June 9, 2018 at 8:06 am
Would anybody know where I can obtain a copy of the above book? It is not available on the Pen and Sword, the publisher, or any other bookshops nor Amazon. It was published 2014/15.
I believe it may have details of the JU88 crash at RAF Thorney on 18th April 1941.
I am trying to narrow down the location of the crash ahead of an imminent Ground Penetrating Radar survey at Thorney by archaeological department prominent university.
Hope you can help
Mike
By: Aviart - 17th June 2018 at 22:17
There are other coordinates the intelligence officer could have used to pin point Thorney Island. If you change the coordinates slightly, a few close combinations still land on the island. Thus meaning he had a choice of coordinates to choose from to offer as the closest option for tha crash site. I think the specific choice he made would have been in the general vicinity of the crash site he was investigating.
By: LM342 - 17th June 2018 at 19:24
Big thank you to Ian and Aviart
I believe the four figure map reference is primarily there to confirm the location as Thorney Island.
I have since received some documents detailing the crash (but not yet the location). The aircraft powered into the ground at a very steep angle. The engines and front of the cockpit were buried and the rest of the aircraft was completely destroyed/burnt. Two 15mg’s and two external bomb racks along with a few other bits were recovered. With regard to the crew “small pieces” were found and buried locally in four coffins (no doubt with a few sand bags) with military honours.
The engines should give a good signal.
Would anyone care to hazard a guess at what depth the engines would be found? I know it would depend on the local ground conditions.
Thanks again, Mike
By: John Green - 17th June 2018 at 17:23
I live hardly a stones throw from Thorney ‘Island’, have flown over what might be a hundred times and occasionally landed, and, additionally, sailed around that part of Chichester harbour probably as many.
Thorney ‘Island’ is roughly square in outline and is no longer an island being short of water on the North side. The seabed around the other three sides is, or was, littered with aircraft wrecks. Thorney is small and the sea around is big. With that in mind, it’s my guess that a majority of aircraft would willy nilly have gone into the sea either completely or partially.
Thorney was a target because of the nearness of Portsmouth and more emphatically because of the presence of deliberately lit fires on nearby Hayling Island acting as decoy beacons to convince Luftwaffe pilots to bomb the wrong place ! The proximity of Westhampnett and Tangmere added to the rather busy day and night aerial shenanigans making this part of the British Isles a rather promising scrap metal collection facility.
By: Aviart - 17th June 2018 at 15:13
Go to “new conversion”
In the “2/ Enter the “Modified British System” coordinates to be decoded.” text field enter: wQ1924
On the results page on the map at the bottom switch to satellite and zoom in to see the location. Not sure how precise, but a note of imprecision varying from 150 to 1000 meters on the field is given.
By: Aviart - 17th June 2018 at 15:06
The map reference should be “wQ1924” on the British Cassini Grid:
http://www.echodelta.net/mbs/eng-translation.php
Not quite on the aerodrome…
By: Aviart - 17th June 2018 at 14:33
The A.I.1.(k) reports are generally only recordings of information that would be of use to the intelligence branches. Prisoner interrogation reports and or further investigation of unknown or specialist equipment carried by the aircraft.
The Ju 88 A-5 was not particularly interesting to the intelligence chaps by this point. It had been around for a good few months and other examples would have been examined prior to this incident. There is nothing to suggest that this aircraft would have been carrying any special equipment. Also, we need to take into consideration the state of the wreckage. Which is recorded as being pretty catastrophic. No markings were ascertainable and they had to guess the number of crewmembers. So a bit of a mess…
What I’m trying to get at is that what with all of the crew being killed and no reason to get excited by the wreckage I doubt there would have been any real reason to follow up the initial A.I.1.(g) crash report with a A.I.1.(k) report. So your search for it might not be very fruitful.
The A.I.1.(g) report contains nothing further on the location other than “Thorney Island Aerodrome, Portsmouth. Map Reference: Q.1924”
Your best line of enquiry would be to try and make contact with any of the older generations in the area who might remember the incident, but sadly that is a slim chance given the years. You might also try Google Earth. It contains satellite imagery and you might be able to see some areas that look like old filled in craters and burnt earth. Again a long shot, but you never know you might be able to cross-reference the satellite imagery on Google Earth with the given map reference: Q1924?.
By: Ian Hunt - 17th June 2018 at 10:42
Hi Mike
Had a look at that file but, sorry, it is just an general index file for the AI 1 (k) reports, with the listings only given in very general category terms, not detailed enough to identify which of the reports you’d then need to locate.
For example a section is for reports about “Enemy Aircraft”, one subsection then being say for the “Junkers 88” – then a list of maybe 30 different report numbers that’ll refer to matters concerning Ju 88s.
Ian
Maybe we can see which file contains the individual Report that you think might be the one you’re looking for.
By: LM342 - 9th June 2018 at 23:34
Matt
PM sent
Thanks Mike
By: Matt Poole - 9th June 2018 at 23:03
Hi, Mike,
If you haven’t secured a copy of the book yet, I might have found a copy, which for me, including postage, is $27.62 (20.59 pounds, at present). I don’t want to post the site here, because someone else might gobble up the one copy, so if you write me a PM, I’ll tell you more.
Cheers,
Matt
By: LM342 - 9th June 2018 at 20:59
Hi Ian
That would be amazing if you could I ask very nicely with a promise of lunch the next time you are in Cornwall!
The exact location would be amazing but just narrowing down would help with the GPR / magnetic resistivity survey.
The file reference I have is RAF Airforce Intelligence AI 1 (k) 166/1941
The index for these appears to be AIR40/2969
There is a file AIR40/2964 which covers these reports but has a misleading title so it is either wrong or misleading as many are. Here is a link to the search page-
http://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/results/r?_q=AIR+INTELLIGENCE+1%28K%29
We believe that a lot of the wreckage was removed but that there is still quite a bit down there.
Huge thanks for your interest
Best regards
Mike Mcleod
By: Ian Hunt - 9th June 2018 at 20:27
If you ask me nicely I might (time and work permitting) be able to take a look at that file for you. I work not far from TNA.
Is it details of the exact crash location you’re after?
Ian
By: LM342 - 9th June 2018 at 18:35
Hi Ian
Thanks for trying! The information regarding the aircraft is as follows –
Mission: Attack on Portsmouth, England.
Date: 18th April 1941
Time: 2.15 a.m.
Unit: 2 Staffel./Kampfgeschwader 54
Type: Junkers Ju 88A-5
Werke/Nr. 6025
Coded: B3 + GK
The details (excluding the precise location) are on this excellent website
http://aircrewremembrancesociety.co.uk/styled-15/styled-18/styled-133/index.html
I have tried unsuccessfully to contact this excellent website.
There is a file reference which I believe is in TNA Kew AIR40/2969 (?) which I am chasing – doesn’t help that it is not digitised and I live in Cornwall!
Any thoughts most welcome
Mike
By: Ian Hunt - 9th June 2018 at 17:38
Hi Mike
Not the book you’re after, but Vol 8 of Nigel Parker’s “Luftwaffe Crash Archive” series says Ju88C-4, Wnr 0345, R4+BM, of 4/NJG2 crashed at Hurns Farm, Gedney Hill, nr Thorney, Cambs at 21:23 hrs.
It says the reason for the crash was not clear but the a/c was on fire in the air and dived vertically into soft clay, being almost entirely buried.
So little was left that the crash report notes were very brief. It says the site was excavated in November 1978, when the a/c identity and the fate of the crew was established. O/gefr Wilhelm Beetz and 2 others killed. Now buried Cannock Chase.
Don’t know whether any of this helps?
Ian
ps Ha! Ignore the above. Just turned back a page and it mentions another crash on the same night on Thorney Island Airfield, Portsmouth at 02:00. No details of the precise location though.
How strange is that: two crashes the same night at completely different places with just about the same name!!
By: kirmington - 9th June 2018 at 09:46
https://www.booktopia.com.au/luftwaffe-s-attacks-on-britain-1941-1945-andy-saunders/prod9781783030255.html
here’s a start! About £21 but dont know the postage.
……and sorry I just read the blurb and it says that it is not in stock and has to be ordered from the supplier so probably back to square one. Sorry for wasting your time!