
Episode One - RAF Hawkinge - Kent Battle of Britain Museum
04/19/24 • 33 min
It is right and proper that episode one is recorded at the very heart of the Battle of Britain at a museum in the village of Hawkinge near Folkestone in Kent in the UK.
This was recorded with Dave Brocklehurst Chairman and curator - and recorded especially on the 42nd anniversary of the opening of the current site at Hawkinge.
Run and managed by Dave Brocklehurst MBE the museum is the world's largest museum of Battle of Britain exhibits, with planes, uniforms, uniforms, militaria and crashed and recovered engines, spars, fuselage and artifacts from over 700 recovered planes from both sides Allied and Axis forces.
Lovingly and compassionately built with a dedication many museums will fail to match, Hawkinge Battle of Britain Museum is of course in the heart of the actual original RAF Hawkinge first line airfield at the heart of the Battle of Britain.
If you listen and visit please say you heard this show. It is a fantastic site suitable for all the family - you will hear my son William also saying how much he enjoyed his visit.
Also take time prior to the visit to visit the Commonwealth War Graves section of Hawkinge Cemetery and visit the graves of young men on both sides who gave their lives for our futures.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
It is right and proper that episode one is recorded at the very heart of the Battle of Britain at a museum in the village of Hawkinge near Folkestone in Kent in the UK.
This was recorded with Dave Brocklehurst Chairman and curator - and recorded especially on the 42nd anniversary of the opening of the current site at Hawkinge.
Run and managed by Dave Brocklehurst MBE the museum is the world's largest museum of Battle of Britain exhibits, with planes, uniforms, uniforms, militaria and crashed and recovered engines, spars, fuselage and artifacts from over 700 recovered planes from both sides Allied and Axis forces.
Lovingly and compassionately built with a dedication many museums will fail to match, Hawkinge Battle of Britain Museum is of course in the heart of the actual original RAF Hawkinge first line airfield at the heart of the Battle of Britain.
If you listen and visit please say you heard this show. It is a fantastic site suitable for all the family - you will hear my son William also saying how much he enjoyed his visit.
Also take time prior to the visit to visit the Commonwealth War Graves section of Hawkinge Cemetery and visit the graves of young men on both sides who gave their lives for our futures.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Episode Two - F/O Arthur Steel of RAF Coastal Command - 1942-1945 - one of the final few
This is a historic recording with former RAF Flying Officer Arthur Steel, veteran of RAF Coastal Command. Sadly Arthur passed away in November 2024 six months after recording this show, and this is now an online legacy record of a very brave man who was one of the few. This recording was made possible by his amazing daughter Sheila. We will be releasing an even longer version of the show with additional audio Arthur took time to commit to digital archive.
This is now, an extremely important piece of aviation history, Arthur's words now committed forever to the podcast universe.
Some historical background
On the 20th July 1944 Arther and his crew member and pilot Flt Lt Anthony (Tony) Adams (service number 86654) were flying on a mission to Norway as part of a squadron active sortie when their plane, a Bristol Beaufighter TFX NE225 developed engine failure in the port engine. Tony attempted to wrestle control of the failing plane and unable to maintain altitude or elevation, the plane descended into a fast vertical dive. Hitting the North Sea and disintegrating on impact, an impact now known to have happened at 320mph.
This was one of the rarest occasions in RAF operational history where a crew member in a plane hitting the water at such an incline and also such a hostile velocity, actually survived.
Arthur, awakening underwater, injured and trapped in the wreckage managed to pull himself free and make his way to the surface with very serious injuries. He was later picked up by a Grimsby based trawler whose captain was awarded the MBE and the crew mate who jumped into the sea with a rope tied round his waist to rescue Arthur given the National Humane Association award for bravery.
Arthur survived, with seven months in hospital and able to rejoin but not in a flying capacity saw out WW2 first in an Intelligence role and then working to resettle and help returning airmen coming from theatres of war across the globe. Sadly Tony Adams was killed in the crash and his body was never recovered and he is remembered on the Runnymede Memorial along with his illustrious comrades. Arthur talks lovingly and with pride about Tony and his guilt at having survived the crash when Tony was not so fortunate. The poignancy is raw.
This is Arthur's story in his own words. Recorded on the 28th April 2024 in Weston Super Mare, UK, six months before he passed away peacefully aged 107 years old.
This is your chance to hear a genuine historic archive.
This is for Sheila, and the rest of Arthur's family with love from Christopher, William and myself
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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