|
F/Sgt IAW âBillâ Gilmore 1072498 RAFVR
Ivan Gilmore, born on 31 March 1918, was the son and only child of JJA and Susan Gilmore. From County Down in Northern Ireland, the Gilmores had long been resident in Surrey. JJ Gilmore was a senior official in the Technical Staff of the Aeronautical Inspection Directorate at the Air Ministry. By some chance, he missed the fatal last flight of the airship R101, his place taken by another AID official.
Young Ivan ("Bill", to the family) was a keen rugby player, his talent remarked on in the Surbiton school yearbook. A laboratory assistant in civil life, he was still playing rugby for his work team before he joined up in September 1940. There might have been something of a promising future in football had the war not intervened.
The new recruit (Masheder family collection)
Enlistment and a disappointment When Ivan Gilmore entered the RAFVR at 3 Recruitment Centre Padgate on 28 September, he did so with an already daunting Aircrew Selection Board notation from the previous month: not recommended for aircrew. Whatever the reason for this assessment, it seems he was quite a determined lad, and his Form 543A was promptly stamped with the more optimistic mustering of ACH/WOp on entry to RAF Padgate. By the end of the year his trade was noted as Wireless operator. After a brief stint there and at 10 SRC Blackpool, early February 1941 found Aircraftman 2nd Class Gilmore posted to 2W2SS Signals School.
10 SRC Blackpool February 1941, possibly (Crown copyright via Masheder family) Ivan is eight from the left, squatting in the front row. This photograph is in the familiar style of other Blackpool trade course shots. While many of the men have their eagle shoulder flash up, many do not. The only indication of rank or authority in this shot is the brassard worn by the central figure in the middle row. All indications are of a group of new airmen.
A change of fortune By June 1941 he was posted to 116 Squadron but the stay was brief. Reclassified to Aircraftman 1st Class on 1 September, later that month came posting to an Aircrew Reception Centre (a very hopeful sign). In the second week of October, AC1 Gilmore was duly posted to 1 Initial Training Wing. His determination had gained him a place on the path to qualification as aircrew.
In mid December 1941, Ivan passed out of 1 ITW and on to 1 Elementary Air Observerâs School at Sunningbourne. By New Yearâs Eve 1941, he had achieved reclassification to Leading Aircraftman. In February 1942 LAC Gilmore was at 2 Signals School. With paperwork lagging slightly in the Adjutantâs Office, it was late March before his remuster to Under Training Air Observer/Wireless Telegraphist was put on record.
Passing through 50 Group Pool of Flying Training Command at Reading, by late June 1942 his initial Observer training was complete. Promotion to (temporary) Sergeant and remustering as a qualified Air Observer followed, then posting to 3 School of General Reconnaissance at RAF Squires Gate on 27 June. Late August 1942 found him on the last lap, at No 2(b) Operational Training Unit Catfoss, near Edinburgh. So much for the 5 ACSB notation!
2(b) OTU Catfoss 1943 (Crown copyright via Masheder family) As captioned by Ivan: No 2 Beaufighter Course and No 20 Blenheim Course. A mix of Pilot Officers and Sergeants, there are 15 Pilots and 18 Observers. At far left in the front row is Sgt Fred King, who also appears in one of Ivanâs Middle East photos, below. Fifth from the left in the centre row is Sgt Observer Moss, who as F/Sgt John Moss was also lost on 211 Squadron operations. At far right, in the back row is Ivan Gilmore. The photograph also carries a full list of the course members (surnames only, left to right). Front: King, Roberts, P/O George, P/O Wilson, P/O Buckley, P/O Burdett, P/O Langley, P/O Willey, P/O Hickie, P/O Payne, Graham-Smith. Centre: Highfield, Perry, Dodd, Chalk, Moss, Sar, Goodwin, Budd, Humphries, Denny, Worrall. Rear: Thomas, Winsor, Hawkes-Reed, Yates, Hey, Tullock, Baldwin, Davies, Cakebread, Canner, Gilmore.
For some reason, the stay at 2 OTU Catfoss seems to have been protracted. Given his own notation of the combined nature of this course, it may be that he converted from the Blenheim to the Beaufighter during his stay there. John Oblein also undertook two OTU stints, in Canada and the UK, for the same reason. Generally he might have expected to have a stint at at Ferry Training Unit with his pilot before undertaking the long flight to the Far East.
His musterings from late 1942 onwards reflect the state of play in the RAF at that time: alternately recorded as Observer and Nav/W.
To the Middle East The practice at the time was for crews to ferry their own aircraft on the long journey from the UK across the Middle East to India. John Oblein, Alan Carter, and Fred Wood all shared the same experience. The aircrew had to be good to undertake this long and potentially dangerous journey, gathering much experience in the course of it.
In these Gizeh Pyramid shots, all the men are Sergeant aircrew: Observers and Pilots, with Ivan and Reg clearly showing the Wireless Operatorâs fistful of sparks patch too. In the 2-seat Beaufighter, the fellow in the back seat was both Observer and Wireless operator, and soon the title of this crew function (and its badge) would change accordingly, to Navigator/Wireless Operator (Nav/W). Ivan was promoted to (temporary) Flight Sergeant towards the end of June 1943, by which time he was in India. The crown and chevrons of a Flight Sergeant are nowhere to be seen in these shots.
These men therefor seem likely to be Beaufighter crews, perhaps taking a break in their long 10 to 15 day flight to the Far East. Given the dates of Ivanâs promotion and movement to 42 FCS it seems possible that he and his fellow airmen had flown as a group on their long ferry flight to the Far East some time after November 1942.
Reg, Johnny (front) Geordie, Ivan, Bill (rear) Egypt early 1943 (Masheder family collection) Reg, Geordie and Bill all wear the Observerâs winged O. Bill and Johnny are Sergeant pilots. To confound easy comparison with the Catfoss course shot, some of the boys (Ivan, Bill and Johnny) wear their stripes on the right sleeve only. Regâs Wireless Operatorâs fist full of sparks badge is clear, above his stripes. Who is standing just out of shot?
Ivan, Johnny, Reg, Bill: Egypt early 1943 (Masheder family collection) Two crews? Ivan (with Observerâs winged O and Wireless Operatorâs sparks badge), Johnny (with Pilotâs wings), Reg as Sgt Observer, and Bill with Pilotâs wings.
Bill, Ivan, Fred [King], Geordie, Reg, Johnny: Egypt early 1943 (Masheder family collection) Three crews? Three Pilots (Bill, Fred, Johnny) and three Observers (Ivan, Geordie and Reg). With only King and Gilmore fully named, tracking these men in 211 Squadron records is going to be rather difficult.
Ivan, Fred and John Moss are readily identifiable from the RAF Catfoss No 2 Beaufighter course. Commonly, a crew formed at OTU would stay together, for the ferry flight and on posting to a Squadron. However, it is not possible to say which of these men were crewing together at this point.
To India... There is no indication on his personnel form of the pending movement to the Far East. Whatever the exact dates of the ferry flight from home, by 23 December 1943 Ivan Gilmore was at 308 Maintenance Unit at Allahabad and writing home to his cousin Anne Warnock, then serving in the ATS in Belfast. That letter indicates that he had been in India for at least 9 months and already had some operations under his belt. However, it is not possible to discover what unit these operations were undertaken with, nor whether it was in India or in the Middle East.
Here the exigencies of war perhaps played a part: the sparse record of his Indian postings may reflect records lost in transit. After 2 OTU, the next entry in his Form 543A movements record is to an Indian unit, 42 FC Section in October 1943 (possibly one of the Ferry Control units looking after the ferried aircraft). However, by his own account Ivan must have been in India by March or April 1943.
As remarked elsewhere, the setting up of the Beaufighter Squadrons in India and Burma was protracted and there was some shuffling of personnel between 308 MU, 177 Squadron and 211 Squadron for example. By August 1944, a W/O JF King was serving in 177 Squadron, another Beaufighter unit at Chiringa: 211 Squadron were there for a period around July. At first blush, possibly the same Fred King of 2(b) OTU and the Middle East, but given Gilmoreâs later remarks this now seems unlikely.
In writing to Anne, for the most part Gilmore intentionally kept the tone of his letters light. However, in sending the Middle East âsnapsâ with his first letter to Anne in December 1943, he had given a frank insight into the risks they all faced, quietly noting that his companions in the Middle East were by then all dead. Sadly, there is just not enough information to make it possible to describe the circumstances of their death.
Bengal: Reg, Bill and Ivan (Masheder family collection) Apparently âsomewhere in Indiaâ, as they then said. It is difficult to know where exactly, and with what unit, these photographs are associated. Reg and Bill appear again in this shot, though by December Ivan had remarked on their death.
...and on to 211 Squadron His letter of 11 February 1944 mentioned the Middle East photographs again, noting that the Middle East shots had been taken over a year before. That would place them sometime between November 1942 and January 1943. While the return address of this letter was still given as 308 Maintenance Unit (then in Allahabad, on the Ganges), at that date Ivan had already been posted to 211 Squadron: with effect from 1 February, according to his Form 543A movement record. The Squadron was then based 600 miles away at Bhatpara, south-east of Dacca in what is now Bangladesh, for operations over Burma.
It may be that he was attending the SLAIS rocketry course during February, or that he was awaiting transport to the Squadron, who in January and February were picking up new crew-members by air using the two available Bisleys. However he reached them, by 16 March Ivan was writing home again from 211 Squadron, clearly having arrived only a few days earlier. From 6 March 1944 to 14 March 1944, the Squadron had lost 4 Beaufighters and their crews in individual operations, and one Aircraftman in a Sten-gun accident on the ground.
It seems from the Squadron Operations Record Book that Ivan regularly crewed with 1213620 F/Sgt Geoffrey Preston Davies from 15 March 1944, with four operations together that month and three the following month: 8 April to Chiengmai to attack the railway junction, 26 April to attack the Kinu-Monywa railway, and their last together on 29 April. There are no other ORB entries for either man. The Squadron had resumed operational status only in January 1944.
Ivan and mate: possibly Bhatpara 1944 (Masheder family collection) Could this be Ivanâs pilot, Geoff Davies? From the kukri knives, clearly somewhere in India. Perhaps we can suggest Bhatpara.
In their first operation on 15 March in Beaufighter Mark X LZ231 âNâ, with three other aircraft they attacked a bridge at Lamu with rockets. Hits were observed and although they left the bridge holed, they found the results âdisappointing as with most RP attacks on bridgesâ.
The task on 21 March was to attack communications and movements, whether road, rail or river, from Prome south to Ple. Again in LZ231 âNâ, Davies and Gilmore attacked railway targets with Waddell and Woodall in LZ515 âXâ. After damaging five factories with their rockets, near Gyobingauk they attacked a train with cannon-fire and destroyed it, the locomotive and trucks exploding. The four aircraft involved all returned safely at ten to two in the afternoon after nearly seven hours in the air.
On 24 March, four aircraft operated singly in attacks upon the Japanese Air HQ at Kalawa and the Thazi-Mingyan railway. In Beaufighter Mark X LZ515 âXâ, Davies and Gilmore returned safely from the operation, though without finding the target due to compass trouble. Ivanâs close friend Flight Sergeant John Moss in Beaufighter Mark X LZ136 âOâ and his Canadian pilot W/O Bill Adamson failed to return. Ivan later wrote to Johnâs mother Hilda, which she greatly appreciated.
Although less activity was seen in a five hour sortie by four aircraft on 28 March, attacks were made on river craft, and some railway rolling stock and a bridge were attacked with rockets. In Beaufighter LZ515 âXâ, Davies and Gilmore returned safely as did the three other crews.
In another five hour, four aircraft sortie on 8 April, Davies and Gilmore in Beaufighter âYâ (probably LZ527) were tasked to attack Chiengmai railway and targets of opportunity. All aircraft returned safely from a wide-ranging raid in which a variety of targets were destroyed including a Hawk III aircraft, with one locomotive damaged.
With four aircraft operating in pairs on 26 April, Davies and Gilmore in Beaufighter âNâ and F/O Stevens with F/O Parker in âVâ strafed the Kinu-Sagaing-Monywa railway and river craft south of Monywa. All returned safely after three and a half hours in the air.
On 29 April, four aircraft were slated to attack communications in pairs in the Gangan/Pakokku/Kaleneyo/Kalewa area. Taking off from Bhatpara at 0653 hours, the second pair attacked targets at Minya and then a bridge at Malwe. In the course of this attack, Beaufighter âNâ of F/Sgt Davies and F/Sgt Gilmore was seen to crash and burst into flames, observed by F/Sgts Bell and Lightfoot in aircraft âVâ.
The Operations Record Book at this date only records aircraft call-sign letters rather than serial numbers. However, the Sortie Reports eventaully came to hand to show that Davies and Gilmore had been flying NE300 âNâ on the day they were lost. Posted âmissing, believed killedâ it was not possible to recover the boysâ remains then or post-war.
The month had been a busy one with 108 operational sorties mounted by the 12 to 15 aircraft available. The Squadronâs casualties during the month, as recorded on the India and Burma page, were regarded as light.
In the meantime, Hilda Moss had written in thanks to Ivan, only to find her letter returned. On receiving this news, she wrote in sympathy to Susan Gilmore. Susan died in 1980. Ivan, an only child, was single when he died. It is thanks to his cousin Anne Warnock and her daughter Caitlin Masheder that Ivanâs place in the 211 Squadron story can now be recounted.
Commemorated Ivan Gilmore and Geoff Davies, like Bill Adamson, John Moss and so many others, are commemorated on the Commonwealth War Graves Commission website, and on the Singapore Memorial in Kranji War Cemetery.
Flight Sergeant Ivan Alexander William Gilmore 1072498 211 Sqdn., Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve who died aged 28 on 29 April 1944 Son of JJA Gilmore BA ARSCI AMIEE and Mrs S Gilmore, of Surbiton, Surrey Column 434 SINGAPORE MEMORIAL Remembered with honour
www.211squadron.org © DR Clark & others 1998â2008 Site created 15 Apr 2001, last updated 31 Jul 2008. Page created 2 Mar 2005, last updated 18 Apr 2008 Home | Site Summary | Next | Previous | Enquiries | Site Search
|