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Snoopy

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Viewing 8 posts - 91 through 98 (of 98 total)
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  • in reply to: No more heroes……… #2120841
    Snoopy
    Participant

    Roland Beaumont: Family?

    Though I certainly never met Roland Beaumont (and am not even from the same country), I have read enough of his contributions to aviation (and felt the results, in the form of certain successfully exported aviation products) to feel I’d like to respectfully endorse ReHeat’s and Snapper’s comments.

    One question: Does anyone know if the late Roland Beaumont was related to another RAF officer of the same last name, who as a Group Captain was loaned to the Indian Air Force, and commanded an IAF training establishment in the 1950/1951 time frame? If so, I can claim a small, indirect connection …

    Snoopy

    in reply to: What is this bird? #2121134
    Snoopy
    Participant

    RE: What is this bird?

    KabirT:

    The aircraft is a Westland Wapiti IIA, an army co-operation light bomber aircraft that was extensively used by the RAF in India and Iraq / Mesopotamia, in the period between the two World Wars.

    I have seen this specific picture before; the caption stated that this particular aircraft belonged to A Flight of No 1 Squadron of the fledgeling Indian Air Force; and that this picture was taken over New Delhi in the mid-1930s.

    A Flight, No 1 Squadron, Indian Air Force was formed on 1st April 1933 with four such aircraft, six pilots and 19 airmen (called Havai Sepoys, in the Indian Air Force of the time) at Drigh Road, Karachi, now Pakistan.

    Regards,

    Snoopy

    in reply to: BBMF other types ? #2121239
    Snoopy
    Participant

    RE: BBMF other types – early RAF Middle and Far East ops?

    Slightly late thought; but (for an RAF Memorial Squadron rather than an expanded BBMF; and yes, I know this is even less likely to ever happen than some of the other proposals):

    How about an example of one or two of the two-seat light bombers — Wapitis, Harts / Audaxes or their variants — that the RAF used between the two World Wars, on what were then called “policing” duties, in Afghanistan, India, and Iraq, among other locations?

    Less glamorous than some of the other types, and perhaps not be as easily recognisable by Joe Public; but of some historic significance for the RAF, perhaps? Isn’t it true that the RAF owed its survival as a separate arm, during the period between the two WWs, at least partly to being able to represent that a couple of squadrons of such aircraft could “police” remote territories more effectively and at lower cost than troops on the ground?

    (And given pivotal 1990s and 2001 events involving air power in the Middle East, can’t some aviation historian dredge up some 1920s Whitehall memo on the use of air power in such circumstances that seems eerily prescient today … ?)

    Cheers,

    Snoopy

    in reply to: Is this cockpit a Mustang Cockpit ? #2121251
    Snoopy
    Participant

    RE: M S Pujji and other Indian aircrew in WW2

    Whee!! 🙂 Thanks for that link, Jagan.

    The squadron referred to in the article, which Sqn Ldr M S Pujji commanded in the Burma-India theatre, was I think No 4 Squadron RIAF. IIRC they were tasked with low-level Tactical Recce and support operations; and yes, they did suffer particularly heavy casualties (ref his comment that they lost 35 pilots and he didn’t manage to shoot down any Zeros). In common with other Tac R units in the theatre, they would have been under orders *not* to engage in air combat, as it was deemed more important for them to bring the results of their recce missions back, than to shoot down enemy aircraft.

    Incidentally, if a mere enthusiast may be permitted to offer a possible correction to a BBC article, the Japanese aircraft that Sqn Ldr Pujji’s squadron was up against in Burma might have been Oscars, not Zeros — the Oscars were the Army version of the Naval Zeros, and AFAIK were more widely deployed in Burma.

    in reply to: Is this cockpit a Mustang Cockpit ? #2121375
    Snoopy
    Participant

    RE: Non-European aircrew in European theatre during WW2

    Jagan, thanks a million for the post to the site about P/O Mehta.

    Interesting that he was with the famous No 43 Squadron — I think Mahinder Singh Pujji also flew with No 43. And didn’t Douglas Bader also fly with that unit?

    (At the risk of over-elaborating, a small correction to my earlier post — Mahinder Singh Pujji flew Hurricanes, not Spitfires, during his service in the UK.)

    About aircrew of Indian / subcontinental or generally non European origin who spent the entire period of their service in the RAF, I know of none, but I’m no authority. There may well have been a few, possibly Anglo-Indians, some of whom chose to migrate to the UK around the end of WW2, and did not necessarily identify themselves as Indian in official records. But with the huge force reductions immediately following WW2, I think it unlikely any non-Europeans (who would mostly have been non-regulars) would have remained in service.

    in reply to: 'New' Hurricane #2121409
    Snoopy
    Participant

    RE: Indian Hurricane – Serial No

    As Mick says, AB 832 is probably not the original serial. Francis Mason’s “The Hawker Hurricane” (Crecy, 2001) has an Appendix which attempts to list “all Hurricanes built and converted”, but I couldn’t spot an AB series of numbers at all, and hardly any 832s. The nearest number I found (stretching it a bit, and assuming weathering and mis-reading) was LB 852, which was a Mk IV which served with No 42 Squadron in India in 1944.

    Jagan, could AB 832 have been an IAF serial?

    Snoopy

    in reply to: Is this cockpit a Mustang Cockpit ? #2121415
    Snoopy
    Participant

    Non-European aircrew in European theatre during WW2

    >
    >Sadly ,the history of Indian and other non-white aircrew is not
    >terribly well known over here in GB.
    >
    > …
    >
    >Any info on Asian or Black crew in the RAF is always
    >interesting to hear.
    >
    >I did recently read a small story on a website of an Indian
    >pilot who crashed his Hurricane into a hill in GB. I shall
    >have to try and find the story again.
    >
    >Apart from the Sikh who flew the Mosquito in “633 Squadron”,
    >very little is ever shown in books or mags etc, on the huge
    >contributions made by our Asian and Black friends in the
    >Commonwealth.
    >
    >Regards
    >Mick

    Mick:

    Nice to read your sentiments. I’d be *most* interested in the story of the Indian Hurricane pilot you mention, if you manage to dig it out.

    People like Jagan (and Pushpindar Singh, the doyen of Indian aviation historians) will have far more; but in response to your comment that info on Asian and Black aircrew in the RAF is always interesting to hear, here are a few rambling snippets(from an enthusiast, not an expert!):

    As you probably know, there were ten RIAF squadrons in the Burma-India theatre which were crewed entirely by Indians, and earned over 25 DFCs between them. But being part of the forgotten theatre, they are often overlooked in European and American histories. More visibly in the UK, there were some Indians (not sure of numbers; but perhaps in the region of 50 to 100?) who volunteered for service as aircrew with the RAFVR after WW2 broke out. By the time they had been shipped to the UK for training the BoB was over, so AFAIK none of them flew in the BoB. However, most went on to serve in other campaigns, and some did fly in the European theatre. Among them, and far from exhaustively:

    Shivdev Singh (later Air Marshal and Vice Chief of the Indian Air Force) flew Stirlings with RAF Bomber Command over Germany;

    Manmohan Singh (killed in action helping to evacuate Dutch civilians from advancing Japanese in SE Asia) flew Sunderlands, I think with RAF Coastal Command;

    Ranjan Dutt (later Air Vice-Marshal, and boss of Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd) flew fighters in the European and in the Burma-India theatres (pretty much unrelated, but perhaps of passing interest, his daughter Ayesha Dutt became a film actress!); and

    Mahender Singh Pujji (still living in the UK, I think) flew Spitfires in the UK, P-40s in North Africa and later served in the Burma-India theatre, was awarded a DFC, and features in both Chris Somerville’s book “Our War”, as well as in a MoD insert in the education resource pack “Together” on the contribution of non-whites to the war effort. (I found a copy of this pack at the Imperial War Museum shop.)

    K K Majumdar, the picture of whom started this thread, was different from all these, in that he was a regular RIAF officer rather than RAFVR; and only came to the European theatre after a distinguished tour in the Burma-India theatre (where he received his first DFC).

    There were also a number of black aircrew from the Caribbean who flew Spitfires and Hurricanes, or served as bomber crews, in Europe — some of them are also featured in Chris Somerville’s “Our War” and the “Together” pack. There was an interesting picture on the UK MoD website some months ago, of a black sergeant-pilot together with the great “Sailor” Malan, at Biggin Hill. Given Sailor Malan’s nationality, I sometimes wonder what some of his pre-Mandela countrymen would have made of this picture! Incidentally, the black sergeant-pilot’s name is given as Bunting — any relation of the Bunting who founded the Jamaican merchant bank of that name, I wonder?

    Hope this is of interest to you (and perhaps to some of your compatriots). Regards,

    Snoopy

    in reply to: 'New' Hurricane #2121418
    Snoopy
    Participant

    Was this Hurricane really a BoB vet?

    >
    >Peter Vacher paid £27,000 for a
    >BoB veteran!
    >

    Gents:

    While I’m always pleased to hear about a South Asia connection, can someone confirm that this India-retired Hurricane was in fact a BoB veteran? I know nothing about this particular aircraft (apologies; but I haven’t even seen the Flypast write-up on it); but AFAIK the Hurricanes that served in India were mostly cannon-armed Mk IIBs, IICs and IVs; plus some Canadian-built examples. Would these have been in service during the BoB?

    If it *was* a BoB vet, wow … !

    Snoopy

Viewing 8 posts - 91 through 98 (of 98 total)