As recounted to Jeff Denness by Colin Ogilvie who was Flight engineer of “ YOYO Y YORK”, the call sign of Halifax JP160. Jeff is the eldest son of the late Pilot Officer Edwin (Ted) Denness who was pilot of the crew in which Colin did his tour of operations. Both were awarded the Croix de Guerre by the French Government as a result of the Barcelonette mission, which is referred to in these memoirs. Colin modestly fails to mention this and I felt it only right and proper that recognition should be made.
I first met
your father in Sept 1943 at 1663 conversion unit. Other
members of the crew were, Ron Brown – Navigator, Johnny Carroll - wireless
operator, Johnny Weeks - Bomb aimer, “Gene” Tunney - Mid upper gunner/despatcher,
Albert Sutton - rear gunner.
Before
coming to Rufforth your dad would have been through initial training wing ITW
quite possibly Padgate before being posted to elementary flying school in the
States. From there he would have gone to advanced flying school before returning
to UK to a holding unit. From this unit he would have gone to an ‘O.U.T.’, Operational
Training Unit where he
would have crewed up with five other members i.e. Bomb-aimer, Wireless operator,
Navigator and two gunners. This period involved flying Wellingtons and lasted a
few months. From there the crew was posted to 1663 Heavy Conversion Unit to move
from twins onto multi-engined aircraft and this is where I (Colin Ogilvie) came
into the picture. I joined the crew by a similar route and during our time at
Rufforth we became familiar with the Halifax V doing circuits and bumps, air to
air firing, bombing runs and cross country flying. During this period our social
life developed with trips into York, mostly to Betty’s bar or to the cinema.
In this unit we resided in a Nissen hut where the only source of heat was a
circular stove situated at the centre of the hut fuelled by a weekly,
“insufficient”, coal ration. Johnny Carroll in true Aussie fashion purloined
two keys, one to the coal store and the other the blanket store enabling us to
have a white hot stove and to sleep with six blankets apiece (not forgetting the
linen sheets which we bought ourselves). November and December in Yorkshire can
be very cold so JC became a bit of a hero.
After
breakfast the crews had to form up to march to their various sections. Pilots
and engineers were referred to as ‘drivers and stokers’ and collected
together. These groups were supposed to march off in true RAF style but in truth
were a shambling crocodile more interested in Jane of the Daily Mirror than
keeping in step.
After three
months at Rufforth we were posted to 76 squadron at Spalding Moor a very, very
despondent place owing to the heavy losses encountered. However, before
commencing operations there, a call went out for volunteers for a
‘Special Duties ‘ squadron based overseas. After a discussion and
agreement from most of the crew, (I think JC wanted to stay in the UK),
we volunteered and were subsequently posted to 301 flying training unit based at
Lyneham. Here we met up with our new aircraft and completed consumption tests,
air to air firing, night take off and landing etc.
On the 14th
January 1944 we were sent to Hearn Airfield, which is now Bournemouth civil
airport. During our time there we were confined to camp as, subject to weather
conditions, we could have left for North Africa at any time. However, after a
week of sitting around in the mess we decided to break camp and go to a dance in
Bournemouth. To make sure that we were in communication in case of an emergency,
we arranged with a code message with the cookhouse staff. If the flight was on
they would tell us that ‘late supper was available’. After a few drinks we
were having an enjoyable time at the dance when JC came back from phoning the
base to tell us that ‘supper was on’. At first we didn’t believe him
because he was a bit of a joker but eventually convinced, we rushed out to get
back to our unit only to find a large queue for taxis. Not to be outdone JC went
to the head of the queue, pushed an army captain out of the way with the words
“ sorry sir but this is an emergency.”
which the captain accepted but left his girlfriend very indignant. The
four of us, your Dad, JC, Ronny Brown and I returned to meet up with the much
relieved remaining 3 members of our crew and just in time for briefing which
included an instruction to look for an aircraft which had ditched in the Bay of
Biscay.
We took off
on the 16th January 1944 in our Halifax II ‘JP160’ and landed at
Rabat Sali in North Africa after an 8 hour and 5 min flight. Sadly, despite
searching, we saw no sign of dinghy or wreckage.
Rabat Sali
was run by the Americans and an amusing incident still stays in my mind.
Most
aircrew during this time smoked and cigarettes in the UK were rationed. After a
breakfast that consisted of fried eggs with pineapple in the yolks, bacon, some
other unidentified fruit and flapjacks with maple syrup (not our usual fare), we
asked if we could purchase cigarettes and chocolate. On being directed to a low
building we found an American Sergeant behind the counter who asked if he could
help us. Tentatively we asked if we could have a packet of cigarettes each.
“Only
one?” he asked, “ you can have
two! “. Imagine our surprise when we were handed two packs of 200 and not the
packets of 20 we had expected.
On the 18th
January we took off for Maison Blanche, a trip which lasted 4 hours and 30
minutes. Two days later after a 4 hour 40min trip we moved on to Brindisi, ready
to begin ‘ops’ over the Balkans.
Our arrival
at Brindisi was quite an eye opener as the place was devasted by bombs and
shellfire having been taken from the Germans only months before. Most of the
signs were still in German and the billet we were allocated had no lights or
beds. This is where my engineering tool kit came in handy as I was able to knock
up timber cots and palliasses filled with sawdust. The switchgear I rigged up to
control the lights, although primitive and risky from an insulation point of
view, functioned adequately enough. And so our stay at Brindisi began!
My first
two ops were with an American Flight Sgt Ferguson from Georgia who couldn’t
understand my Scottish accent. However, we survived and it was the end of
January before we were reunited as a crew again. We then went on to complete our
first two ops over Yugoslavia. [1]
On
the 8th Feb we set off to Blida in Algeria and did our first op over
Southern France on 13th February 1944, a trip which lasted 7.1/2
hours. March was a busy month for us as we completed 10 ops, all in JP160.
April was not quite so busy and we only did 7 ops but one incident, which happened in this month, is worth relating. It had rained all day and during briefing for that night’s op the Met officer said there would be “showers all the way.” By this time the rain was bouncing about a foot off the ground and one wag asked, “ showers like we are having outside just now?” and the met man, deadly serious replied “ Exactly “. I think that we were No. 1 up for take off that night. We start up checking for mag drop, air pressure etc. as we taxied round the perimeter to the end of the runway and then we were told to hold off as a Wellington with engine trouble had been given emergency priority to land. This aircraft tried to abort its landing but couldn’t gain height and crashed into a farm killing all 5 crew members and 3 civilians. As our engines were overheating by this time and the rain was still heavy, we requested permission to cut the engines and join the queue further back. This was granted and No.2 who had started his engines later than us, became No.1. He accelerated down the runway and began to lift off but for some reason nose-dived into the ground at the end of the airfield, killing all 7 crew members. Imagine the scene, a fire burning to the left of the runway a fire burning straight ahead and now as No.2 we were told to take off. We were getting revved up prior to becoming airborne when a vehicle raced down the length of the queue flashing a red light to cancel that night’s operation. I was never so glad to feel my feet on firm ground again when we exited the aircraft even though the ground was a sea of mud.
May
wasn’t such a busy month as we only completed 7 ops, but June although also a
seven op month contained a trip to Barcelonette to relieve the Maquis trapped on
a plateau. This op was originally scheduled for four squadron, two RAF and two
American however the weather was so bad over the Med. and Southern France that
one by one the sorties were cancelled until only the most experienced crews of
624 were left. I think this number four or five including us. The drop was
apparently a success and according to Colonel Buckmaster of SOE, saved the lives
of Col. Hislop and Captain Johnson as well as countless members of the Maquis.
Two
operations in July 1944 completed our tour numbering 38 sorties all told.
Incidents and recreation.
In between
operations I can still recall the following incidents that took place during our
tour, some amusing some not so.
When we
arrived at Blida we were accommodated in tents…two men to each tent. There had
been a spate of robberies by Algerian Arabs who used to cut through the lower
walls of the canvas and remove any personal items they could get their hands on.
Ron Brown the navigator and I shared and early one morning I was wakened by Ron
whispering to me to keep my head down as he was sure there was an intruder
outside and he intended firing a shot from his pistol over the top of my prone
body. Needless to say I was not too confident about Rons’ marksmanship
especially in the darkness and I shouted “ no way “. The Arab hearing this
scuttled away.
After some
time under canvas we were moved into chalets previously occupied by the French
Military which consisted of four rooms, a shower cubicle and an entrance hall
which was used as a bedroom. Occupying the latter in one chalet was a Canadian
called ‘Red’ Symms who was a collector of handguns. Poker and bridge were
the main card games and Symm’s billet became a popular venue for poker games.
One day, during a game in which Red was absent, a player complained about the
state of the playing cards and asked if anyone had another deck.
Another replied that ‘Red’ would probably have some in his tin box,
which was stored under his bunk and contained his personal effects. As one of
the players was about to open the box he was stopped by another resident of the
chalet who shared with ‘Red’. He proceeded to demonstrate why opening the
box was inadvisable. When everyone was cleared out of the way, the lid was
lifted and a gun discharged into the floor where a head would have been. This
was Symms way of dealing with the Arab pilferers, however it didn’t meet the
approval of the card school and they subsequently insisted that he dismantle his
booby trap.
For
recreation we sometimes travelled into Algiers where, if you could stand the
smell of the local cigarettes, you could enjoy a coffee. The Casbah of Algiers
made famous by a Charles Boyer film of that name was a magnet for some people
but not us as it contained narrow streets festooned with washing and populated
by people who showed a dislike for us in their very eyes. JC however was
determined to visit the place and talked us all into going. Out of the seven of
us only one had his pocket picket…guess whom…JC.
Blida sits
at the bottom of the Atlas mountains and someone had the idea of visiting one of
the ski resorts situated high up and popular with the French Algerians.
Requisitioning a 15-cwt truck, we all piled in for a days skiing but on arrival
at the resort we all decided to visit the bar for a pre ski drink. Six hours
later when the truck returned for us we were still in the bar, somewhat merry
and wondering where the ski hire was.
Another
amusing recollection that gives an idea of the conditions in which we lived,
took place in Brindisi. The billets leaked rain from the roof which we collected
in an assortment of tins, which created quite a musical symphony. As I have
already mentioned, most of us smoked during this period and cigs. were rationed.
This ration included a brand called ‘Vs’.
These cigarettes were atrocious and only smoked by those who were
desperate. One-day news flashed around the billet that the mess was selling
English cigarettes and a stampede ensued, each person returning with a prized
packet of Kensitas a brand not very popular but 100% better than ‘Vs’. The
remaining packs of these were consigned to the tins of roof water to show our
contempt for them. Later, when the Kensitas were finished and no more were
available from the mess, people had to resort to fishing out and drying the
sodden ‘Vs’ in order to satisfy their craving.
Half way
through our tour we were given 7 days leave at a local rest hotel situated in a
small fishing village called Jean Bartre. It was administered by Army Catering
and the food was quite acceptable. It was run by an RAOC corporal who treated
British beer as though it was liquid gold. After a morning swimming in the cove
at the foot of the cliffs, we would troop into the bar for a beer before tiffin.
There, we would have to undergo an agonising half-hour or so watching the barman
slowly pour the beer into a jug and then into the glasses, whilst we stood there
with our tongues hanging out. It was a welcome break especially as the mess
possessed a radiogram and about six records which were played continuously, so
much so that I still have not recovered from an overdose of Vera Lynn and a
record called “Biding my time “.
Once during
our stand-down period four of us arranged to go into Blida for dinner and a
show. Albert, Ted (Denness), Ronnie Brown and myself booked dinner at a hotel
with a few bottles of champagne (more sparkling wine than champagne). It must
have been quite potent because later on, during the performance of Seven Brides
for Seven Brothers, we were asked to leave for being too rowdy. The cinema in
Algiers was also a haunt of ours because I can remember queuing up to see Errol
Flynn in “ Black Swan “ a pirate swashbuckler.
Although we
shared a base with the Americans at Blida, we did not mix much but as they were
allowed no alcohol in their mess any invitation to ours was gratefully accepted.
Johnny Weeks and “Gene” Tunney used to play bridge against American
pairs and were a formidable team, winning many more times than they lost.
On a more
serious note, one of the incidents related to you by your father was our foray
into the bomb dump. This was the result of the brakes overheating during a
landing, rendering them inoperable. Instead of pulling up well short of the
runway end, we carried on at an angle of 45 degrees and landing up in the bomb
storage area. Fortunately for us they were not fused and none detonated.
About the
hole in the side of the aircraft, it could have been caused by either a rocket
or by flak. The ground crew who was experienced in repairing damage were
convinced that it must have been a rocket. Luckily the mid-upper gunner was not
in his turret at the time otherwise it would have taken his feet off.
Most nights
we encountered light flak somewhere or other but over the French Coast it was
always very heavy. One night after running into flak, which we used to call
“flaming onions”, your father commented that he could not synchronise the
engines. I tried everything, RPM and throttles but still we had an uneven beat
on one of the port engines. On landing in darkness I mentioned this to one of
the ground crew and logged it in my report at debriefing. After breakfast that
day I went down to dispersal and was surprised to see one of the airscrews of
JP160 on the ground with a portion of the blade missing. It had been shot off
and had been the cause of our irregular beat.
On one
sortie, as a result of an erroneous pinpoint of the junction of the Rhone and
Nazarre rivers (good old Johnny Weeks), we crossed the coast at Marseilles
instead of between Marseilles and Toulon. We became coned by searchlights and
the ensuing radar predicted flak was very heavy. Although we took all possible
evasive action and dropped to near sea level we knew that we had been hit as we
could hear flak hitting the fuselage.[2]
On returning to Blida we reported this to the ground crew expected substantial
damage. On inspecting the aircraft in daylight we were astonished to find that
there was not one hole in wings or fuselage just a mass of screeves caused by
shrapnel right at the end of its momentum but without sufficient force to
penetrate the stress skin.
Once, on
return from a sortie to a target near Toulouse, we crossed the coast near
Perpignan and made uneventful progress out to sea. Well out into the Med. when
we though we were well out a danger, a rocket flashed across our beam which we
assumed must have been from a JU88. We knew that there were two night fighter
squadrons stationed in the South West France, but we had never experienced them
this far out in the Med. [3]It must have been the only
rocket aboard as no more were fired and we made our way safely back to Blida.
Although
most nights over the Med. were clear, sometimes low cloud covered large areas,
especially over the Balearics which we used as a pinpoint before making our
final run to the North African coast using clear beacon as a guide. One night
when the cloud was down to sea level we had to drop down to try and get a
sighting of Majorca. Johnny Weeks as the bomb aimer was in the Plexiglas nose of
the Halifax trying hard to spot landfall. Suddenly he screamed over the intercom
“ PULL UP, PULL UP “. Dead
ahead we saw a mountain looming and realised that under normal boost we would
not clear it. For such emergencies there is a procedure which gives a max. boost
of 12lbs and full RPM. Taking this action we just managed to clear the top
although the bomb aimer was really shaken. Later when we landed he said “ It’s all right for the rest of you but I was in the
front.”
On a few
occasions, returning from France at dawn we would encounter Luftwaffe Condors
heading back to France from missions although whether it was from bombing
missions to North Africa or against allied shipping we never did find out.
It is
interesting to note that through all these missions we only ever suffered one
casualty amongst the crew and that was the Ted your father (the pilot) who
sustained a head wound when he was bounced off his seat when we ran into to some
cumulo nimbus cloud and the Halifax dropped like a stone. As he was not buckled
into his seat his head hit the perspex canopy!
On
completion of our tour we volunteered for a second, not because we were feeling
heroic but because we viewed it as the best opportunity of getting back to the
UK.
Albert
Sutton, Gene Tunney, Johnnie Weeks and Johnny Carroll went back to the UK to
complete a second tour for which both Albert and Johnny Carroll were awarded the
DFC. The remaining members of the crew were posted to 216 Squadron where another
Wireless OP. named Neville Springate joined us. A week or so after we completed
our tour and while still members of 624, supply drops were laid on to Warsaw and
Krakow in Poland, which meant flying over Yugoslavia, Czeckoslovakia, Hungary
and Poland, all heavily defended by flak batteries and night fighter squadrons.
The losses on these trips were tremendous so we were grateful our tour expired
when it did.
Life on an
operational squadron was something that had to be experienced to understand. At
home in Spalding Moor where losses were heavy, moral suffered but at Blida where
we were more fortunate a better atmosphere existed. I cannot remember how many
aircraft we lost during our tour, but two crews whom I counted as friends were
lost within weeks of each other, one off Sardinia and the other off the Spanish
coast.
YOYO Y YORK
was our call sign and was used for ground to air communications with the letter
Y being painted on the side of the aircraft.
Also, for a brief period, we had an emblem painted on the nose but I
cannot remember what it was. It was not common practise to have this on the nose
of RAF aircraft, a fact that I stressed to the crew, but they insisted and
scrounging some paint and brushes from the ground crew I proceeded with the
‘nose-art’. It lasted for 24 hours before a directive came down from on high
to remove same under the threat of charges. [5]
On days of
operations all crews reported to their respective section leaders
,
Navigators with Navigators, Bomb aimers with Bomb aimers etc., where we were all
briefed on special procedures such as what loads we were carrying, whether there
would be any “Joes “ (agents), fuel loads, wireless frequencies etc. All
this was done before the main briefing which dealt with target areas, where
likely night fighter activity would be encountered, weather etc. This was
followed by the issue of escape kits. These were more like evasion kits and
contained water purifying tablets, glucose sweets, hard biscuits and silk maps
of the area disguised as handerkerchiefs.
We were
also issued with currency of the area we would be flying over.
When we
were transporting any Joes we had no contact with them until all the crew were
aboard. Then they were brought out to the aircraft by independent vehicles and
boarded in silence. The mid-upper gunner who doubled as dispatcher was the only
member of the crew who had any contact with them. Unless they were from the UK
this was done by grunts and sign language. Most of these Joes gave no trouble
and when the green light was switched on they jumped without any bother.
Sometimes however when a foreign national was to be dropped, usually for
sabotage purposes, a reluctance to go meant that they had to be ‘helped’ by
the dispatcher. The delay meant that they could end up landing many miles from
where they had intended. Luckily this happened very rarely and I can only recall
one occurrence.
I can
recall an occasion when we went on a sortie without any functional guns. When
checking guns before flight, the armourers would plug in a chore horse, which
was an electrical trolley intended to save the aircraft’s batteries. A toggle
was used to isolate the internal circuit when this external supply was in
action. On completion of this ‘checking out’ the armourer was supposed to
remove this toggle and restore the internal circuit. On this occasion he had
failed to do so and we did not discover it until we tried to test our guns when
well out to sea. Theoretically it was forbidden to go over enemy territory
without a means of defence but it also meant that we would have to stooge around
for hours until we achieved a safe landing weight, there being no way to
jettison fuel. After a discussion amongst the crew it was decide to take a
chance and carry on with the mission. Luckily the trip was uneventful apart from
the usual light flak. No action was taken against the armourer as it would have
meant incriminating ourselves for not turning back.
[1] My
late father did his first ops as a second pilot with Les Povey and a Sgt. Wilkinson)
[2] My late fathers recollection was somewhat more colourful as he told me that a flak burst had flipped the aircraft and put it into a dive which he had great difficulty pulling out of, hence the foray to sea level. However it had served to give the Halifax a change of direction that was sufficiently violent to shake off the master searchlight and associated flak.
[3] Note: there is much conjecture that Spain violated its neutral status and allowed German nightfighers to be based in the Balearics and other crew were similarly surprised when they though they were safe…one fatally so.
[4] JD:
My father recounted one incident where they flew quite close to a Dornier
flying boat. They just eyed each other for a while and the Dornier pilot
eventually waved and peeled away, presumably having had a similarly long
night and didn’t feeling like mixing it.
[5]
JD. My father told me that this was a rose because the Bing Crosby
song “ The one rose “ was popular with the crew.