Below are a selection of letters and memoirs from members of 152 Hyderabad squadron

 

Potted history of my connection and service with 152 (Hyderabad) Squadron, a Squadron of Spitfires also called the Black Panther Unit.

 It was in October 1942 that I first became aware of 152 Squadron that formed part of 522 Wing. This was a Fighter Wing destined for the landing at Algiers in North Africa when the invasion took place. The first base was at Maison Blanche but that was only for a very brief period. The Wing very soc moved to Bonne further east along the coast and it was here more or less that : came to life. In those days the Spitfire had a very limited range. The ground staff moved over land by motor transport across the Atlas Mountains and it was at Bonne that we spent Xmas 1942 our Dinner being M & V and unleaven bread. However the Wing was extremely busy and my duties were concerned with consolidating data etc., for onward signaling to HQ and additionally the preparation of Daily Routine Orders. As time went by we moved to Souk-el-Arba where the Engineers had prepared a landing strip. There was much more action from this area as the Americans were flying Marauders and the Wing continually gave air cover against enemy action. It was here that 1 first made contact with 152 Squadron staff. By this time we had a new Commanding Officer a South African Fighter Ace - Wing Commander Peter Hugo. The Commanding Officer originally in charge was badly wounded during an air raid on the airfield at Bonne. My memory does not serve me so well but I believe him to have been either Group Captain Atcherly or Appleton. As a result of the land advance and air strikes from this area a lot of progress was made and very soon we found ourselves in Bizerte still on the north coast of Africa. By June 1945 the Wing was on the move to Malta, the siege being over but again we were involved in continua] combat and striking out at Sicily and Italy. Whilst in Malta my main duties were pin pointing machine gun nests, gun sites and any other places of importance along the coasts of Sicily and Italy the information being received following recce work by camera and debriefing. This work was undertaken at a Naval Unit in Valetta- June and July 1945 were spent in Malta being billeted in Nazzer (Nasha) a distance of about three or four miles from Ta Kali air base. We were housed in a beautiful Mansion, which amazingly had escaped bombing. Officers and Aircrew were housed at the Grand Hotel in Rabat. Food was very poor but it was surprising how we managed on Cornpo Rations etc. Eventually the invasion of Sicily took place and in this the fighter units played a very big part. By mid August we were over in Sicily and based between our Infantry and the enemy at a place called Lentini. Rather unfortunately we were bombed here one night losing aircraft and personnel but were very soon operational again! Before Ion we moved and camped on the riverbed at Messina. This was to await our transfer to Italy. 7;hen that happened it was then that I joined 152 Squadron as Clerk Special Duties. Little did we know when news came that a move was to take place that after Italy we were destined for Alexandria in Egypt. Again it was not very long before we were moved to fort Said in readiness for transportation to the Far East. In a matter of about three weeks we were in Bombay but only for re-kitting and by Xmas 1945 we were operational at Baigachi a station outside Calcutta. 152 were the first to take clipped wing Spitfires to India. These proved a great asset although some modifications had to be made. They proved a boon in assisting the 14th Army who had been struggling against heavy odds. Early 1944 we moved to Chitagong in Bengal, here we were raided by the Japs but no great damage was done and very shortly we were moved down the Arakan to Cox's Bazaar. From here it was possible to hit harder at the Jap and help the Army. By now the Spits had been fitted with long-range tanks to carry more Octane so that sorties further East could be carried out. Although these advantages helped greatly other hindrances occurred such as monsoon periods and bad road conditions. Heavy rain often hindered flying and not always were spares available for aircraft servicing. There was always something to set us back slightly but we were greatly boosted by the occasional visit from Mountbatten, Wavell or Slim. From Cox’s we moved to Comilla mid Burma as things were hotting up in the North around Imphal and Kohima and before long we were an our way to Imphal being camped at Talihul. Although it was a serious state of affairs the unit came through unscathed. Things like Dysentry, Hepatitis and Malaria did tend to lower our strength occasionally but to no great effect. On the whole t Unit's health was very good and apart from aircrew our losses were very low.

It was not until some time June/July 1945 that we had our first casualties. We were camped at Khan in Burma and one night we had a Jap air raid. Our losses were three or four of the lads and some wounded. It was tragic really to lose boys who had been our mates for years and who had been like brothers to us. In any case we had to continue with our work and from here we went to Prome aiming for Rangoon, which was reached by August. During August hostilities ceased but this was not the end for us. The Squadron was directed to Siam (Bangkok) to fly the Flag but again that was not to be for long as things were not so good in French Indo China. Again we were directed to Saigon (Ho Chi Min) to help out. By the time things were quieter we learnt that the Fighter Squadron was being disbanded and the personnel would become 7152 Servicing Echelon. As time went by the Echelon began to split and I volunteered for further service in Hong Kong where I was occupied with three others in opening an Air Booking Centre at the Shanghai Bank Building for reopening of Trade facilities and routing of interested parties to other parts of the world. Although offered permanent occupation in Hong Kong not having been home in Britain for four years I could not find my way clear to accept this and was repatriated in May 1946.

R.J.LLYOD-JONES (TAFF)

 

 

 

Dear Mr Rooker,

Thank you for your letter about the tracing RAF Personnel based at Warmwell, Dorset between 1940-45. I have enclosed some memorabilia which may be of interest. As you will see I was based at Warmwell with 152 Sqdn from July 1940 to September 1940 flying Spitfire II’s during the battle of Britain. This mark of Spitfire was equipped with eight Browning machine guns, which gave a total of about 15 seconds fire power. About two or three good bursts. So one was quicklyu out of amo and could not stay around in the fray after that. So it was get in, destroy and get out fast.

8TH AUGUST 1940 SHOT DOWN BY BF109 of II/JG 53 Off SWANAGE.

It happened during the Battle of Britain on 8th August 1940. By this time I had destroyed a ME 109 on 25th July and destroyed another on 5th August, but now it was my turn to be shot down by ME 109s of II/JG 53 off Swanage in Spitfire K9894. The facts are not particularly gratifying for either myself or Pilot Officer Beaumont who was also shot down with me that day. We were returning from a patrol in which we had intercepted the enemy and had used all our ammunition. Our eight Browning machine guns used ammo fast and due to the limited storage space in the Spitfire wings there was never more than fifteen seconds total fire power available. So we were returning to our base at Warmwell to refuel and re-arm. There werethree of us flying in vie formation with Beaumont on the left of the flight leader and myself on the right. We were flying in very tight formation probably about a foot from the leader's wingtips. Therefore Beaumont and I had our eyes and concentration firmly fixed on the leader's aircraft. This was the way we flew in close formation early in the Battle until we learnt better later. Unfortunately, a group of ME 109s spotted us and carried out an attack on our unprotected rear, which we had offered them on a plate. We ought to have known better, and did. We knew that it was vital to keep a good lookout at all times, but were lulled into a false sense of security and had relaxed our vigilance briefly. After all we had had our scrap, were nearly safely home and, anyway, we had no ammo. The first thing I felt was the thud of bullets hitting my aircraft and a long line of tracer bullets streaming out ahead of my Spitfire. In a reflex action I slammed the stick forward as far as it would go. For a brief second my Spitfire stood on its nose and I was looking straight down at Mother Earth, thousands of feet below. Thank God my Sutton harness was good and tight. I could feel the straps biting into my flesh as I entered the vertical with airspeed building up alarmingly. I felt fear mounting. Sweating, mouth dry and near panic. No ammo and an attacker right on my tail. All this happened in seconds, but now the airspeed was nearly off the clock. I simply had to pull out and start looking for the enemy. That's what I did, turning and climbing at the same time. As I opened the throttle fully, with emergancy boost selected to assist the climb, I noticed wisps of white smoke coming from the nose of my fighter. God, no! Fire! Suddenly the engine stopped. Apparently a bullet in the glycol tank had dispersed all the coolant and even the faithful Merlin could not stand that for long at full power. So that explained the white smoke. Blessed relief. Just in front of my feet and legs was the main fuel tank with 48 gallons of high octane fuel. The dread of being burnt to death was one of the worst fears. It drew heavily on any reserves of courage one had. You can imagine by now, my eyes searching....wildly, frantically looking for my adversary - but, as often happens in air combat, not a single plane was to be seen in the sky around me. The release of tension as I realised my good fortune is something that cannot be described. You only know what it is like to begiven back your life if you have been through that experience. The problems that still confronted me, sitting in the cockpit of a battle-damaged Spitfire, seemed almost trivial in comparison with my situation of a few seconds before. I experienced this feeling several times during the Battle and it had a profound effect on me, which remains with me to this day. It somehow changed my value system, so that things that had seemed important before never had the same degree of importance again. Maybe this is what generated the anti authority behaviour amongst us. It was no good telling us not to do a victory roll because our aircraft may be damaged. This seemed a trivial risk compared with our experiences of combat in battle.

The end of the episode was something of an anticlimax. I still had plenty of altitude and time to think. I prepared to bail out and began going through the procedure in my mind. Release the Sutton harness, make sure all connections to flying helmet are free, slide the canopy back, roll the aircraft until inverted, push the stick forward and out you go. Then start counting-how before pulling the D-ring. How many? My memory went blank. Was it three or ten? God! there is a vast difference between the two, I thought. Well, as long as the interval is sufficient to get clear of the aircraft before pulling the D-ring it should be OK. During this soliloquy I'd got the Spit into a steady glide. It was gliding rather like a brick, but handling reasonably well and responding to the controls almost normally. I surveyed what I could see of the damage from the cockpit. Not much, apart from a few bullet holes here and there-particularly in the starboard wing. It worried me to abandon the old bus to certain destruction on to heaven knows what, perhaps a school full of children. Besides, I was by no means convinced that the bail-out procedure I had rehearsed was not without considerable risk. I could get caught up in the cockpit paraphernalia...I might be struck by the tailplane...or what if the parachute didn't open? No. I convinced myself it was too dangerous. I would stay with her and force-land in a suitable field. By now most of the fields looked pretty small, so I decided it would be with the wheels-up. I picked a field that looked suitable, slid back the canopy and commenced an approach. At about two hundred feet the boundary loomed up. Full flap and a flare out near the ground achieved a creditable touch-down. So far so good. I was quite pleased with myself as the Spit slithered across the grass. Then suddenly, I felt her going up onto her nose and, I thought, onto her back. With an almighty crash the canopy slammed shut over my head the cockpit filled with dirt, completely blinding me. The aircraft seemed to me to be upside-down and I was trapped. That awful fear of burning returned at full strength. I grabbed the canopy with all my might and threw it backwards. To my utter amazement it shot back easily, and the excessive adrenaline-boosted force I had used nearly tore my arms from their sockets. Now I could see that the aircraft had finished up vertically on its nose, in a ditch I hadn't seen from the air. My actions now became somewhat comic. It was obvious that I could easily jump clear and I commenced to do so without much hesitation. To my utter horror I couldn't move. Suddenly, I realised I was struggling against the Sutton harness, still buckled firmly in place. An instant pull released the pin. I was free. As I stood up to jump my head was jerked violently backwards. This time it was my flying helmet still attached to the radio and oxygen sockets in the cockpit. Removing this final impediment I jumped to the ground, leaving my helmet in the cockpit. To my surprise the Spitfire didn't burn. I stood back and took in the scene as locals arrived to convey me off to a pub in nearby Wareham and filled me with whisky. I had a slight bullet graze on my leg, but was otherwise unhurt and felt strangely elated. Next day I was back on ops again. Later my thoughts turned to my actions at the time and to my survival, which was probably attributable to two factors. First, the instant reaction of stick hard forward causing the Merlin engine to belch smoke from the exhausts may have convinced the ME 109 pilot that he had been successful in his attack, or perhaps the sudden change in attitude of my aircraft caused the attacker to overshoot his target. Second, ME 109s operating over the Dorset coast far from their French bases were short of fuel and couldn't hang around at length in a dogfight or chase situation. It would have been nice for us if we had known this fuel problem at the time, but we did not. I only found this out years later after the war. Telling this story helps me to deal with my survival syndrome. In a difficult-to-describe way, it is though I am speaking for the other chaps who did not make it. Their final story would have been infinitely more readable than mine. One constantly asks: "Why did I survive ... why did others not?"

DENIS N ROBINSON F/LT

 

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