponsored by CAHS Toronto Chapter and the Toronto Aerospace Museum- All CAHS / TAM members, guests and the public (museum admission payable) are welcome to attend. Refreshments will be served “Landing Fee” of $2.00 will be charged to cover meeting expenses Next Meeting November 18, 2006 Speakers - We are pleased to have Mr. Tim Whittier and Mr. Kyle Schmidt of Messier-Dowty as speakers for this meeting. “Landing the Arrow + Current Projects” Information: www.torontoaerospacemuseum.com/news/events Bob Winson, CAHS Toronto Chapter Tel: 416-745-1462 [email protected] 1 Flypast V. 41 No. 2 Last Month’s Meeting Last Month’s Meeting “Recollections of World War II” Speaker: Charley Fox, DFC & Bar Reporter: Gord McNulty Toronto Chapter President Howard Malone introduced Charles W. Fox, DFC & Bar, a colourful and engaging speaker with many compelling stories about his wartime flying experiences. Charley, of London, Ontario, is considered one of Canada’s more famous military aviators and aviation personalities. He loves to discuss his air force days and is active in projects involving veterans. As Charley says with a wink, “you press a button and I start off on a tangent.” Charley was born in February 1920 at Guelph. Signing up with the RCAF in the spring of 1940, he was an instructor at Dunnville from October 1941 to May 1943, when he went to an Operational Training Unit at Bagotville, Quebec. While there, on June 1, Charley had a narrow escape when a Hurricane collided in mid-air with the Harvard he was flying. Although injured, he was able to bail out safely. In August 1943, he went overseas and checked out on Spitfires. In January 1944, he began his tour with 412 Squadron. Charley served continuously on ops until January 1945. His duties included escort, armed recce and dive bombing. On D-Day, he flew three sorties. On 18 June, 1944, the squadron moved to B4 airstrip in Normandy at Beny-sur-Mer. Charley specialized in ground attack and prided himself on accurate marksmanship. His success is summed up in the official commendation for a Bar to his DFC: “This officer has led his section against a variety of targets, often in the face of intense anti-aircraft fire. He has personally destroyed or damaged 22 locomotives and 34 enemy vehicles, bringing his total to 153 vehicles destroyed or damaged. In addition, he has destroyed at least a further three enemy aircraft and damaged two others. In December 1944, Flight Lieutenant Fox led his squadron on an attack against enemy airfields in the Munster area and personally destroyed another enemy aircraft, bringing his total to four. Through his quick and accurate reporting, a further four enemy aircraft were destroyed. Since the award of the Distinguished Flying Cross, this officer has continued to display outstanding skill, coolness and determination.” Charley ended his tour in January 1945 at Heesch in Holland, after which he did a six-week stint as a test pilot for #410 Repair and Salvage Unit. He became Operations Officer in the Intelligence Section of 126 Wing and was among a flight of four Spitfire pilots who flew what it considered the last operational sortie of the war for 126 Wing, landing at 8 a.m. on May 5, 1945. In the peacetime RCAF he served with 420 Reserve Squadron, flying Harvards, P-51 Mustangs and T-33 Silver Stars. He was instrumental in helping the squadron win the MacBrien Trophy for air to air and air to ground marksmanship. In September 1956, Charley began a career with a large shoe and slipper manufacturing firm. He retired in 1998. Charley has pursued his love of flying for many years as a member and past president of the Canadian Harvard Aircraft Association (CHAA), based in Tillsonburg. Flypast V. 41 No. 2 2 Today, Charley still acts as ground control for Harvard Formation Flypasts on special occasions for the CHAA. He also does colour commentaries, with his trademark enthusiasm and knowledge, at airshows throughout Canada and the United States. Charley brought an impressive display of photos, artwork and documentation to bolster his presentation. He began by saying that he didn’t talk about the war for about 40 years, just as a number of veterans preferred not to discuss their experiences. Displaying a photo of four RCAF aircrew from Guelph including himself, taken at Bournemouth in October 1943, Charley noted that two came home from the war and two didn’t. Andy Howden took off in a Mosquito on the night of April 7, 1944 with his navigator. They were never seen again. Sandy Borland, who had lived just around the corner from Charley, was shot down Dec. 25, 1944, in a sortie by an unmarked P-47 and killed. Only the day before, on Dec. 25, Sandy’s sister, Jean --who served as a nurse in the Army Air Corps --married Sandy’s Flight Commander in 416 Sqdn. in a ceremony at Brussels, Belgium. Charley noted that towards the end of the war, the Germans recovered Allied aircraft and flew them again. “The only real dogfight that I had was with an unmarked Spitfire flown by a German,” Charley recalled. The Germans would fly B-17s, have them join up with crippled bombers coming home, then shoot them down. Lancasters would be used that way as well. Hitler issued an edict that if anyone bailed out over Europe, they would not be allowed to reach the ground alive. His rationale was that if any Allied aircrew returned to their units, they would be flying against Germany again. When Charley returned to Canada in 1945, he went into retailing while he contemplated his options in the air force. He recalled a difficult moment at the store in Guelph where he worked when Andy Howden’s mother came in. She 3 started crying, grabbed Charley by the shoulders and started shaking him back and forth. “Why my Andy and not you?,” Charley recalled her saying. “She was pounding me on the chest and saying ‘Why my Andy and not you?’ Charley continued: “All I could do was hold her and say, ‘Mrs. Howden, I don’t know why not me.” Charley mentioned that he’s working on a book, to be titled Why Not Me, containing many stories about the men he flew with. He explained that many veterans didn’t talk about the war because they felt guilty about surviving combat while their friends didn’t. “Mrs. Howden had every right to feel that way,” he said. Charley added that after reviewing his logbook, he realized that many events could have been disastrous for him. As for his mid-air collision in the Harvard at Bagotville on June 1, 1943, Charley was returning to base, leading two other Harvards. There were also three Hurricanes in the vicinity. The two different types of aircraft were not supposed to be mixed. When he noticed the Hurricanes, Charley said he saw the wing of the leading aircraft drop, as if the pilot was about to simulate an attack. “It turned out that he had been partying the night before,” Charley said. “He came down and went below. As he did that, I called a right to port to let him know that I had spotted him. Well, he came up from underneath and the nose of his aircraft hit mine, tore out the engine and everything in front of the fire wall. The collision took off the left wing and the tailplane of his airplane. He spun and went in. He was killed. I was knocked out, but came to. Now I had a glider, but it wouldn’t glide,” Charley continued in matter-of-fact style. “I bailed out and my Harvard fluttered down into the bush at Bagotville.” Charley displayed a photo of the wreckage of his Harvard that he received just last year. Among the other vivid memories Charley recalled was the dedication shown by Arthur Flypast V. 41 No. 2 Bishop, son of Canada’s most famous First World War fighter pilot, Billy Bishop, in coping with the pressure of continuing the Bishop legacy. Charley met Arthur while the young airman was serving with 401 Squadron at Biggin Hill. At the time, Charley considered himself to be a mature pilot, an ex-instructor, age 24, married with one son who had been born shortly after he went overseas. There was a memorable encounter when he came across the sight of Arthur leaning against the wall of a Quonset hut, crying. When Charley asked him what was wrong, Arthur replied: “Charley, I’m not afraid to die. I’m afraid to fly.” As Charley said, “Can you imagine the pressure on that young man from the time he enrolled in elementary school?” Charley felt at home as a pilot from the time he went on his first flight in January, 1941. In comparison, Arthur was pushed through flying training as “Billy Bishop’s son,” struggled to earn the wings pinned on him by his famous father, and went overseas as a Spitfire pilot even though he was afraid to fly. “Arthur Bishop completed his 100 trips, which was a tour on the Spitfire, and that took guts,” Charley said. “I like to pass that story on to young students.” Charley also paid tribute to the dedication of the groundcrew. He displayed a photo taken at Beny-sur-Mer in 1944 showing him with two of his groundcrew --- Danny Daniels, who looked after the engine, and Monty Montgomery who looked after the rest of the aircraft except the radio and the armament. The groundcrew and administrative personnel served a three-year tour of duty overseas. Charley knew that his groundcrew’s schedule time for repatriation to Canada was coming up. So he wrote to his wife back in Guelph and told her to send over two letters with their names inscribed on them. “When the letters came, I told them, ‘Guys, I have a couple of letters for you. I have never had to worry about what shape my aircraft would be in. I knew it would be the best shape that you fellows could make it.” Lo and behold, when Charley gave the crewmen the letters, they replied almost in unison that they would not return to Canada until Charley had finished his tour of duty. “They stayed for seven long months until January 1945 before they called it a day overseas.” Charley enjoyed reconnecting with Danny and his wife in Kelowna, B.C. 60 years later. The Great Escape of Allied PoWs from Stalag Luft III in Sagan, Germany --- not too far from Berlin --- has been of considerable interest of Charley. The man in charge of constructing the escape tunnels was Wally Floody. Shot down in the fall of 1941, Flight Lieutenant Floody used his knowledge of mining (gained in northern Ontario) to mastermind the tunnelling. Charley recalled meeting Wally in October, 1940, on a train going to Brandon, Manitoba in a group for instruction under the BCATP. Six months and two weeks later, the recruits were qualified pilots with their wings. They had about 110 to 120 hours. The whole group, including Wally, went overseas. Charley recommended the book, The Tunnel King: The True Story of Wally Floody and the Great Escape, by Barbara Hehner (published by HarperCollins, 2004, $9.99), describing the heroic story and Wally’s role in it. Charley brought a print back from Poland, where Stalag Luft III is located today, showing the layout of the tunnel. The tunnel was 30 feet down and 348 feet long. It came up about 30 feet of the trees. The PoWs worked on three tunnels at a time, and proceeded at a rate of 10 feet a day, round the clock 24 hours a day. Charley emphasized the incredibly small working area: the tunnel was only two feet wide and two feet high. The PoWs had to lie on their side while they were tunnelling. They used milk tins to provide air from the surface and tapped into the camp electricity to run lights through the tunnel. When the PoWs decided to break out, Flypast V. 41 No. 2 4 those who had worked on the tunnel would be first. They were hoping to get 200 prisoners out, enough to create chaos for the Germans when they redeployed defence resources to catch the escapees. In fact, that is what happened. Hitler assigned 70,000 troops to hunt for the escapees. The PoWs faced many obstacles. It had snowed two days before the escape, and the door they planned to use had frozen solid. It took them 90 minutes to get the door open. They had to keep their heads down and didn’t know that they were short of the trees by 30 feet. Guards and searchlights were everywhere, so they slowed down even more. Also, they had a cave-in, and three guys became totally unnerved by the claustrophobia and the darkness. They had to be subdued and taken out. Then the Germans cut off all the power in the camp, depriving the PoWs of any light whatever. Nonetheless, 76 men eventually got out. Another four almost escaped but were caught as they running for the trees. Only three --- two Norwegians and a Dutchman --- made it to England, while the rest were caught within a week. Hitler was so incensed that he wanted to execute every single man. Sadly, in the end, 50 were executed. “It is a fascinating story of commitment,” Charley said. “Every one of those PoWs is an unsung hero. If you were a PoW, you were supposed to continue to try to escape and get back to your base and this is what they did. They fought the war in the only way they could.” Charley also discussed his account of the attack on Field Marshal Erwin Rommel in Normandy on July 17, 1944. He said he had never wanted to talk about this issue, which has involved some controversy as to who should be credited for it. Charley said that he and an American pilot, who was his number two, took off in their Spitfires from 412 Sqdn. looking for targets of opportunity. Charley said he saw a big, black German staff car approaching and opened fire on it. He had no idea who was in the car. It turned 5 out to be none other than a party of high-ranking German officers including Field Marshal Erwin Rommel, who was seriously wounded in the attack. “I never wanted to do anything about this story because Rommel was a general’s general … a leader of men.” While Charley would have preferred to keep quiet about the episode, with all of its controversy, the Ottawa Citizen published a story outlining Charley’s role after he was made honorary colonel of the present-day 412 VIP Sqdn. based in Ottawa. Major-General Richard Rohmer also has an account of the attack on Rommel’s car, which Richard outlined in the December 2005 meeting of the Toronto Chapter. “He has a story and I have mine, and I’ll leave it at that,” Charley said. Charley’s business card features an illustration of “The Last Patrol” as rendered by artist Lance Russwurm. On May 5, 1945, Charley was one of the four Canadian Spitfire pilots who flew what was almost certainly the last sortie of the war. On May 4, Wing Commander Geof Northcott learned that hostilities were to cease at 0800 hours on May 5. He decided the 126 Wing Tactical Airforce should put up one last flight. At 6:30 a.m. Charley took off in his Mk IX from 412 Sqdn. He flew No. 4 with Northcott, in a Mk IX, from 401 Sqdn., as No. 1; S/L Bill Klersey as No. 2 in a Mk IX of 401 Sqdn., and S/L Don ‘Chunky’ Gordon as No. 3 in a Spit XIV of 402 Sqdn. They looked everywhere for the Germans but didn’t find any during the 90-minute sortie. Charley also described his recollections of flying with George ‘Buzz’ Beurling, Canada’s greatest ace of 1939-45. He served in Beurling’s flight at Biggin Hill in January, 1944. “To fly with Buzz Beurling was the most comforting thing you could do. He was a fabulous pilot. His eyesight was so phenomenal that he knew everything that was happening around him.” Beurling would spend hours Flypast V. 41 No. 2 helping his fellow pilots become better marksmen. “He could party with the best of them, but he never took a drink and never smoked, because that would affect his eyesight.” Charley added that Beurling made a point of shooting at the wing roots of the aircraft that he was firing upon and he rarely used more than five cannon shells because of his accuracy. The story of the famous poem High Flight, penned by 19-year-old Pilot Officer John Gillespie Magee, Jr., was also recalled by Charley, partly because of the 412 Sqdn. connection. Magee was born of missionary parents in China in 1922. His father was American, his mother was British. In 1931, at nine years of age, John was taken by his mother along with his younger brother back to England to his maternal grandmother’s house. In school, he specialized in writing. When he was 17, he went to the U.S., attending a private school in New York where his father’s sister lived. In the summer of 1940, he got a scholarship to Yale in English and poetry. The Battle of Britain had erupted, and bombs were dropping in east London where his grandmother lived. So he enrolled in the RCAF, took his elementary flying training at St. Catharines, then got his wings in Ottawa. Magee went overseas, serving in 412 Sqdn. On Sept. 3, 1941, he was flying at 30,000 feet when he was inspired to write the words of High Flight. He wrote a letter home to his parents in Washington, D.C. and on the back of it he had written the poem. He called it just a “little ditty.” Some ditty! Tragically, on Dec. 10, 1941, he was descending through clouds when his Spitfire collided with an Oxford. Both pilots were killed. Expanding on the wartime service of the Americans, Charley noted that his first flight, 5 Jan. 1941, at Mount Hope, took place under the instruction of “an American, Mr. Brown.” He added that without the participation of the American volunteers who came to Canada, the BCATP would not have started as well as it did. In all, 8,800 American volunteers joined the RCAF. After the attack on Pearl Harbor, 2,200 returned to join the American Air Corps. However, 6,600 stayed in the RCAF until the end of the war. Charley also recalled the remarkable story of “Cap” Foster, of Grimsby, Ont. “Cap” was an instructor at Dunnville. He taught by example, stressing that fighter pilots should be able to fly just as well when upside down. Cap’s students included Bill Olmsted, the Spitfire pilot who flew more than 500 sorties and authored the book Blue Skies in 1987. Charley mentioned that Cap and Bill actually looped the Rainbow Bridge. Fortunately they were never charged for the stunt because observers were able to identify only two of the four numbers on the aircraft. Charley said that the markings were later changed to include two large numbers only “and that spoiled all the fun.” Cap went overseas, flew with 403 and 416 squadrons, and was awarded the DFC. But when he returned home to Grimsby and left the air force, he couldn’t get a job. “Cap Foster’s grandfather was a full-blooded Mohawk. Suddenly, Cap was treated as a half-breed again. In the air force, he was an officer and a gentleman, probably our best aerobatic pilot, one of our best athletes at Dunnville … and he couldn’t get a job,” Charley recalled with dismay. Cap returned to the air force during the Korean War and became an instructor again. Once, while returning to base at Gimli, Manitoba, Cap had a close call when he was flying alone. Another instructor and a student flying formation with Cap at altitude noticed that Cap had slumped over. The instructor called Cap and managed to awaken him when they were below 10,000 feet, then guided him to a safe landing. Cap was taken by ambulance to hospital, where it was learned that he should never have been a pilot --- he had epilepsy. Cap Flypast V. 41 No. 2 6 stayed in the air force, serving in administration. He raised three children. One became a doctor and the other two became lawyers. Charley answered lots of questions from the audience. He said that fighter pilots, when in air combat, faced “one aircraft shooting at them at a time, and that would be it, normally.” But in flying ground attack at prime targets like the buzz bomb sites, pilots encountered multi-faceted, sometimes unpredictable resistance from anti-aircraft fire. Charley said none of the pilots enjoyed ground attack. In attacking trains for example, pilots never knew when they might come under fire from armed box cars equipped with two 40 mm guns on each car. “I always took the engine,” Charley said. “It could be a little bit dicey. Charley Fox probably went through more Spitfires than most people.” Charley paid credit to the Typhoon pilots, describing them as unsung heroes. “They had to fly straight and level for about 10 seconds when they were releasing their rockets. They suffered 50 per cent casualties because they were very vulnerable.” Charley’s favourite combat fighter was the Spitfire. “For close combat, I would want my Spitfire. You had a safety factor. You could go into a steep climbing turn and nothing could stick with you.” Howard Malone expressed thanks on behalf of the chapter to Charley for sharing his memories in an impressive, thoughtful talk. He presented Charley with a gift in appreciation. Some of Charley’s stories can be found on www.spitcrazy.com, website for the Spitfire Emporium in Kitchener. He can be reached via e-mail at [email protected]. His address is Apt. 1312, 585 Proudfoot Lane, London, ON N6H 4R6. 7 Flypast V. 41 No. 2 By Taxi: Take the TTC Subway to the Downsview Station and take a taxi from there. It will cost around $8 one way, but it is by far the most convenient option for tourists, because the cab will take you right to our front door, whereas the TTC unfortunately - doesn't! By Car: From the 401 East or West, exit at Keele Street North. Turn right on Sheppard Ave, and follow Sheppard the entrance to Downsview Park. Turn right into the park (onto John Drury Road) until you reach Carl Hall Road. Turn left at Carl Hall and continue east over the railway tracks to the Museum, which is on your right hand side. By TTC: From the Downsview TTC station take the 108 Downsview, the 86 Sheppard West, Westbound or the 84 Sheppard West, Westbound bus and ask the driver to let you off at the Downsview Park entrance (it is well past the DRDC and Idomo buildings). Walk into the park entrance and follow John Drury Road until you reach Carl Hall Road. Turn left at Carl Hall Road and continue east over the railway tracks to the Museum, which is on your right hand side. Approximate walking distance is 0.7 km. CAHS National Website : www.cahs.com Meetings and news from all the chapters, journal back issues, and more! Toronto Chapter Meetings - 2nd Saturday of the month 1:00 pm - 3:00 pm. Toronto Aerospace Museum, 65 Carl Hall Road TAM is in the former deHaviland building in Downsview Park Near Downsview TTC Station All Welcome Flypast V. 41 No. 2 8