March 4, 2004 at 12:43 pm
Snapper…I have been looking through the 609 stuff I have and came across references to MN205 which was shot down on 11th Nov 1944 near Dunkirk. All the books simply tell me that it was shot down by flak…however doc bells book adds some more to the details. Do you have any other details on this? can you mail me and I can let you know all the other details that I have so far
Cheers
Dave
By: ettrick40 - 9th March 2004 at 07:33
hello Dave,
It’s at the “Musée Memorial de la bataille de Normandie”
Boulevard Fabian Ware
14400 Bayeux
tel 00 33 231 92 93 41,Fax 00 33 231 21 85 11
[email]museedelabataille@free.fr[/email]
open all the year except the first fourteen days of January
cheers
By: DaveR - 8th March 2004 at 18:13
Thanks for the reply etterick40. I did a search for Bayeux museums and the tourism web site lists a number of musuems around the area. I have seem a recovered Napier Sabre museum at Arromanches…is this the musuem you mean or is there another around the area that has the remains?
Thanks
Dave
By: ettrick40 - 8th March 2004 at 08:18
Hello,
The remains of Balbo’s aircraft are at the Bayeux museum.
By: Snapper - 6th March 2004 at 21:47
No need:
S.A. Pilot Leads Raid Over Holland
WITH THE TACTICAL AIR FORCE, BELGIUM, Sunday
A Johannesburg pilot, Squadron-Leader T.Y. Wallace, led an attack yesterday by a West Riding squadron which paved the way for a new advance in Holland. On the previous day Squadron-Leader Wallace had been in the front line with the Canadians to study the reasons why the advance there was being held up. The attack which he planned as a result worked out magnificently.
Rocket-firing Typhoons arrived over the area, and a pre-arranged smoke signal was fired off. As they went in the pilots could see Allied armour waiting to go forward as soon as attacks were made against the German positions which had been dug-in on higher points besides the road.
The Squadron-leader’s first rocket set fire to a house which the Germans were using for an observation post, and, after the first section had poured in many rockets and all the cannon shells it had, the second section followed in.
Then the Typhoons reformed, and the pilots watched the Canadian troops going forward without opposition.
SAPA-Reuter. 24th September 1944
SOUTH AFRICAN FIGHTER ACE
SQUADRON-LEADER T.Y. WALLACE KILLED IN ACTION
Squadron-Leader Thomas Young Wallace, DFM, CFM, who was killed after his plane had burst into flames due to enemy action and crashing near his target on November 11, took part in the defence of London during the Battle of Britain, and within three weeks brought down 12 enemy planes and probably another four. After being reported missing he was found injured on top of a house.
He was one of the nine fighter pilots left to defend London. Posted to Canada as an instructor, he was ill for four months after a serious crash near Ontario, Canada.
He returned to England in June, 1943, and was posted to No. 1 Squadron, on Typhoons, which were then on the secret list. He was invited to make a special study of the plane. His invasion plan was submitted to the Air Ministry by his OC, the late Lord Douglas Hamilton. He went to the north of England to make a special study of invasion aerial tactics, and on returning to London was made a Fighter Controller.
Squadron-Leader Wallace joined the West Riding Squadron of Typhoons as Flight Commander soon after ‘D’-Day and he fought in the Battle of the Falaise Gap. Early in October he was appointed to command the famous West Riding (Yorkshire) Typhoon Squadron.
A few weeks ago he led the raid over Holland and paved the way for the Canadians advance.
He joined the RAF early in 1939 and was the first South African to gain the DFM. His eldest brother, the late Lieut. Hugh Wallace, SAAF, was killed in Italy on May 11. Lieut Derrick Wallace of the Royal Navy, arrived in England from Persia by plane to spend a months leave with his brother a day before he was killed.
Squadron-Leader Wallace was the second son of Captain and Mrs W.F. Wallace. He was in his 29th year and was educated at the Jeppe High School.
UNVEILING CEREMONY AT YORK MINSTER
S. African woman represented relatives of 18,000 airmen
A SOUTH AFRICAN woman, Mrs Ruth Wallace, of Kensington, Johannesburg, was chosen by ballot to have the honour to represent the relatives of 18,000 airmen who lost their lives on active service, at a memorial service and unveiling ceremony in York Minster recently. She arrived in the mail ship, the Edinburgh Castle, in Durban today.
Mrs Wallace stood next to the Duke of Edinburgh during the ceremony, which was attended by 4,500 people. On either side of her stood two Marshals of the RAF, Sir Arthur Harris and Viscount Portal. Others present included Lord Tedder and the High Commissioners of South Africa, Canada, Australia and New Zealand and Ambassadors for the United States, France, Norway, Belgium, Denmark and the Netherlands.
‘Greatest moment in my life’
It was an impressive ceremony, “the greatest moment in my life,” commented Mrs Wallace. The memorial was in the form of an astronomical clock in the chantry of York Minster. Mrs Wallace’s son, Squadron-Leader Thomas Young Wallace, who was killed in a crash over France, commanded No. 609 (West Riding) Squadron in 1944.
Immediately after the ceremony Mrs Wallace attended a reception given by the Duke of Edinburgh at Duncombe Place, where she met him personally.
“He was very natural and immediately put you at your ease,” said Mrs Wallace. “He asked me if I was nervous in York Minster in front of all those people.”
Mrs Wallace is to receive a memento of this very special occasion in the form of a tape recording of the memorial service from Lord Deremore, the chairman of the Memorial Committee.
DIANA
Natal Daily News. 22nd November 1955
Mrs Ruth Wallace, of Kensington, Johannesburg, who arrived in Durban from a visit to Britain in the Edinburgh Castle to-day. While she was in England, Mrs Wallace was chosen by ballot to represent the relatives of 18,000 airmen who lost their lives on active service, at a memorial service attended by the Duke of Edinburgh.)
(N.b. Photograph caption)
Natal Daily News. 22nd November 1955
A SOLEMN CEREMONY: The Duke of Edinburgh was photographed after the ceremony of unveiling the memorial in York Minster, England, to 18,000 airmen from allied countries who lost their lives on active service. The memorial is in the form of an astronomical clock. Inset: A Johannesburg woman, Mrs W.F. Wallace had the honour to represent the relatives of these airmen at the ceremony.
Johannesburg. 27th December 1955
By: Snapper - 6th March 2004 at 21:43
Bah. Best I reboot with the scanner on, seeing as I found the clipping today. Datewise i’ll have a root through.
Roelandts a/c – the video was quite jumpy. I saw it at the nephew of Georges Jaspis. I haven’t got a copy myself, but one day I will get hold of it. I get stuff down now and again. The remains that were recovered – scrap metal from the look of it – are on display somewhere in a museum. not sure where, sorry. On the continent though.
By: DaveR - 6th March 2004 at 21:06
Snapper,
I would be interested to find out the dates that his aircraft was found…but don’t worry too much if it is a pain. Was it a local French paper or did the story make it back to the UK?
Apart from the very safe RPs how much of Roelandts Typhoon survived? is the footage with 609 archives?
By: Snapper - 5th March 2004 at 20:25
Aha. Well, she was the South African representative for something at some service in the UK, a memorial thing. Came by cruise liner. Do you really want me to dig out the press cuttings? As for burial, Pihen-Les-Guines War Cemetery in the Pas de Calais. I imagine the aircraft remains were either scrapped or destroyed by tide over the years. No idea in all honesty.
Saw footage of Balbo Roelandts Typhoon being dug up last week. Including 6 blue-nosed RP’s being removed from the hole. By digger. gulp!!!
By: DaveR - 5th March 2004 at 18:51
re: 609 Typhoon
Thats the basis of the information that I have…ex 609 members obviously kept in touch after the war if they knew this information but I was wondering if it was known when his mother re-visited Dunkirk? Where is he buried? Were the remains of the aircraft left after they retrieved his body?
By: Snapper - 4th March 2004 at 16:36
The CO, Tom Wallace. A South African. An attack on Walcheren. Typhoon appeared at low tide when his mother was visiting.