🧵Friends, I have a treat for you. I’ve been loaned a set of original photos/news clippings which belonged to Eric Kirkland, an RAF Navigator on 254 Sqn Coastal Command. Eric flew on Beaufighters, attacking enemy shipping in the North Sea/Dutch/German coastal areas 1/10
Most (if not all) of these photos were taken by Eric himself. He was based at RAF North Cotes, Lincs. The photos were all taken April/June 43 - significant dates for those of you who’ve read #AboveUsTheStars
Eric’s Beaufighter attacked the Strasburg on 13.6.43. The incident made all the papers. This from the Times:
Here’s Eric’s view of the attack on the Strasburg , in his own words:
On the same day the Strasburg was hit, the Emden was also attacked. I’ll let Eric do the talking:
It seems Eric’s boys were regulars in the newspapers:
Remember in #AboveUsTheStars when Jack’s Halifax was nearly shot down by 3 flak ships? Here’s one - seems Eric really feared them too:
However it wasn’t all work and no play for these boys. I love this one, a postcard from Eric’s mate Reg.
“This Might Brighten Your Billet!’
Huge thank you to @chris_kirkland5 for the loan of these precious family heirlooms!
There are loads more photos and news cuttings but I’ve shared the best with you. Enjoy!
ALAAARRMM!! One for @WeHaveWaysPod . This is very, very exciting. I've just received an original Kriegsdagebuch from German minesweeper M1803 (Commandant Kapitänleutnant Witting), covering July 1940 to January 1941. Some of it typed, most of it handwritten ➡️
The entries include the capture and scuttling of RN submarine HMS Shark on 6 July 1943 off Stavanger . Incredibly there's a photo of this incident in the IWM archives ➡️
M1803 was part of the 18th Minesweeping Flotilla which took part in the invasion of Norway. From July to late 1940, Witting & his crew swept up and down the Norwegian coast, intercepting & sometimes seizing Norwegian vessels. ➡️
Writing about ‘the Channel Dash’ today. Scharnhorst, Gneisenau & Prinz Eugen had been holed up in Brest on the French Atlantic coast for months, where they were regularly attacked by the RAF. They couldn’t be sunk though as they were either in dry dock or shallow water ➡️
Kriegsmarine decided to try to get the 3 back to the main Naval base at Kiel for repair; they slipped out of Brest in the early hours of 12/2/42. Bomber Command, sneaky buggers, had heavily mined the area around the Frisian Islands, through which they had to pass ➡️
Scharnhorst hit a mine mid afternoon - didn’t do much damage (probably a naval mine as it wasn’t in a Bomber Command ‘garden’) Gneisenau & Scharnhorst then each hit air-laid mines later that day. Gneisenau not badly damaged, but the 2nd mine did a lot of damage to Scharnhorst ➡️
On 4.3.1941, #OpClaymore was launched against targets in the Lofoten Islands with troops from 3 & 4 Commando. Mission: destroy oil installations & enemy shipping, take German prisoners & Quislings, & recruit Norwegian volunteers #Lofoten41 1/8
Force Rebel comprised HMS Nelson, George V, Bedouin, Eskimo (which had been blown up in the Battle of Narvik but miraculously rebuilt), Legion, Somali, Tartar, submarine HMS Sunfish & transports HMS Princess Beatrix & Queen Emma #Lofoten41 2/8
500 commandos were on board, plus 52 Norwegians (including former actor and resistance hero Capt Martin Linge) & 52 Royal Engineer demolition experts #Lofoten41 3/8