TEMPSFORD VETERANS AND RELATIVES ASSOCIATION SPRING NEWSLETTER 2014

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TEMPSFORD VETERANS AND RELATIVES ASSOCIATION SPRING NEWSLETTER 2014 Bob s diary It is hard to know where to start this newsletter - so much has happened in the world of the TVARA since the last one! In the time honoured phrase, there is good news & bad news, so I will start with one of the good things that have happened and go on from there. Firstly, there was a record attendance at the Remembrance Sunday Service. We were, yet again, blessed with fine weather, which meant that neither did anyone have to get wet, nor did we all have to get very friendly squeezing inside the Barn! We were privileged to have four veterans in attendance: Len Ratcliff, Tommy Thomas, Mike Gibbons and Bob Large, who made his TVARA debut. We hope very much to see all of them in the Summer as well. Having veterans able to attend events is extremely important to all of us. Pictures of the day are on the next page. The autumn has been a 3 month whirlwind for me, and I have been clocking up the air miles attending events. October brought the ceremony at St Clement Danes, which we mentioned in the last newsletter. Many TVARA members were able to attend this wonderful ceremony marking, finally, the contribution made by the Special Duties Squadrons. In the words of Mark Seaman, who gave the address at the ceremony, this is a permanent memorial to some of the best and bravest aircrew of the Second World War and whose endeavours were in support of some of the noblest aspirations let us not forget their squadron crests and mottos For Freedom and Liberate. What finer aspirations can there be?

REMEMBRANCE SUNDAY On the evening before the Remembrance Sunday Service, Edwin received a Tempsford Surprise! Ken Merrick, the author of Flights of the Forgotten had sent a signed plate to be inserted into Edwin s copy of the book, along with a letter to Edwin. Mike Gibbons also presented Edwin with a folder containing all the records relating to his uncle, F/O Alex Bryce, who was killed on 7 May 1944. Operation Payback! Cadets from 2500 Squadron ATC formed the guard of honour once again. They are a credit to their unit. Rev Margaret Marshall conducted the service. We were privileged to have four veterans at the service. L-R Mike Gibbons, Len Ratcliff, Tommy Thomas, Bob Large

3 December - Report on a new Tempsford Memorial W/Cdr Len Ratcliff, with French agent Bob Maloubier, and Noreen Riols. Some of the members of the TVARA were delighted to be able to join the people of Tempsford to witness the unveiling of the Tempsford Memorial by HRH The Prince of Wales. The Memorial (which came into being following a village initiative and which was designed by Tazi Husain) bears, on the top, the names of women agents who went into the Occupied Countries to carry out a range of highly dangerous tasks including those of Wireless Operators and Couriers. The base of the Memorial carries the crests of the two Tempsford Special Duties Squadrons who were responsible for ensuring that many of these women reached their destinations safely. The Memorial is a great tribute to both the women and the men who flew them. Following a short service in the church, led by Rev Margaret Marshall, His Royal Highness was greeted by an honour guard formed by members of 2500 ATC Squadron (St Neots). HRH then proceeded to the Memorial and, after unveiling it, inserted the final piece of the mosaic which depicts a dove, the full moon, and the inscription By the full moon we flew. Two of our veterans, along with relatives of some of the agents and other specially selected guests then joined HRH for a drink in the Wheatsheaf. Edwin with W/Cdr & Mrs Ratcliff & Noreen Riols. The Squadron Crests at the base of the Memorial. Behind the Memorial an information board (right) gives a brief history of RAF Tempsford and 138 & 161 Special Duties Squadrons.

The fourth event of the autumn was actually, chronologically, the first. In September, a ceremony was held in Harmondsworth, South London, to celebrate the early work of Barnes Wallis, creator of the bouncing bomb used in the Dambusters Raids on the Möhne and Eder dams. The early tests on the bomb were undertaken at the Road Research Laboratories in Harmondsworth. Following the unveiling of the monument to Barnes Wallis, which is topped by a blue plaque (below), a special presentation was made by Wg Cdr Ed Partridge OBE AE DL, Representative Deputy Lieutenant for the London Borough of Hillingdon to Tommy Thomas, a local resident, and a Tempsford Veteran well known to most of us. Tommy was officially presented with his Bomber Command clasp in recognition of his bravery and service. Bob & Edwin were invited to the ceremony as representatives of the TVARA (thank you, Armelle), and were delighted to witness this presentation to Tommy who, in addition to his work on mail pick ups for 161 Squadron, had spent a period as a rear gunner when the Squadron was used for bombing operations. Tommy with Dr Mary Stopes Rowe, Barnes Wallis daughter, and Jonathan Stopes Rowe, (grandson), pictured behind the plinth bearing the blue plaque. Apologies that we have no picture of the actual presentation of the Bomber Command Clasp - we were both seated behind the action and could only get pictures of the back of Tommy s head! B & E Picture courtesy of Tangmere Museum

Continuing, briefly, the good news: we have gained several new members in the last few months. It is to be hoped that at least some of them will be able to attend the Summer Gathering and discover the pleasure of meeting other Tempsford family members. Sadly, in the last few months, we have lost three of our veterans, and one long standing member of the TVARA. Noel Gomersall (161 Squadron). You can get a flavour of Noel s Aussie straight talking and sense of humour from the 2009 Summer Newsletter here. His son, Ross, hopes to attend the Summer Gathering this year. Jack Galbraith (161 Squadron) was a Canadian contributor to the last 2 newsletters - in the Summer 2013 edition he is pictured wearing his Runways to Freedom pin. Jack actually coined the slogan, which has been taken up enthusiastically by many members. Bob had regular conversations with Jack, and learned a lot from him about the feelings of colonial servicemen far from home. Our oldest veteran, Norman Riches, was with us last summer, sharing a joke about soft landings with Mike Gibbons. His health failed quickly, and he died at Christmas. Tom Croad, the brother of George Croad (who was KIA on 138 Squadron) was one of the earliest members of the TVARA (in its former incarnation as the Friends of Tempsford). Edwin was able to attend his funeral on 15 January and to pass on the condolences of the TVARA to his widow, Kath. They will all be much missed. In the way of such things, the circle of life continues turning. We were contacted just after Christmas by Andrew Wooster, whose grandfather, Clarence Bowker, served at Tempsford, and who died on Christmas Day.

AN ANNIVERSARY On December 11, it was 70 years ago that an RAF plane carrying, among others, SOE s chief agent in Denmark, Flemming Muus, was shot down over Bonderup and St. Merløse. Muus was on his way to Denmark to help prepare the resistance movement in view of the expected allied invasion. He was saved by some brave people in the Tølløse area. ST. MERLØSE The night before December 11 1943, a Halifax plane from the British Royal Air Force was flying over Denmark. On board were 12 boxes of explosives and hand weapons meant for the Danish resistance movement. The cargo was to be dropped east of Tissø lake. On board was also Flemming B. Muus. He was a Dane, but also a major in the British army and SOE s chief agent in Denmark. He had been in England during the fall and beginning of winter 43, where he had been involved in the plans for bringing the Danish resistance movement into shape so that it might be of help during the expected Allied invasion. The British crew was told that they would be taking Muus with them to Denmark only a very short time before the Halifax took off from the Tempsford base in England. Flemming B. Muus was supposed to parachute down near the hill of Gyldenløves Høj between Kirke Hvalsø and Jystrup. Spotted by a German fighter plane Shortly before 2 am, the RAF plane was spotted by a German night fighter which started shooting. The right wing of the Halifax was ripped up by machine gun fire, one of the engines caught fire, and the other engine cut out. The crew, and probably especially captain Peter Barter, fought to put the plane more or less safely on the ground. It landed in a frozen field near the farm of Bonderupgård in the vicinity of St. Merløse. It was lucky the furrows were ploughed in the right direction, the crew later said. The plane came to a halt shortly before a marl pit. The crew managed to escape from the burning Halifax and separated into two groups. One group went northwest towards Tuse, the other northeast towards Roskilde. The group fleeing to the northwest received help from brave locals and was rescued by being sent to Sweden, while the group fleeing to the east was denounced and ended up as German war prisoners. Bicycling in Sorø Flemming B. Muus was not in any of the groups. After the crash, he fled towards Bonderupgård but was frightened by a barking dog. He ran over the frozen moor towards Vanløse Huse and was taken in and hidden by Frederik Jensen who had seen the air combat together with his wife. Muus spent the night in the hay loft. He bought Frederik Jensen s son s bicycle, biked to Sorø, caught the train to Copenhagen and was saved. On Wednesday December 11 it was, therefore, 70 years ago that the Halifax plane was shot down and landed in the field near Bonderup. At this occasion, two Englishmen and a group of Danes met in the narrow road of Bonderup Allé. The Englishmen were Nigel Atkins and his son, Jean Marc. Nigel Atkins father - and thus Jean Marc s grandfather - Brian Atkins, was one of the members of the Halifax crew. He was the plane s 2nd pilot. The other people present in Bonderup Allé were relatives of those who participated in helping the British crew in 1943, representatives of Holbæk Museum, and Jan Christensen from Næstved who is writing a book about another downing of an RAF plane on Sjælland, at Allindemagle in August 1944. To the rendezvous in Bonderup Allé they had brought photos and maps to find the exact spot where Brian Atkins and the rest of the crew crash-landed. Photos for the museum After the meeting in Bonderup, the party continued to Holbæk Museum, all the while discussing what happened in those December days. Nigel Atkins presented several objects to Holbæk Museum and had the opportunity to discover the museum s collection of memorabilia from the Occupation, among which one tyre from the Halifax plane from the field near Bonderup. The museum was given photos of Brian Atkins and of Ralph Briggs, Bill Howell, Sydney Smith, Joe Fry, Peter Barter and Nick Anderson, who were on board the aircraft. By Jørgen Juul - NORDVESTNYT newspaper Article contributed by Nigel Atkins

The TVARA - growing & growing! Bob writes: On 5 July, in 1944, Hudson FK790 and its crew left RAF Tempsford on a mission to drop 4 Dutch agents into occupied Holland. They did not return. The pilot was my uncle, Flt/Lt John Menzies DFC. The crew were Denis Withers, Eric Eliot and Ken Bunney. The Dutch agents were Jan Bockma, Pleun Verhoef, Peter Kwint & Johannes Walter. The aircraft was shot down by a German night fighter off the Dutch coast and all on board FK790 were killed. The bodies of the agents and three of the crew members were found close to the date of the crash, but my uncle was listed as missing. He was missing until 5 July 1997 when some Dutch fishermen caught their nets on the wreckage of the aircraft. A salvage operation ensued, because explosives were discovered, and the aircraft was raised from the sea bed. It was confirmed that the remains of Flt/Lt Menzies were still in the cockpit. He was buried with full military honours, alongside his crew, in October 1998, in Makkum, Holland. Had it not been for my search to find out what had happened to him, beginning in 1985 when my mother died, and I inherited his medals, the TVARA would not exist. That the TVARA has grown & grown is something I could not possibly have imagined when we stood in a cold and very windy Dutch churchyard laying my uncle to rest. We, the relatives of that crew, formed a bond then which has led to this a tribute to what is good in people out of a situation which was born of evil. If anyone would like to know more about the story of FK790, Bob s book about it has just been reissued in print & digital formats. Full details of where to obtain it are on the website - http://www.161squadron.org/linksnewv2.htm

The Tempsford Veterans and Relatives Association We help the old to remember, and the young to understand. 138 & 161 Special Duties Squadrons Special then Special now Special always Contact details: Bob Body - editor@tempsford-squadrons.info Websites www.tempsford-squadrons.info www.161squadron.org www.tempsford.20m.com