ADS NOT DISPLAYED TO REGISTERED USERS.
+ Reply to Thread
Page 18 of 74 FirstFirst ... 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 68 ... LastLast
Results 256 to 270 of 1104

Obituaries

WW2 General Discuss Obituaries in the World War II - General forums; ...

  1. #256
    World Travelling Doctor? Gnomey's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2004
    Location
    Royal Deeside/Swansea, UK
    Posts
    28,810
    Country
    United Kingdom




    "Success is not Final, Failure is not Fatal, it is the Courage to Continue that Counts"
    Sir Winston Churchill

    "To him the People of the World Largely owe the Freedom and Liberties they Enjoy Today"
    Enscription on Hugh Dowding's (AOC Fighter Command 1936-40) statue in London


    My Photo Collections on Flickr

  2. #257
    Senior Member RabidAlien's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
    Location
    Hurst, Texas
    Posts
    6,622
    Country
    United States


    Pillage, then burn.

    Argue not with dragons, for thou art crunchy and go well on toast.

  3. #258
    v2
    v2 is offline
    Senior Member v2's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Location
    Cracow
    Posts
    5,311
    Country
    Poland
    Flight Lieutenant Doug Turner DFC has sadly passed away after a short illness.

    Doug flew the Mosquito variant with the 6-pounder gun with 618 Squadron, and sank a U-976 with it in March 1944 - the first person to do so. His story is in the long out-of-print book "Most Secret Squadron" which was written by his navigator Des Curtis.



    Mosquito Bomber/Fighter-Bomber Units ... - Google Book Search
    Last edited by v2; 09-09-2008 at 03:54 PM.

    "A good fighter pilot, like a good boxer, should have a knockout punch..... You will find one attack you prefer to all others. Work on it till you can do it to perfection... then use it whenever possible."
    - Captain Reade Tilley, USAAF 7 Victories, WW-II -

  4. #259
    Senior Member ToughOmbre's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2007
    Location
    Jersey Shore, USA
    Posts
    4,176
    Country
    United States


    TO


    “Let's get Enterprise and Hornet turned into the wind."

  5. #260
    World Travelling Doctor? Gnomey's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2004
    Location
    Royal Deeside/Swansea, UK
    Posts
    28,810
    Country
    United Kingdom


    "Success is not Final, Failure is not Fatal, it is the Courage to Continue that Counts"
    Sir Winston Churchill

    "To him the People of the World Largely owe the Freedom and Liberties they Enjoy Today"
    Enscription on Hugh Dowding's (AOC Fighter Command 1936-40) statue in London


    My Photo Collections on Flickr

  6. #261
    Senior Member RabidAlien's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
    Location
    Hurst, Texas
    Posts
    6,622
    Country
    United States


    Pillage, then burn.

    Argue not with dragons, for thou art crunchy and go well on toast.

  7. #262
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Location
    Moscow, Russia
    Posts
    354
    Country
    Russian Federation
    ...

  8. #263
    "Shooter" evangilder's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2004
    Location
    Moorpark, CA
    Posts
    18,841
    Country
    United States
    Medal of honor recipient passes
    Nathan Green Gordon dies at 92; Medal of Honor recipient, Arkansas politician
    As a Navy pilot in the Pacific in WWII he rescued 15 downed airmen under enemy fire. He later served 20 years as lieutenant governor of his home state.
    From the Associated Press, From the Associated Press
    September 10, 2008
    Nathan Green Gordon, a Navy pilot who received the Medal of Honor for rescuing 15 downed airmen under enemy fire in the Pacific during World War II, has died. He was 92.

    Gordon, who went on to become lieutenant governor of Arkansas, died Monday night at a hospital in Little Rock, Ark., while being treated for pneumonia and other ailments, his nephew Allen Gordon said.

    Born in 1916 in Morrilton, Ark., Gordon graduated from the University of Arkansas law school in 1939 and began practicing law in his hometown. He learned to fly after enlisting in the Navy in 1941.

    During the war, Gordon flew a Consolidated PBY Catalina flying boat, a large plane no faster than a high-powered automobile. On Feb. 15, 1944, he received orders to search for downed pilots after a raid on the Japanese position in Kavieng along the Bismarck Sea near Papua New Guinea.

    Under fire in rough seas, Gordon piloted the unwieldy aircraft to make three landings to pick up nine men. On the way back, he saw a life raft 600 yards from the enemy shoreline. Gordon landed yet again, pulling six more airmen aboard while taking on heavy fire.

    "His plane was seriously overweight by the time he finished," said Stephan McAteer, executive director of the MacArthur Museum of Arkansas Military History in Little Rock. "He just did not want to leave anyone there because if they had been captured, they would have faced almost certain death."

    Gordon flew his aircraft to Finschhafen, a port in northern New Guinea.

    "I hadn't thought about what I was doing," Gordon told the Kansas City Star in 2005. "I did what I had to do. And I was lucky to get out of it."

    In nominating him for the nation's highest military honor, his superiors cited Gordon for "exceptional daring, personal valor and incomparable airmanship under most perilous conditions."

    Gordon also received the Distinguished Flying Cross for his service in the Pacific.

    Family members said Gordon didn't speak much about his military service. However, until his final days, he would tell anyone who asked about the rescue mission in the Bismarck Sea that brought him national acclaim, his nephew said.

    "He would always tear up," Allen Gordon said.

    On his return to Arkansas, friends persuaded him to run for lieutenant governor. The Democrat entered office in 1947 and held the position for 20 years, serving under Gov. Orval Faubus during the 1957 Little Rock Central High School desegregation crisis.

    "He pretty well kept his head down and didn't take part in it to any great extent," said Roy Reed, a former Arkansas Gazette reporter who covered the crisis and later wrote a book on Faubus.

    Gordon left office in 1967, the same year as Faubus, and returned to practicing law.

    He retired in 1992, and three years later his wife of 50 years died. They had no children.
    [URL="http://www.latimes.com/news/obituaries/la-me-gordon10-2008sep10,0,6319145.story"[/URL]


    > I Support Doug Gilliss <

    For once you have tasted flight you will walk the earth with your eyes turned skywards, for there you have been and there you will long to return. Leonardo Da Vinci

  9. #264
    World Travelling Doctor? Gnomey's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2004
    Location
    Royal Deeside/Swansea, UK
    Posts
    28,810
    Country
    United Kingdom
    A hero passes.


    "Success is not Final, Failure is not Fatal, it is the Courage to Continue that Counts"
    Sir Winston Churchill

    "To him the People of the World Largely owe the Freedom and Liberties they Enjoy Today"
    Enscription on Hugh Dowding's (AOC Fighter Command 1936-40) statue in London


    My Photo Collections on Flickr

  10. #265
    Senior Member RabidAlien's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
    Location
    Hurst, Texas
    Posts
    6,622
    Country
    United States
    Man, I love that story.


    Pillage, then burn.

    Argue not with dragons, for thou art crunchy and go well on toast.

  11. #266
    The Pop-Tart Whisperer Njaco's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Location
    Southern New Jersey
    Posts
    19,377
    Country
    United States


    "If you can read this, thank a teacher. If it's English, thank a soldier!"


    http://www.njcacoa.org/

    http://www.facebook.com/ShaydsOfGray


  12. #267
    v2
    v2 is offline
    Senior Member v2's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Location
    Cracow
    Posts
    5,311
    Country
    Poland

    "A good fighter pilot, like a good boxer, should have a knockout punch..... You will find one attack you prefer to all others. Work on it till you can do it to perfection... then use it whenever possible."
    - Captain Reade Tilley, USAAF 7 Victories, WW-II -

  13. #268
    Senior Member Wayne Little's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Location
    Adelaide Sth. Aust.
    Posts
    35,508
    Country
    Australia

  14. #269
    Pacific Historian syscom3's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2005
    Location
    Orange County, CA
    Posts
    12,114

    Ian Fraser, VC

    Obituary: Ian Fraser, VC | World news | The Guardian

    He led a midget sub mission that sank a key Japanese warship

    The largely indifferent story of the Royal Navy's role in the far east during the second world war is lit up like a beacon by the extraordinary exploits of Ian Fraser, who won the VC for leading a midget submarine attack that sank a Japanese heavy cruiser off Singapore harbour in the last days of the war.

    Fraser, who has died aged 87, commanded XE3 as a lieutenant, supported by a sub-lieutenant, an engineer, and leading seaman James Magennis, frogman and diver, who also won the VC. The mission was part of Operation Zipper to recapture Singapore and Malaya. But within a week came the stroke that ended the war, the first atomic bomb at Hiroshima. The planned invasions of Malaya and Singapore, and of Japan itself, could therefore be called off, an irony Fraser appreciated as much as anyone else.

    The Royal Navy, by December 1941 already heavily engaged in Atlantic convoys while suffering massive losses in the Mediterranean, was forced to open a third front after the devastating Japanese attacks on Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, and the British, Dutch and French empires in south-east Asia. Two British warships, the Prince of Wales and the Repulse, were quickly dispatched by Japanese naval aircraft off Kuantan, eastern Malaya, on December 10, the first of a long string of defeats. They had been given no air cover.

    The sinking of the cruiser Takao, however, stands out as one of the bravest individual attacks of the entire war. As part of the invasion preparations, six XE-type midget submarines, supported by conventional submarines, were deployed to disable Japanese warships around Singapore and the Malayan mainland. Among their main targets were the cruisers Takao and Myoko, against which XE3 and XE1 were launched on the evening of July 30 1945. Each was towed by a larger submarine to a point off the eastern end of the Singapore channel and then left to its own devices.

    Had a thriller-writer invented the story of what happened next on board XE3, readers would have had difficulty in suspending their disbelief. The little craft had to pass through 40 miles of dangerous waters to reach its target. There were shallows, minefields, hydrophones (underwater sound detectors), anti-submarine defences and naval patrols to contend with. To overcome a lack of navigation aids, Fraser perched on the awash hull with binoculars for two hours.

    To avoid the hydrophones, XE3 chose to sail through a minefield on the surface rather than stick to the swept channel. Then the craft had to crash-dive to avoid an enemy tanker with naval escort. On the final approach at periscope depth, Fraser had to dive again to avoid a launch, completing the advance by sightless guesswork and only realising he had found the Takao when he collided with it.

    XE3 then positioned herself under the cruiser's hull in shallow water. Magennis left the craft through the escape hatch, which was so close to the enemy's hull that it could not be fully opened. He had to take off his breathing apparatus to get out, pulling it and several limpet mines after him. Marine growth on the hull and weak magnets made it difficult to attach the limpets.

    The next move was to attach two larger bombs to the hull like saddlebags, one of which got jammed, so Magennis insisted on leaving the submarine again to release it with a spanner. Meanwhile, the tide was ebbing and the cruiser began to settle on her attacker. It took nearly an hour for XE3 to wriggle free, but she rejoined her mother sub and got clean away. The Takao succumbed to a series of explosions at 9.30pm on July 31 with a 60-foot hole in her hull, and settled on the bottom.

    Fraser was born in Ealing, west London. He entered the merchant navy as a cadet and in 1938, joined the Blue Star line, also becoming a midshipman in the Royal Naval Reserve. When war broke out in 1939, he saw service on several destroyers before volunteering for the submarine arm. There he won the Distinguished Service Cross for gallantry aboard HMS Sahib in the Mediterranean in 1943. Around this time he married Melba Hughes, his childhood sweetheart.

    The following year he volunteered again, for service on X-craft, officially described as highly dangerous. XE3 was his first command. He left the service in 1947 (retiring as a lieutenant-commander, RNR, in 1966) and went into the diving business, carrying out exploration work ahead of the North Sea oil and gas boom. He openly exploited his VC, to the chagrin of the navy which had decided to dispense with his services. His memoirs, Frogman VC, appeared in 1957.

    His wife, four sons and one daughter survive him. Another daughter predeceased him.

    Ian Edward Fraser, submariner, born December 18 1920; died September 1 2008
    "Pilot to copilot..... what are those mountain goats doing up here in the clouds?"

  15. #270
    Senior Member B-17engineer's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Location
    Revis Island.
    Posts
    14,428
    Country
    United States

+ Reply to Thread
Page 18 of 74 FirstFirst ... 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 68 ... LastLast

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86