Thursday, 23 August 2018

What happens when your navigator bails from your plane?

Emperor Haile Selassie

Another segment of my grand-uncle Dick's memoirs.
 
I was now back with 'B' Flight and my last unusual experience was due to happen.

I had been promoted Corporal and one of our Wellesleys was due back from Addis Ababa It was August 1941 about 4 o'clock in the afternoon. There was myself and two lads waiting for the old Wellesley to arrive, sitting outside the hangar.

The war in this area was practically over and the Squadron, as well as isolated bombing of pockets Italians, scared to surrender to no-one but the British and South Africans, we were also carrying out quite an amount of VIP and Communication work.

She duly appeared over the edge of the plateau, as previously stated 7000 feet up, landed and taxied up to the hangar.

The normal crew of the Wellesley was the pilot, navigator and rear gunner. On this trip there was no gunner but a passenger instead. Since there was no air opposition, she did not have to protect herself.

The old Pegasus engine wound slowly down, the cockpit hood slid back, and the pilot climbed out onto the top of the wing. Fg Off. James was a tall, dark youngster, about 6'2, a bachelor, the latter perhaps being one of the key facts of the story. The step was unfolded, and the two lads busied themselves with chocks, fitting of control locks and getting the covers ready. I mounted the step and opened up the heavily-loaded spring perspex canopy. Looking into the fuselage I saw a young Army Captain getting his kit together prior to disembarking.

“Afternoon sir, good trip?” A fleeting glance trying to locate the sickness bag.

“Yes, fine thanks.”

“Pass your kit out, Sir, and we'll run you and the crew up to the mess in the OM.”

OM were the initials on the front of the little Italian jeeps, a number of which we had 'requisitioned' from the Italian Air Force. What they stood for I cannot remember now. (ОМ-32 Autocarretta da Montagna) Four wheel drive, four wheel steering, hard solid tyres with a four cylinder, two stroke engine; an amazing little vehicle. They towed Bowsers, the lot.

My own time was then occupied with getting a brief from the pilot and filling in the Form 700. This done James turned and shouted to the mid-fuselage window position.

“Sling my hat out, Bonner.”

Bonner was his navigator; a sergeant married with children, another fact which has quite a bearing on the story.

No hat duly arrived, nor any answer to the request. James then jumped up on the step and put his head in through the window and peered fore and aft, up and down the fuselage tunnel. Finding no navigator, he turned and looked in the direction of the hangar, fully expecting to see Bonner standing quietly facing the hangar wall with a blissful and serene look on his face.

Once again a blank, so he turned to the ground crew in general and said, “Anyone seen the nav? Where's he gone?”

None of us had seen him. There was only one other person to ask: the passenger.

James turned to face the young Captain, still passing down his kit. I can see him now: a good looking chap, dark, with a small Clark Gable moustache. And the conversation went like this:

“Where's the navigator?”

“He bailed out about 300 miles back.”

“He what?”

“He bailed out about 300 miles back.”

“What the hell for?”

“I don't know, he came through the tunnel, clipped his chute on his chest, put a bag of desert rations over his shoulder, a water bottle over the other, said 'Excuse me,' opened up the hatch and bailed out.”

“What did he do that for?”

“Don't ask me, I thought that he might be on a secret mission.”

We all stood there dumbfounded. The Army Captain too, as soon as he realised that the pilot was just as much in the dark. Until then, whilst unloading, he hadn't been in the least perturbed. But now he too became transfixed. Nobody moved for a moment, then we boarded the OM and drove to the mess with not a word being spoken.

For my part in the incident gradually faded in importance over the next few days until Sgt Bonner turned up with quite a growth on his chin. He had been picked up by Abyssinian patriots who, though he had a job in finally convincing them he was on his side and not an Italian, finally took him to a British Forces post. From there he hitched transport back to Asmara and to the Squadron. It appears that his 'Goolie Chit' was the only thing that saved him.

Well what had happened? After climbing out of Addis Abba James had, instead of climbing to his regulation height, decided to have a bit of a change and fly along the valleys. But Bonner, a married man with children, had other ideas. He knew the capabilities of the Wellesley, cruising 160 knots, one single little Pegasus in the front, rate of climb at 10,000ft about nil, and he did not fancy the idea of suddenly around the next bend, being confronted by a mountainous cul-de-sac.

It is said the conversation went like this:

Nav to Pilot: “Come on, get up top, above these mountains.”
Pilot to Nav: “Who's flying this kite?”
Nav to Pilot: “Either you get up, or I get out.”
Pilot to Nav: “?!?!!?!?!?!?!?!”
Nav to the Army Captain: “Excuse me. Sir.”

A few weeks later I started packing my kit. So I never knew of any repercussions. I think that many such instances in those days were allowed to be quietly forgotten. Especially when both aircrew were partly to blame. I hope so.

Goolie Chit

Incidentally a 'Goolie Chit' was a slang name for the document carried by British Servicemen, especially air crew, in this area. Written in Sudanese, Eritrean and Abyssinian with the stamp of the Abyssinian Emperor Haile Selassie, who was then sheltering in England having lost his country, it stated that the holder was a member of a friendly country and should be taken to the nearest military establishment wher he would be rewarded.

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