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MEN BEHIND THE MEDALS LIONEL COLES


Hampden, which carried a crew
of four: pilot, navigator, WOP/AG
and an air gunner. The navigator
was usually a recently qualified
pilot who flew some eight or nine
‘ops’ in the role before getting
his own crew. Both gunners were
qualified as WOPs and usually
alternated duties, the one on the
wireless manning the twin 0.
Vickers gas-operated machine
guns in the rear and the other in
the claustrophobic turret in the
underside of the rear fuselage.

Crewed up
In July, Coles moved a few miles
up the road to Lindholme to
join 408 Squadron, Royal
Canadian Air Force,
which had just formed.
Two weeks later the
unit moved to its
wartime base at
Syerston, Notts.
Initially, he was
crewed with one
of the flight
commanders,
Flt Lt Arthur
Clayton DFC.
Raids began
on the night
of August
11/12 when
the marshalling
yards at Hannover
were the target.
On this sortie, Coles
was the air gunner in
Clayton’s aircraft on
the eight-hour flight.
It is remarkable that
Coles still had less
than 100 flying
hours in his
logbook.
A few days
later, he teamed
up with Sgt
Des Bradley, a New
Zealander, and on
August 27 they
flew their first ‘op’
together, dropping
mines off the
Frisian Islands. A
‘Gardening’ sortie, as

mine-laying was called, was often
given to a new crew to acquaint
them with operational procedures.
A few nights later came a long
flight to Frankfurt, with Coles in
the WOP’s seat, and in September
he took part on three daylight
‘Circus’ sorties to northern France,
each escorted by Spitfires. On
the 29th, the squadron sent two
Hampdens loaded with bombs to
Hamburg docks where the cruiser
Admiral Scheer had arrived at
the Blohm und Voss shipyard
for repairs. Despite severe
icing, Coles’ aircraft pressed on,
identifying the dockyard and
attacking amid heavy flak.
During October the
crew’s objective was
Saarbrücken and
Cologne when
their aircraft was
damaged by flak,
receiving 12 holes
in the wings and
fuselage. On
the 16th they
experienced
engine trouble
and, unable to
climb, turned for
home, dropping
their bombs on a
searchlight near
the Zuider Zee.

Only
survivor
At 18:14 on October 20
the Bradley crew took
off from Syerston in
P1212 on their ninth
operation. They were
one of 153 aircraft
tasked to attack two
aiming points in the
marshalling yards
at Bremen, 82
Hampdens making
up the majority of the
force. They successfully
dropped their load of
two 500lb, two 250lb
and two small bomb
containers.
The return was
uneventful until four

miles north of Coningsby at
00:45 when the starboard engine
failed due to fuel starvation.
The Hampden stalled and,
before Bradley could complete
the recovery, it crashed on the
northern edge of the small village
of Haltham. Coles was the only
survivor, suffering a broken neck,
burns and severe concussion.
Air raid wardens Ernest Basley
and Herbert Whaler were soon
on the scene and pulled Coles
from the wreckage, administering
first aid before he was taken to a
nearby cottage where a woman
tended his lacerations and burns.
An ambulance arrived and he was
taken to Coningsby before being
transferred to the RAF hospital at
Rauceby, near Sleaford.
The loss of P1212 was the first
suffered by 408 Squadron since
its formation a few months earlier.

Des Bradley (22) and Canadian
Alex McMillan (24) were buried at
Newark and the air gunner, Bob
Stansfield, was taken home to be
buried in Blackpool.

Change to ‘Lancs’
It was nine months before Coles was
sufficiently fit to return to flying
duties. In late September
1942 he arrived at
Swinderby to

Sgt Lionel Coles,
aged 19, in 1941.

Change to ‘Lancs’
It was nine months before Coles was
sufficiently fit to return to flying
duties. In late September
1942 he arrived at
Swinderby to

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