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Borden Graduation
Camp Borden, Jan. 16. 1942 - (CP) - Six United States
fliers and one Australian, were included in a Royal Canadian Air Force
class which graduated today from No. I Service Flying Training School
here.
Graduates from Ontario included: W.T. Blakeney, R.F. Reid, G.R. Hare,
J.L. McManus, F.J. Silk, M.G. Cleworth, J.L. Lush, R.W. Orr, P.K. Gray,
R.C. Yeates, H.K. Hamilton, J.H. Slimon, Toronto; L.D. Manzer, Ingersoll;
R.S. Gage, Oshawa; C.J. Walker, G.E. Mott, Sarnia; M.R. Thompson, Windsor;
J.C. Montieth, Paris; D.F. Church, Peterborough; G.R.
McConnell, Sault Ste. Marie; H.J. Ross, St. Catharines; A.G. Hare, St.
Catharines; R. Thomson, North Hamilton; C.E.A. O'Brien, Thorold; C.R.
Coome, Hamilton; J.D. Douglas, St. Pauls; A.S. Meilly, North Galford;
E.A. Magee, Wallaceburg; W.P. Paris, Weston; J.P. Lumsden, Hamilton.
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Born 10 October 1917 in Gravenhurst, Ontario
Home in Peterborough
Enlisted in the RCAF in September 1940 as WAG
Remustered as a Pilot
Trained at:
10 EFTS Mount Hope
1 SFTS Camp Borden
Graduating 16 January 1942
Joined 14 (F) squadron later in the month
Posted to 126 Sq. (RCAF) at Dartmouth in May
Then to 130 Sq. at Bagotville in '43
Commissioned P/O
He & 130 Sq. move to Goose Bay in October
Sent to UK in February 1944 (now a F/O)
At
61 OTU in May
83 GSU in July
Joins 401 Sq. 4 August 1944
Stays with 401 until 19 April 1944
Joins Bomber Command in May (6 Group RCAF)
Returns to Canada in August
Released from service in September |
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COMMISSIONS GIVEN AIRMEN
October 22, 1943 - R.C.A.F. headquarters yesterday announced
that the following air crew members serving in the Dominion have been
appointed to commissioned rank: A. Whitelaw, R. S. Ewart, J. H. Bellinger,
W. E. McLean, F. A. Dixon, P. N. Hart, H. L. McKenzie, F. R. Aitken, J.
E. McInerney, J. Buda, W. Wright, W. K. Clarke, D. Watson, J. C. G. Moore,
P. J. Weber, and H. J. Powell, all of Toronto.
K. C. Gallinger and S. F. L. Cuthbert, both of Port Colborne; T. C. Wager
and W. C. Nobes, both of Kingston; E. W. Page, K. Norris and J. J. Halcrow,
all of Hamilton; W. Campbell, R. N. Elvin and L. J. Walter, all of Windsor;
G. L. Smith and S. W. Fechet, both of Fort Frances; B. H. Biggar and J.
G. McNamara, both of Niagara Falls.
N. W. McAlpine, Tillsonburg; M. V. Smyth, Chatham; W. C. Lawrence, Galt;
G. A. Smith, Sudbury; W. C. Maxwell, Mount Dennis; D. H. Neelin, Merritton;
W. R. Hibbert, Sioux Lookout; G. L. Passmore, Hensall; W. E. Cairns, Weston;
J. W. Chapman, Napanee; F. R. Skelly, Kirkland Lake; D. F. Church,
Peterborough; G. Baker, Stouffville; S. W. Smith, Riverside;
W.I. Williams, Merlin; K R. Liss, Uxbridge; B. D. Henry, Muskoka; A. M.
Park, Fort William; C. B. Dockrey, Port Arthur; E. R. Millbank, Simcoe;
J. A. Thompson, Port Dover; N. E. Patterson, Welland; D. J. Shapter, Bracebridge;
J. O. Payton, St. Thomas; P. J. Hurley, Owen Sound; J. P. Duggan, Petrolia;
W. A. King, Collingwood; J. R. Poste, Woodstock; J. W. Butcher, Brantford;
and J. T. Evans, Georgetown.
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Don Church with a Spitfire - probably 401 Sq.
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Canadians Down 8 Nazi Planes; Audet Gets 2 Jets
London, Jan. 23, 1945 – (CP) – Canadian fighter
pilots in continuous strikes today destroyed at least eight German aircraft
in combat, damaged as many others and blew up ground targets with withering
cannon and machine-gun fire.
Five of the destroyed planes and six of those damaged were twin jet-propelled
ME262s.
They fell to the planes of the Ram and Grizzly Bear Spitfire Squadrons
in two separate engagements. This is believed to be a record day’s
bag of jet-propelled aircraft.
Two of the jets were shot down by F/L Dick Audet, DFC, of Lethbridge Alta.,
and the double kill brought his score to 11½. Audet, a Grizzly
Bear Squadron pilot, only started scoring a few weeks ago when he destroyed
five German planes in one dogfight, in one of the greatest single triumphs
of aerial warfare.
The latest victims were about to land at an airfield near the city of
Rheine on the Ems River, 65 miles north of Dortmund.
Ram pilots destroyed the three remaining jet craft when they encountered
more than 15 of the jets either landing or taking off an airfield near
Osnabruck. F/O D. F. Church of Peterborough, Ont., was credited with one.
Attack Near Hamm
Remainder of the planes destroyed were FW190’s. The Red Indian Squadron
pounced on several near Hamm, big rail center east of the Ruhr, and shot
down two in flames. F/L M. J. Gordon of Edmonton
and F/O Fred Evans of 310 Durle St. Toronto shared one of them.
During the day Spitfires of this wing destroyed a locomotive and damaged
four others and 15 freight cars. They also destroyed eight motor vehicles.
RCAF squadrons flew almost 400 sorties and among other achievements, 17
cuts were made in German rail lines carrying supplies and reinforcements
to the front.
The day-long activities cost the RCAF five planes but one of the pilots
is safe.
Audet Is Modest
F/L Dick Audet, the young Canadian who made air-war history in a Spitfire
over Germany by destroying five German aircraft in a single dogfight failed
to claim a fifth kill at first interrogation, the Maple Leaf reports from
Holland.
It wasn’t until he and his squadron mates returned from a subsequent
mission and retraced the battle Hun by Hun that the 22-year-old Lethbridge
Alberta pilot claimed two Me109s and three FW190s destroyed.
It was all the more remarkable in that it was his first success in the
air. He had no luck at all on his first operational tour from English
bases.
Audet’s five-to-seven minute dream battle materialized 14,000 feet
over Osnabruck where, leading a section of the high-scoring grizzly Bear
Squadron, he spotted a mixed gaggle of 12 MEs and FWs
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250 Mark Passed By Canadian Wing
An RCAF Airfield In the Netherlands, Jan. 25, 1945 -
(CP) - A Canadian Spitfire wing in the 2nd Tactical Air Force has become
the first to pass the 250 mark in enemy aircraft destroyed since D-Day,
last June 6, it was announced today.
The wing's total now is 254, and a haul of six German planes Tuesday by
the Grizzly Bear and Ram Squadrons was what put the wing past the quarter-thousand.
Honor of bagging the 250th plane went to F/O D. F. Church, Peterborough,
of the Ram Squadron.
The wing also has an excellent record in rail and road transport destroyed
or damaged, and rail lines cut.
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Victories Include :
10 Dec 1944
14 Dec 1944
01 Jan 1945
23 Jan 1945 |
one Bf 109
one Bf 109
one Bf 109
one FW 190
one Ar 234 |
destroyed
damaged
destroyed &
damaged
destroyed |
EN569
MJ390
MK888
ML141 |
NE of Hengelo
NW of Rheine
Rheine Airfield
Bramsche Airfield |
scores from "Those Other Eagles" by Christopher Shores
After his 3rd kill, by normal Air Force standards, Don should have
recieved the DFC
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