Following
My Father’s
World War Two
Story
Michael
Rossiter
Foreword
This article is dedicated
to the men who fought both in the air and on the ground to give us the world we
have today. Without their hard work, dedication, tenacity and sacrifice, we
would not have our freedom.
I have just returned from a life-long visit to see where
my father (Thomas Rossiter) was based for five months in 1945. I was in England
due to my son playing hockey for six months and my wife and I decided to spend
Christmas with him instead of staying in Melbourne. As he was based in Bristol,
we planned to take two days out of our holiday and travel to the northern part
of England, some three hours from Bristol. I had heard of two brothers some
years back that had bought a Lancaster bomber in dedication to their brother
who had been lost during the World War II conflict. It just so happened that
these two brothers based their business at the same airfield where my father
was based in 1945, East Kirkby.
In preparation for the trip, I had researched the
Organisation (Lincoln Aviation Heritage Centre) and had spoken to a work
colleague who had visited the centre some years back. The centre's website
described the business well and are the proud owners of Lancaster 'Just Jane'
which takes paying passengers for taxi rides only. This is due to the aircraft
currently not being airworthy, which means that it cannot fly. So accommodation
was booked in the historical town of Lincoln and off we go to step back into
the past.
On the day before we left our son's new hometown, another
confirmation check of the website was carried out and hurdle number one
encountered. The centre was closing for Christmas break on that day and hurdle
number two, 'Just Jane' was undergoing a heavy maintenance visit, stripped off
all it's paint and was not in any condition to be looked inside. I was
devastated and to have come so far and not be able to see this magnificent
aircraft, my stomach sank. However all was not lost and after a quick phone
call to the Centre, my spirit was again buoyed. I spoke to a gentleman named
Phillip who, once I told him my story let me know that my family and I were
welcome at the Centre even if it was closed. He told me that he would be in the
Centre's office and just ring him before we left Lincoln for East Kirkby and he
would meet us. It would turn out that Phillip was one of the founder's sons and
he was intrigued and sympathetic to my cause.
So, on Thursday the 15th of December we trekked from
Lincoln to East Kirkby to see the spiritual home of 57 and 620 squadrons of
Lancaster aircraft. At the height of WW II, there were up to 50 Lancaster
bombers stationed at this airfield. We arrived and were warmly met by Phillip
Panton who invited us into his reception area. I gave him the expanded brief of
why I was so keen to come to East Kirkby and gave him photos of my 20 year old
father in his flying uniform, a copy of Dad and his Lancaster crew and a photo
of what I believe is 57 Squadron. I had also brought with me a full copy of
Dad's logbook showing the number of raids he was part of between January and
June 1945. Of also the same importance, the logbook listed where Dad was from
when he enlisted in 1942 to when he came home in late 1945. I explained to
Phillip that when Dad arrived home, he and fellow RAAF airmen got together back
in Melbourne and started a group called The
Odd Bods UK. This important group is now in the second generation of which
I am a proud member of, 'Friends of The
Oddbods'. This association ensures that the spirit and tenacity of these
airmen will never be forgotten as they forged the world we live in today.
After our initial introduction, Phillip escorted us
around the East Kirkby airfield and showed us the site lay-out of the
buildings, for example where the aircrew slept, where they flight planned their
operation, a chapel listing all crew lost from both squadrons (This was a very
moving experience). Then it was with great excitement that he opened the hangar
door and there was 'Just Jane' in her bare metal glory. Due to the time of the
year, ‘Just Jane’ was up on jacks, landing gear removed, paint stripped,
engines in various state of installation and flight controls removed. The
Centre is using this down time to see exactly what needs to be done to get her
back in the air. There are currently two airworthy Lancasters, one operated by
the RAF at Conningsby, England and the other across the water in Canada by a
privately owned organisation. ‘Just Jane’ will make it three eventually but it
will be a long process, aiming to be by the end of the decade. This maintenance
visit is an exploratory inspection to see exactly what is needed to ensure she
is fit to fly again. The fuselage is being X-rayed to see how much corrosion is
in ‘Just Jane’ as this is the enemy of any old metal fuselage. At the end of
this visit, ‘Just Jane’ will be re-painted and made 'ground' serviceable again
so it can commence it's taxi rides which will start in April 2017. For a cost,
the public can go for a taxi ride on this beautiful aircraft around East Kirkby
and this is a major part of the income revenue stream, which will go towards
getting her back in the air.
After looking at her in the naked beauty, we were allowed
to look around at various artefacts of the history on the two squadrons and the
Lancaster fleet that lined both sides of the hangar walls. There were airmen's
logbooks (which will now have an Australian example and an OddBod), a pictorial
scrap book of both squadrons, a real life size version of the Dambuster's
bouncing bomb, various airmen positions and what they actually did on the
aircraft ( eg Wireless Operator, Flight Engineer ) and tributes to each country by having individual flags
adorning the walls ( we saw our Australian Flag ). As we strolled around these
items, my mind and heart were filled with great pride on what these guys had
done. We were being given full access to stroll around this facility at our
leisure. Both sides of the hangar walls had stories to tell and great
description of everything you could imagine. I did find the 'Dambusters'
section very interesting and to be able to see what the bouncing bomb looked
like was brilliant.
Once we finished looking at the displays, we ventured outside
to the Airmen's Chapel and Phillip left us alone to reflect on the many names
on the wall-boards of the men who paid the ultimate sacrifice for their
countries and adopted country. From the chapel we were then taken into the
Control Tower, which has, several sections fitted out as if it still was 1945.
Radio calls can be heard informing crew of the meteorological conditions at the
airfield and giving aircraft clearance for take-off and landing. Flight
planning rooms, a muster room and even a pictorial representation of where 164
Lancasters fell.
My trek to this unique part of the world was everything I
wanted it to be and more. To look out at the airfield on the foggy December day
gave me an inkling into what those fresh-faced young airmen were faced back in
1945. I can't imagine what the feeling was like to board an aircraft at night
with 49 other Flight Crews not knowing if you were going to make it back into
your bed after that sortie. Primitive, agricultural and even crude navigation
devices both inside the aircraft and on the ground made these operations
extremely risky to say the least. There was no such thing as risk mitigating
these movements, it was a time to just get it done and that's what aircraft
like 'Just Jane' did.
Bomber Command Memorial
After experiencing the euphoric sensation of visiting
East Kirkby, my family and I travelled to Central London. It was there that I
needed to visit one last piece of my puzzle during my trek. In 2012, the Bomber
Command Memorial was built to commemorate the loss of 55,573 airmen during
World War II. It stands with life size
statues of seven Bomber Command aircrew made up of the 1) Navigator, 2) Flight
Engineer, 3) Mid-upper Gunner, 4) Pilot, 5) Bomb aimer, 6) Rear Gunner and lastly
7) The Wireless Operator. The Memorial was erected following a five-year
campaign by the Bomber Command Association to recognise the contribution and
sacrifice of the 125,000 men who served in Bomber Command.
The purpose of the memorial is to remind us of these gallant
men and to ensure that the scale of that sacrifice is understood and remembered
by future generations. You could feel the emotion welling up as you stand there
and looked at the statues and the individual facial expression has been
captured perfectly. I was especially keen to see the Wireless Operator who is
situated on the far right side of the Memorial, as you look front-on with
Kensington Palace behind you. The Wireless Operator was the position my father
filled in his role on the Lancaster Bomber.
As you will see in the pictures at the end of this report,
the Memorial has 11 distinct features, which are;
1) Design – What sort of stone was used in the design;
2) Thank-you Inscription – The message to say thanks to all
who made the Memorial possible;
3) RAF Badge – The motto reads ‘Per Ardua Ad Astra’ which
means ‘Through Adversity To The Stars’;
4) Roof – Replicates the construction used in the Wellington
and has sections from a Halifax Bomber shot down over Belgium in 1944 with all
eight crew killed;
5) Winston Churchill Quote – ‘The fighters are our salvation
but the bombers alone provide the means of Victory’;
6) Sculpture – The centrepiece of the Memorial;
7) Message of Reconciliation – ‘The Memorial also
commemorates those of all nations who lost their lives in the bombing of 1939 –
1945;
8) Bronze Wreath – Designed by a veteran of No 578 Squadron;
9) Bomber Command Badge – This features the motto ‘Strike
Hard, Strike Sure’;
10) Dedication Inscription – States that the Memorial is
dedicated to the 55,573 airmen from the United Kingdom, British Commonwealth
and Allied nations who served in the RAF and unfortunately lost their lives.
These crews came from the UK, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and occupied
nations including Poland, France and Czechoslovakia;
11) Screen Wings – The seven columns are freestanding and
match the seven crew in the sculpture.
In closing, the
rear of the Memorial states ‘Freedom is the sure possession of those alone who
have the courage to defend it’. All we can say as the next generation is
thank-you as we “Press On Remembering
these men”.
*** END ***
Appendix I – East Kirkby Photos
Above are the two lists of men
lost from the base of East Kirkby. This moving tribute is inside the East
Kirkby Chapel
Above items are from the 57
Squadron scrap book inside the hangar
Lancaster briefing.
Dam Buster Photo of the hero of
the raid, Wing Commander Guy Gibson (VC, DSO & Bar,
DFC & Bar)
Mr. Barnes Wallace.
Dam
Buster Photos, note the size of the bouncing device (cont)

Dambuster Timelines.
Photos around the East Kirkby
Base
Inside the East Kirkby Control
Tower (note the RAAF reference)
Lancaster Flight Engineer
Detail
Lancaster Wireless Operator
Information
Inside the East Kirkby Control
Tower
Information on Lancaster NX611
‘Just Jane’
‘Just Jane’ undergoing
maintenance
Small
window on the side of the fuselage (just behind pilot’s canopy) is the Wireless
Operator’s window.
Just Jane when painted (photo
from the Lincolnshire Heritage Centre website)
Three
Lancasters taxiing out for flight.
Appendix II – Bomber
Command Photos
Memorial Statues
Memorial Information
Internal
Memorial Tribute Encryption
Small Pictorial Description
The Author before the Memorial
The Memorial from behind.
Appendix III – Thomas Rossiter
Photos
Copy of Thomas Rossiter’s RAAF/RAF history
Thomas Rossiter (standing, second from left)
His Lancaster Crew of which the Pilot (in the middle at the front) was
Harry Martin from Perth.
Remainder of the crew were either from the UK or Canada.
Group Photo of 57 Squadron. F/O Rossiter is seated in
the front row and the left end.
*** END
***
Nice presentation. I saw Just Jane in pristine condition in 2017, though not on a day when I could go for a ride. It is an excellent museum. I was thereabouts to visit Waddington and Spilsby where my MUG father was based.
ReplyDeleteThe last photo btw cannot be 57 squadron. The white flashes and lack of stripes and wings shows the photo is of a training group. The staff I imagine are the ones with stripes and wings.