Photos
and the Meritorious Performance List from Major W. H. Osman’s book Pigeons in World War II published in 1950 by The Racing Pigeon Publishing Co.
Ltd. courtesy of The Racing Pigeon Co Ltd. www.racingpigeon.co.uk.
Friday, May 31, 2019
Saturday, May 25, 2019
Pigeons in Africa, May 1943
(c) Crown copyright images reproduced by courtesy of The
National Archives, Kew, UK
Catalog numbers: AIR23/6546
#02, #10, #11, #12, #14, #15, #17, #21, #22, #23
You can use the scroll bar at bottom to center the documents.
You can use the scroll bar at bottom to center the documents.
RAF
Operations in the Middle East and Africa, 1940-43
Camels at work with their drivers
during levelling operations on the airfield at Khormaksar, Aden. Note the red
warning flags attached to the camels' yokes to alert aircraft in the area. Photo by RAF Khormaksar. Imperial War Museum © IWM (CM 5378)
Kenya
Supplies Bacon for Middle East Troops, C. 8 October 1942
The
expanding Uplands Bacon Factory in Kenya can now handle 500 pigs weekly. Half
of its total bacon produce is packed in wooden cases and dried salt, to save
refrigeration space, and exported to the Army in the Middle East. Both dry and
tank methods of curing are employed and the factory specialises in Wiltshire
Cured Bacons and Hams. Sausages and tinned produces are made in large
quantities. The factory suplies Tanganyika Territory, Uganda, Congo, Seychelles
and Zanzibar, and, after the war, intends to export full Wiltshire sides of
green (unsmoked) bacon to the English market. Picture shows:- Sausage making
machine. Imperial War Museum © IWM (K 3198)
Tuesday, May 21, 2019
75th Anniversary of D-Day
In Courageous Couriers: Memoirs of
a Pigeon Soldier, Lt. Col. (retired) Jerome J. Pratt explains the mission
of the 2nd platoon of the 280th Signal Pigeon
Company. Led by Lieutenants Thomas H. Spencer
and Irwin F. Salz, 45 enlisted men and 1391 pigeons landed in Britain on September
12, 1942, where they would establish the Pigeon Breeding Center at Tidworth
Barracks.
“As its tactical mission, the platoon was
responsible to train pigeons for communications from the shores of Normandy to
the United Kingdom. Some 500 birds
landed with our troops on D-Day. They
were immediately put to work carrying ammunition status reports, undeveloped
photographic film, and emergency messages.
When the members of the 165th
Signal Photographic Company stormed ashore with the invading forces they had
three crates of pigeons with them. The
pictures of our landing operations to reach England for the first few days
after the invasion arrived by pigeon.”
A pigeon saves the lives of the men who took out the Merville gun battery
This is Lieutenant Colonel
Terence Otway, Commanding Officer, 9th Battalion, Parachute
Regiment, concluding his account of the successful destruction of the Merville
gun battery on D-Day. You can listen to his entire account by going to The Imperial
War Museum’s site, iwm.org and searching Otway in the sound archive. This
operation commenced at 2:15am.
“By five o’clock we had
completely occupied the battery. We had
taken all the casements, we had taken twenty-two prisoners and there were a lot
of German casualties, killed and wounded, in the casements, and I was able to
send a success signal. I had no radio to
send a success signal but I lit a yellow signal flare and an RAF plane went
over, saw it, and waggled its wings. And
my signals officer, unbeknown to me, had got a carrier pigeon with him, brought
in all the way from England in his airborne smock, and he tied a victory
message around its leg and sent it off.
Then the problem was to get
out. I went round the casements and I
told all the troops to get out but we didn’t know how to get through the
minefield so I told the prisoners to show me the way. They refused.
So I said, ‘Well, OK, we’re going to make you walk forward and if you
don’t show us the way through the mines we’re just going to start shooting the
ground and you’re going to lose your feet and maybe the mines will go up
too.’ So they showed us the way and we
got out.
I went and sat by the cavalry
near the battery and I told everybody to take up defensive positions such as we
were able to. Because, out of the 150
men that we went in with, all ranks, there were only 75 of us left standing on
our feet. The others had been killed or
wounded.”
The Western Front Committee was established at Bletchley Park in October 1942 and for the next 18 months built up a comprehensive picture of German forces in the West, recording every unit, its location and its strength.
Link to Bletchley Park May Podcast
88-The Tide of Victory
Description of the podcast
from the Bletchley Park site:
It Happened Here this month takes us to a Britain whose south coast
in May 1944 resembled one huge army camp as over two million men waited for
D-Day. In the Buckinghamshire countryside, the staff at GC&CS carried
on feeding detailed and crucial intelligence to the Allied forces that would
play an integral part in the success of the upcoming Operation Overlord.The Western Front Committee was established at Bletchley Park in October 1942 and for the next 18 months built up a comprehensive picture of German forces in the West, recording every unit, its location and its strength.
Royal
Air Force: Operations by the Photographic Reconaissance Units, 1939-1945
Annotated
vertical photographic-reconnaissance aerial taken over Auderville on the Cap de
la Hague peninsula, France; the first of a series of reconnaissance photos
which provided evidence that the Germans were employing early-warning radar.
The ringed circular objects, at first thought to be cow bins, were examined by
Dr R V Jones, the Assistant Director Air Intelligence (Science) at the Air
Ministry, in January 1941. From this he conjectured that the circles may house
'Freya' aerial arrays, a fact confirmed by subsequent low-level sorties
undertaken by No. 1 PRU. Photo taken by
W.K. Manifould (Pit Off), No. 1 Photographic Reconnaissance Unit, Royal Air
Force Official Photographer. Imperial
War Museum © IWM (C 5474)
Remembering A Pilot
R.V. Jones served as Assistant
Director of Intelligence (Science) in the Air Ministry. At the end of the chapter on D-Day in his
book Most Secret War, Jones explains the importance of the bombings which took out
the German radar and jamming stations.
“Not only had we eliminated the jammers
and the headquarters of the German
Signals Intelligence Service in north-west France which might otherwise have detected our movements on Day D-1, but
we had knocked out large proportions of the German radar chain….
Reviewing the results, Sir Trafford Leigh
Mallory, the Allied Expeditionary Air Force Commander, said in his Official
Despatch (London Gazette, 2 January,
1947):
The application of radio
counter measures immediately preceding the assault, proved to be extraordinarily
successful….These results may be summarized as follows: the enemy did not obtain the early warning of
our approach that his Radar coverage should have made possible; there is every
reason to suppose that Radar controlled gunfire was interfered with; no fighter
aircraft hindered our airborne operations; the enemy was confused and his troop
movements were delayed.
And as for the attack we had
thrown in for good measure along with those on the five jammers the Despatch
said:
The success of this last
attack on the Headquarters of the German Air Force Signals Intelligence must
have been a major catastrophe for the enemy, and it may well be that it was an
important contributory factor to the lack of enemy air reaction to the assault.
But there was a cost. As the Official Despatch said, ‘These Radar
targets were very heavily defended by flak, and low level attacks upon them
demanded great skill and daring….losses among senior and more experienced
pilots were heavy.” In one case, that of
an attack on a ‘hoarding’ on the Hague Peninsula, I received a German
eye-witness account: three of our
fighters had attacked in line astern, and one was hit by flak. The pilot had dived his aircraft into the
hoarding, finishing it—and himself—forever.
The German said it was the bravest thing he had ever seen. It was agreed on the Air Staff that if I could
find who the pilot was I should write a citation for a posthumous Victoria
Cross; but two of the three aircraft in the attack had crashed with their
pilots lost, and we could not establish which was the aircraft which had
destroyed the hoarding.
The Official Despatch concluded: ‘These attacks saved the lives of countless
soldiers, sailors and airmen on D-Day.”
Link to Roosevelt’s Fireside
Chat 29: On the Fall of Rome, June 5, 1944:
https://millercenter.org/the-presidency/presidential-speeches/june-5-1944-fireside-chat-29-fall-rome
Link to D-Day real time radio
broadcasts:
https://www.wwiifoundation.org/students/real-time-radio-broadcasts-from-d-day-june-6-1944/
Link to President Roosevelt’s
D-Day prayer (cut 44):
https://archive.org/details/NBCCompleteBroadcastDDay/CBD-440606_NBC2200-PresidentRooseveltD-DayPrayer.mp3
Newsreel: Preparations for D-Day
Newsreel: Preparations for D-Day
This video was too long to
load to the World War II Pigeons site so here is the link to watch the British
Pathe newsreel, Stores of War Materials
at the Ready for D-Day:
https://www.britishpathe.com/video/VLVAJI75D1Z6NMFJAUO44446KSUI-STORES-OF-WAR-MATERIALS-AT-THE-READY-FOR-D-DAY/query/D-Day
Gustav
in safe hands after his adventurous
flight. 1944
PIGEON BRINGS FIRST INVASION NEWS
Gustav, an RAF Coastal Command carrier pigeon, brought the first War
Correspondent's dispatch back to England from the Allied Invasion forces off
the enemy coast, and the bird was released at 8:30 in the morning. Flying
against a 50 mile an hour head wind, the pigeon landed in its loft on a south
coast Coastal Command Station at 1:46 in the afternoon. The message was
immediately telephoned to London for publication. It read: "We are just
twenty miles or so off the beaches. First assault troops landed 0750. Signal says no interference from enemy
gunfire on beach. Passage uneventful. Steaming steadily on. Formations
Lightnings, Typhoons, Fortresses crossing since 0545. No enemy aircraft
seen." Imperial War Museum © CH 13321
Friday, May 10, 2019
Pigeons in question duly arrived and youngsters ready for South Africa, 1943
RAF
Operations in the Middle East and North Africa, 1939-43
Captured
Messerschmitt Bf 110D "The Belle of Berlin" in British markings on a
landing ground in North Africa. This aircraft served with II/ZG76 in Iraq and
was captured after crash-landing near Mosul in May 1941. It was used as a
communications aircraft and later as a unit 'hack' by No.267 Squadron RAF. Photo by Royal Air Force official
photographer. Imperial War Museum. © IWM (ME(RAF) 2628)
(c) Crown copyright images reproduced by courtesy of The
National Archives, London, UK
Catalog numbers: AIR23/998
#04, #13, #15, #17, #18, #19,
#20, #21, #22, #27, #29, #30
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