Obituaries

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Dr. James Hannah who was a pilot in 115 sqn RAF in which he flew tour in Lancs and he also flew a tour in 6 group RCAF Halifaxs can't recall the Sqn passed away on the 15th of May. Here is a pic of him last year getting a ride in a Cornell taken last year in Ft Erie .
 

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Geoff Fisken, leading Commonwealth ace in the Far East, passed away on Sunday. After flying training he was posted to flying boats at Seletar, Singapore, but hankered to fly fighters. When the Buffalos started to arrive in numbers, pilots were needed to ferry them to airfields on Singapore and Geoff gladly volunteered. He was then transferred to 243 Sqn with which he served throughout the Malayan Campaign. When 243 Sqn was disbanded at the end of January 1942, he was transferred to 453 Sqn and continued operations until the final Buffalos evacuated at the end of the first week in February. During the Malayan Campaign, Geoff attained as many as 6 kills, being one of only a very few Commonwealth pilots who attained ace status on the Buffalo. He subsequently flew P-40s, his personal aircraft wearing his well-known "Wairarapa Wildcat" marking.

Happy landings Geoff. You were one of a kind!

 
F/Lt Ralph Barker

Ralph Barker, who has died aged 93, served as a wireless operator and air gunner during the Second World War, surviving many hazardous anti-shipping operations in the Mediterranean theatre; he later became noted for his books about aviation and cricket.
After completing his training in 1941 Barker joined a Beaufort torpedo bomber squadron, flying from Scotland, but was soon posted to the Middle East with Nos 47 and 39 Squadrons. Flying from airfields on Malta and North African desert landing strips, it was the task of these squadrons to sink the Axis ships supplying Rommel's Panzers in the Western Desert. They were highly dangerous missions, and losses among the Beauforts were high.
Barker flew on many of these operations, but his career attacking convoys and their powerful escorts was terminated by a crash in which his pilot and navigator were killed. He returned to Britain, ending the war flying transport aircraft.

Ralph Hammond Cecil Barker was born at Feltham, Middlesex, on October 21 1917 and educated at Hounslow College. He joined the staff of the Sporting Life in 1934 but later went into banking. Meanwhile, he had begun writing, and several of his sketches were performed at the Windmill Theatre, some of them in the early years of the war.

After leaving the RAF in 1946, Barker returned to banking; but two years later he rejoined the Service as an administrative officer specialising in public relations. In December 1948 he moved to RAF Headquarters in Germany and was later based at Lubeck airfield to cover the Berlin Airlift. After two years broadcasting with the British Forces Network, Hamburg, he left Germany in 1952 for the Air Ministry; for two years he prepared official war records at the Air Historical Branch. He later saw service in the Persian Gulf and Aden on intelligence and PR duties.

By the time he retired from the RAF as a flight lieutenant in April 1961, Barker had already begun to establish himself as a serious author on RAF subjects. His first book, published in 1955, was Down in the Drink; this was followed by The Ship Busters (1957), an authoritative work in which he drew on his own experience of wartime operations. A succession of aviation books followed, among them The Schneider Trophy and Torpedo Bomber.

Barker's other great passion was cricket. An accomplished player himself, he turned out regularly for the RAF's Adastrians team, and for a number of years he captained West Surrey. His first book about cricket, Ten Great Innings, came out in 1964 and was followed three years later by Ten Great Bowlers. Reviewing the second of these, the broadcaster John Arlott described Barker as "a master of the reconstruction of past cricket matches".

Barker's most substantial book on the game is a history of the Test matches between England and Australia, published in 1969. It includes a report of every match and a summary of every Ashes series. He later wrote a further three books on cricket.

At the same time, Barker continued to write about aviation, and in 1982 turned his attention to the exploits of the Royal Flying Corps during the Great War, producing four books on the subject which are regarded as some of the most important reference works for that period of the RAF's history. His last book, Men of the Bombers, about the Second World War, came out in 2005.

Ralph Barker, who died on May 16, married, in 1947, Joan Harris. She died in 1993, and two years later he married Diana Darvey, who also predeceased him. He is survived by a daughter of his first marriage.

source: The Telegraph
 
Air Commodore Peter Cribb

Air Commodore Peter Cribb, who has died aged 92, was one of the most successful and gallant master bombers of the Pathfinder Force; he flew more than 100 wartime operations, including one when he made an unauthorised raid on Hitler's retreat at Berchtesgaden.
Cribb was already a veteran of more than 70 missions when he returned to operations in May 1944 to fly the Lancaster. He attacked targets in the run-up to D-Day, often acting as the master bomber directing the main force against rail yards and gun emplacements.
In July he was put in command of the newly-formed No 582 Squadron and flew 16 daylight sorties in support of the Normandy landings. On July 18 he was the deputy master bomber when more than 1,000 aircraft pulverised the German panzer divisions in front of Montgomery's stalled army at Caen.
Cribb also controlled more than 700 bombers which attacked the V-1 sites before the bombing campaign resumed its efforts against major oil targets in Germany.
On October 3 he was master bomber for the attack on the sea walls of Walcheren Island. Coastal gun batteries dominated the approaches to the important port of Antwerp; the aim was to breach the walls and flood the island, most of which was reclaimed polder below sea level.
As the first to arrive at the head of 252 Lancasters, he orbited the target and directed eight separate waves of bombers, correcting the aiming point with flares and markers to widen the initial breach. The sea poured in, forcing the German defenders to abandon their carefully prepared positions. Cribb was the last to leave the target after a brilliantly controlled attack, which allowed Canadian ground forces to capture the island and open Antwerp to the Allies. Newspapers hailed the achievement with the headline "RAF sinks an island".
On promotion to group captain at the age of 25, Cribb was appointed to command the Pathfinder airfield at Little Staughton in Bedfordshire, and shortly afterwards he was awarded a Bar to an earlier DSO. Frustrated at being desk-bound, he flew unofficially on a number of operations. On April 24 1945 he learned that a force of Lancasters was to bomb Hitler's Bavarian retreat at Berchtesgaden, but the Lancaster squadron on his airfield was stood down.
Determined not to miss this final attempt to eliminate Hitler, Cribb commandeered a Lancaster and some bombs and made up a crew from the senior executives on his station. He took off at dawn, catching up with the main force as it was approaching the target. He dropped his bombs and obtained an excellent aiming point photograph.
Anxious to get back to Britain before anyone realised what he had had been up to , Cribb returned on a direct route at top speed — but to no avail. Air Vice-Marshal Donald Bennett, head of the Pathfinder Force, had tried to contact him and his deputy, only to be told that they were airborne on "a 10-hour navigation exercise". It was said that, when he learned the truth, Bennett "hit the roof".
The son of a wool merchant, Peter Henry Cribb was born in the Yorkshire Dales on September 28 1918 and educated at Prince Henry Grammar School, Otley, before gaining a cadetship to the RAF College, Cranwell, where he trained as a pilot.
Cribb joined No 58 Squadron to fly the Whitley bomber, and on the outbreak of war flew convoy patrols before the squadron reverted to the bombing role. He was involved in attacks on German-occupied airfields in Norway and Denmark.
Following the German blitz into the Low Countries, he bombed road and rail systems being used to transport reinforcements, and during a hectic period in June he flew numerous sorties in support of the British Expeditionary Force. After completing 25 operations he was rested.
In December 1941 Cribb was promoted to squadron leader and joined the RAF's first Halifax squadron, No 35, as a flight commander. He attacked major industrial targets in Germany before turning his attention to the German battleship Tirpitz, which was at anchor in a fjord near Trondheim.
Bad weather and a smoke screen severely hampered the low-level attack and the force returned the following day. As he approached in poor visibility, Cribb's Halifax hit the sea and the tail wheel was ripped off. After he had landed the intelligence officer asked him at what height he had delivered his attack. Cribb replied: "I don't know. The altimeter reads in feet, not fathoms."
Cribb flew on the first "Thousand Bomber" raid, against Cologne on the night of May 30 1942, and on the attacks on Essen and Bremen that followed. Shortly afterwards he was awarded a DFC.
No 35 became one of the founder squadrons of the Pathfinders, and Cribb — who was rated an "exceptional" pilot — flew on the first raid mounted by the new force when he attacked Flensburg on the night of August 18/19 1942. He went on to attack the heavily defended targets in the Ruhr, often returning with his Halifax damaged by enemy gunfire. By January 1943 he had completed 60 operations and was awarded his first DSO .
During this period he shared a bleak Nissen hut with his Canadian colleague, "Shady" Lane. The winter of 1942-43 was especially cold, and both men were anxious to avoid being the last into bed, and thus responsible for switching out the lights. Eventually Cribb circumvented this problem by shooting them out instead with his .38 revolver. Due to the cold and an alcoholic haze, he frequently missed. In the morning his batman would wake him with a cup of tea and inquire: "Shall I reload, sir?"
Cribb was given command of the Bomber Development Unit, working closely with the eminent scientist RV Jones to develop new bombing, navigation and electronic countermeasure aids. He frequently flew on operations unofficially to test new equipment and tactics. In May 1944 he returned to the Pathfinder Force to start a third tour of operations.
In May 1945 he left for Ceylon, from where he flew Liberators on mercy missions to drop food and medical supplies to the PoW camps spread across the Far East. He served in India and commanded the airbase at Peshawar during the difficult period of Indian Partition.
After a period with Coastal Command and at the Air Ministry, on technical intelligence duties, he served at HQ Bomber Command, responsible for operational plans and policy at a time when the V-bombers were entering service. He was appointed CBE.
In 1957 Cribb was sent to Germany, where he commanded three fighter stations and took every opportunity to fly the Meteor and Hunter fighters. In 1961, on promotion to air commodore, he served in Aden as the senior air staff officer, having responsibility for operations in the Radfan and along the Yemen border.
Two years at the MoD left him disillusioned with the Wilson government's defence cuts, and disdainful of "the ponderous bureaucratic existence in Whitehall". Accordingly, he resigned in 1967.
Cribb moved with his family to Western Australia, where he was manager of one of the state's first giant iron ore mines before starting his own business in Perth. He was active as a Rotarian, magistrate and charity worker.
A keen sportsman in his youth, Cribb played rugby for the Yorkshire Wanderers, once breaking his nose during a warm-up match against the All Blacks. In later life he was a blue-water yachtsman and game fisherman. A modest man, he never spoke of his wartime experiences unless pressed to do so and then only to relate the episodes he had found amusing.
Peter Cribb died on June 20. He married, in 1949, Vivienne Perry, who survives him with their three sons.

Source: The Telegraph
 

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