Sunday, March 28, 2010

WW2 R.A.F. AIRMAN P/O D.K. HODGE

PILOT OFFICER  DONALD KINNEAR HODGE
97 "Straights Settlement" Squadron

Hit by enemy flak at the controls of Avro Manchester L7476 which subsequently crashed at Coningsby on 8 November 1941 - P/O Hodge died of his wounds later that day.



Medals awarded posthumously to Hodge:
1939/45 Star, Air Crew Europe Star and 1939/45 War Medal.

The scarce WW2 Air Crew Europe Campaign Star

Issued unnamed to British recipients and named to recipients from South Africa and the Rhodesias - Officially to South Africans and unofficially, yet uniformly to recipients from Rhodesia and Southern Rhodesia. The engraved naming style in this picture below is correct.

"Our surviving records show that P/O/ Hodge was 2nd Pilot aboard Manchester aircraft  L7476 of 97 Squadron based at Coningsby, Lincolnshire, which crashed at Coningsby on 8 November 1941. Sadly, P/O Hodge died of his wounds later that day. The five other members of the crew were injured as a result of the accident.
P/O Hodge is buried at the Coningsby Cemetery, Lincolnshire, Row 65, Grave 1279."


P/O/ D.K. HODGE
"......in respect of whose service these awards are granted did not live to receive them."


The WW2 Avro Manchester similar to the one which P/O Hodge piloted.

(THE FOLLOWING INFORMATION HAS BEEN OBTAINED FROM THE ORB HELD AT THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES AT KEW - REF AIR27/766)
Hodge was part of a crew detailed for ops to destroy docks, firstly at Boulogne and then Dunkirk. Herewith record of his last two sorties, the final sortie on L7476 turned out to be fatal for him.

7/8 November 1941 – Boulogne (To destroy Docks)

L7491C F/O Mackid, P/O Friend, P/O Tree, Sgts Marshall, McDermott, Day, Bennett. Up 1830 Down 2232. 10 x 500lb. Boulogne bombed – no bursts observed owing to haze. One bomb hung up, the other fell out when doors were opened on landing.

L7492A P/O E.E.Rodley, P/O Hodge, Sgts Hawley, Merralls, Cummings, Crisp, Simpson. Up 1746 Down 2340. Jettisoned bomb load east of Harwich in order to conserve fuel. Target not located owing to thick haze and cloud later.

L7382D F/Sgt Harrison, Sgts Crouch, Platten, Preston, Farara, Saw, Townsley. Up 1740 Down 2131. Performance of aircraft good. Two sticks of five bombs dropped along dock no 6. Second stick burst on buildings to south-east of dock.

8.11.41 Three aircraft detailed by A Flight for ops against docks at Dunkirk. Two dropped bombs successfully and one brought them back, failing to locate the target. P/O Hodge (Rhodesia), 2nd pilot in P/O Deverill’s crew was hit by flak and died at 2300 hours at the Station SQ. Much flak and searchlights at Dunkirk. F/L Price DFC and crew and F/O Blakeman and crew took off from base at 1320 for sea rescue work over North Sea in the hope of crews of numerous aircraft from other units which may have made forced landings in the sea. No trace. F/L Price and crew are missing from this operation. F/L Trueman, gunnery leader, of the other aircraft, last saw the aircraft L7466 N at 1600. The missing crew are the Captain and P/O Pickering, Sgt Weston (Aus), F/Sgt Stanley DFM, Sgts Dexter, Manners and Bronson(Can).

8 November 1941 - Dunkirk

L7476 K P/O Deverill, P/O Hodge, P/O Hepburn, Sgts Irons, Hildersley, Canning, Benbow. Up 1745 Down 2038. Target attacked but bombs released due to flak during run up. P/O Hodge badly wounded. Jettisoned 4 x 500lb in North Sea. 2nd Pilot admitted to SSQ on return – where he died of his wounds at 2300 hours.

WW1 R.A.F. AIRMAN KILLED IN ACTION

2ND/LIEUT. JULIEN PERCY FERREIRA
57th SQUADRON, ROYAL AIR FORCE
K.I.A.

Killed in action on the 16th September 1918, age 18. Flying on DH4 as pilot, shot down in flames in Marcoing sector (Nord) after a combat against FOKKER DVII's


Medals in their original named boxes as they were issued.
Made by: ROBINSON & SONS, LTD
Box makers of Chesterfield.



He was born in Humansdorp in the Cape Province in 1900. He volunteered while a student at school in April 1917, and left for training, obtained his wings in May 1918.
(source: C.W.G.C..)

Naming on Ferreira's British War & Allied Victory medals

A De Havilland DH4 photographed in the clouds over Northern France in 1918. Same time when 2nd Lieutenant J.P.Ferreira flew his sorties.

Ferreira "shot down in flames"- An artist's impression of what possibly happened.

Sketch of the De Havilland DH4

Aritsts impression of a DH4 in dogfight with a German plane.

Ferreira perished in combat with these fighter aircraft.


2nd Lieut J.P. Ferreira is one of 40 South Africans commemorated on the Arras Flying Services Memorial in France.