Battle Order 204

Battle Order 204

by Christobel Mattingley
Battle Order 204

Battle Order 204

by Christobel Mattingley

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Overview

David's boyhood dreams of flying led him to England for months of training to be a bomber pilot in World War II at age 19, but his final flight was a nightmare. Seconds after the bombs were released, David was wounded in five places and his fellow pilot Dog was hit. Flying metal slashed his right knee, thigh, and shoulder; the tendons and artery in his right hand were severed; and shrapnel ripped through his thick leather helmet, fracturing his skull as his aircraft went into a dive. This riveting true story takes young people through the events of a young WWII pilot’s heroic journey and his courage and endurance in the face of terrifying conditions.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781741761733
Publisher: Allen & Unwin Pty., Limited
Publication date: 09/01/2007
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 252
File size: 3 MB
Age Range: 12 - 17 Years

About the Author

Christobel Mattingley is the author of several books, including First Friend; Hurry Up, Alice!; and No Gun for Asmir.

Read an Excerpt

Battle Order 204

A Bomber Pilot's Story


By Christobel Mattingley

Allen & Unwin

Copyright © 2007 Christobel Mattingley
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-74176-173-3



CHAPTER 1

A Passion for Planes


David was only six when his father hired a launch to take the family on an expedition to explore Twenty Day Island in Bass Strait, about twelve miles from the fishing village of Bridport where they always spent the summer. The launch's engine had sputtered into silence near the rocky shore, when David heard the drone of another engine. There was not a boat to be seen in any direction.

Then, above in the sun-bright blue, David glimpsed something extraordinary. An aeroplane! The first he had ever seen! David nearly jumped off the launch into the water in his excitement. He waved and waved. And watched and watched until the little plane disappeared beyond the horizon. He knew then that he wanted to fly too. One day. When he was a man. Bobbing about in a boat over choppy sea was an adventure. But surely it could not compare with rushing through the air, up among the clouds, looking down on the world spread out below like a multi-coloured tapestry. The pilot was pioneer aviator Bert Hinkler and David's passion for planes had been kindled.

In 1931, when David was eight, Charles Kingsford Smith came on a barnstorming visit. On 1 March, Tasmania had its first Air Pageant at the recently established Western Junction airfield. Interest was intense and so many people flocked to see the show that the newspapers reported Tasmania's first traffic jam, with cars banked up for a mile or more.

Impatient to reach the display, David hopped out of his father's Essex car and eagerly walked the final stretch. His unmarried aunt, a feisty woman who lived with the family, gladly parted with ten shillings to go up with the famous pilot on a brief circuit beyond the airfield.

'Can I go up too?' David begged.

'No!' said his parents, very firmly.

In those Depression years, times were tough for his father, a dentist whose patients could not always pay their bills. And because David was their youngest son, his mother always worried about him. He had to content himself with inspecting the amazing machine on the ground and questioning his aunt over and over about every detail of the flight.

David cut photos of the historic event out of the paper. Then over the next months he saved the tuppence his uncle gave him each week for a pie from the tuckshop, until he had enough money to buy a big scrapbook, into which he carefully pasted all the cuttings. Over the years he added other items about aviation as he found them. All the while, watching and waiting for his chance to fly.


By the time David was thirteen he spent most summer Saturdays on the water. He loved the wide brown Tamar River studded with swans, its tidal waters ebbing and flowing between reedy banks where native hens ran with raucous calls. Training in the mornings, racing in the afternoons, year by year he had progressed from the Junior rowing crew to the Seconds and at last to the Firsts, rowing at Number Three or Bow. He loved the teamwork, the camaraderie, the shrill voice of the young coxswain chanting, 'In. Out. In. Out,' and the deep voice of the coach shouting instructions across the water through his megaphone. He thrilled to the thrust, the glide, the power generated by four sets of shoulders, four pairs of arms pulling on the oars. It seemed like the steady beat of wings making the boat fly across the water.

Winter Saturdays were different. On wild wet days, or when fog seeped up from the river, or dark clouds shrouded the Western Tiers, he stayed home, disappointed but determined, plugging away at the maths he would need if he was ever to become a pilot. But when the clouds were light and playful and the sun danced over Mount Barrow, he would slap together two sandwiches thick with cheese, peanut butter or blackberry jam, wrap them hastily and shove them in a pocket, stuff two apples in the other, and grab his bike, shouting 'I'm off, Mum!'

Whistling, he would pedal uphill out of town. When he reached the flat road that led to the Western Junction airfield, speeding by the clipped hawthorn hedges still speckled with red berries, he laughed as he felt the wind rushing through his hair. He counted down the minutes - fifty, forty-five, forty - until he would catch his first glimpse of a windsock, a hangar, a plane ... The Northern Tasmanian Aero Club had set up its headquarters in a shed at the airfield and members gave joy flights at the weekends. David soon learned to distinguish between the different types of Moth aircraft, boxy little biplanes constructed of wood and fabric. There were Gipsy Moths, Fox Moths, and a Leopard Moth. But his favourite was the Tiger Moth. Each Saturday he promised himself that one day he would learn to fly a Tiger Moth.

He prowled round all the machines, watching preflight checks, listening to conversations between pilots and mechanics, thrilled when someone called 'Lend a hand, will you, lad,' or even, 'Want to look at the instrument panel?' The sights, sounds and smells would later fill his dreams.

At school, David persevered with maths, but English and history were his favourite subjects, especially poetry and modern European history. As he scanned the papers for any items about aviation, he could not help noticing news about the growing unrest in Europe. At first, small paragraphs were tucked away in back pages, behind local and Australian news. But as the months went by they moved closer to the front of the paper and had bigger headlines, as the Nazis grabbed more and more power in Germany.

In March 1938, German troops entered Vienna, the once-proud capital of the great Austro-Hungarian Empire, and Austria was declared part of the German Reich. By August, as Germany began to mobilise, the name Hitler had become a household word, evoking anxiety and fears for the stability of the precarious peace established after the Great War.

In September, half a world away, schoolboy David studied cartoons of British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain caving in to Hitler at the infamous Munich Conference, which established Nazi Germany as the dominant power in Europe, with Fascist Italy under Mussolini in support. As France and Britain followed a policy of appeasement, Nazi troops occupied Czechoslovakia. But in Britain an outcry against Chamberlain arose, and David noted the name of its leader, Winston Churchill, soon to become another household word epitomising resistance to Nazism and Fascism.

If Britain went to war, Australia would follow. It threw a long shadow over the eagerly awaited summer holidays, spent, as usual, at the family beach house. The young people partied around the bonfire on Mattingleys Beach, as they did every New Year's Eve, but lads whose eighteenth birthday would fall in 1939 were quieter than usual.

Staring into the leaping flames, sixteen-year-old David had a heavy feeling he was looking into the fire which seemed about to engulf Europe, its fierce heat scorching and destroying lives around the world.

But despite the foreboding, it was a glorious summer, that last summer of peace. David and his friends swam, sunbaked and walked for miles along the pristine beaches of the great sweep of Andersons Bay. At dusk, they threw their lines into the Brid River for blackfish, though David secretly hoped he wouldn't catch any. On shooting expeditions in the bush with his father and brothers, he deliberately missed the gentle wallabies in the gun's sight, unable to bring himself to kill them.

David had gained the Royal Lifesaving Society's Award of Merit and Instructor's Certificate and now drilled younger swimmers in lifesaving techniques. He had never forgotten the terrible day six years before, when, despite the efforts of his older brothers Max and Brian to save them, two boys, one also named David, had drowned.

When David turned seventeen on 14 June 1939, war in Europe seemed inevitable. Hitler and Mussolini had signed 'The Pact of Steel', a ten-year military and political alliance, and although non-aggression pacts between Germany and other countries were collapsing, a new one with the USSR strengthened Germany's position. Poland's sovereignty was threatened. Britain and France had warned Germany they would stand by Poland. But Germany invaded on 1 September. Two days later Britain and France declared war on Germany.


The heavy black print of the Launceston Examiner headline of 4 September seared itself into David's brain. BRITAIN AT WAR WITH GERMANY.

A second headline, TASMANIAN TROOPS CALLED TO THE COLOURS, appeared over a photo. David studied the photo closely. 'How long before I'm in uniform?' he wondered.

By the end of September, when Germany and the USSR had invaded and divided Poland between them, Britain had sent 158 000 men to fight in France and the

Royal Air Force (RAF) had begun its propaganda raids, dropping thousands of leaflets over Germany. David's album bulged with newspaper pictures of warplanes, both British and German.

In December, celebrations marking the end of the school year were subdued. Some boys who had turned eighteen went straight off to enlist. Through Christmas and January, David was aware of faces missing from the beach scene. His older brother Max, home on holidays from teaching in Brisbane, talked of enlisting in the Royal Australian Navy, because the sea had always been his passion. And when term began in February 1940, David found that teachers at his school had left to join the Services.

By Easter, Germany had invaded Norway and Denmark, and a British force sent to help Norway singe Herr Hitler's moustache failed for lack of air power. In May, Germany invaded the Netherlands, Luxembourg and Belgium and pierced French defences. On 29 May the heroic evacuation of British forces began at Dunkirk in France.

Then, on David's eighteenth birthday, the Germans entered Paris. For the free world it was a day of mourning as this great city, symbol of culture and popular revolution, fell once more victim to tyranny.

Every day, David rose early to read the war news in the paper before setting off for school. In the evening he gathered with the family round the wireless to hear the latest broadcast, watching their expressions become more serious as the news worsened. In July, the RAF began night bombing of Germany. Germany had unleashed the force of its Luftwaffe on Britain, in an attempt to knock out as many airfields and defences as possible prior to invasion. But the German planes met with valiant opposition. Avidly, David pored over the accounts of the courage and daring of the fighter pilots in their Spitfires and Hurricanes, who with such skill and tenacity harried and attacked the Heinkels, Junkers and Messerschmitts sent by Hitler to blast Britain into submission. The stories of this small band of weary but indomitable airmen in their battle-worn planes, patrolling the English skies, repulsing invaders, inspired him and strengthened his determination to join them in defending the heart of Empire. He was moved by Winston Churchill's tribute, 'Never in the field of human conflict has so much been owed by so many to so few.'

By mid-August, when the Battle of Britain was at its peak, one hundred and eighty German planes had been shot down. But still more came over in wave after relentless wave, pounding London day and night - the beginning of the Blitz.

At sea, German U-boats threatened vital supplies of food and fuel, and troops arriving from Commonwealth countries.

At eighteen David was not old enough to vote. But he could pay taxes and legally drive a car. And he could join the armed forces, which seemed the right thing to do. The only thing. Everyone in the free world had to take responsibility for opposing the evils of Nazi aggression. But war meant mayhem and mass destruction on both sides. Created widows and orphans. Destroyed homes. Robbed parents of children in whom they had invested so many years of care and love and hope. 'How will Mum and Dad feel if I enlist?' he asked himself again and again.

One spring evening David was walking home with his father through City Park, where since he was small he had always loved to watch the monkeys' antics. The question which had kept his heart and mind in turmoil for months spilled out.

'Dad, when I leave school, I want to join the Air Force. That's all right with you, isn't it?'

His father was silent, but a blackbird scratching among the oak leaves scolded loudly. His father's footsteps slowed, then stopped. Two children ran by, laughing as they pelted each other with acorns.

'I've been expecting this,' his father replied at last. 'And so has your mother. Of course we aren't happy about it. But we understand. And you have our blessing.'

David gripped his father's strong square hands. The hands which extracted teeth in the surgery and tended flowers in the garden. The hands which had shown him how to hold a cricket bat, wield an axe, plant a rosebush, prune an apple tree.

'Will you tell Mum or shall I?' he asked.

'Let me break it to her first,' his father said. 'Then you can talk to her.'

When they sat down to tea, David's mother's eyes were red and he knew at once that his father must have spoken to her. But the family talked of other things, focusing on end of year plans and David's brother Brian's return from teaching in Armidale.

After the meal, everyone gathered as usual around the wireless, listening intently to the progress report on the newly opened North Africa campaign, hearing with dismay that the Germans had extended their bombing raids over Britain.

David carried the teacups out to the kitchen where his mother was running water into the sink. 'Dad's told you,' he said. It was more a statement than a question. His mother nodded, not trusting herself to speak. He hugged her and held her close for what seemed a moment, but was actually almost three wordless minutes as he realised, looking up at the trusty old clock on the dresser, which had already ticked through World War I.

'When?' she asked, holding him at arm's length so she could gaze on him.

'As soon as I've left school.'

She nodded again. 'Your father and I expected this. After all, you've always loved planes and this is your chance to learn to fly.' She smiled wanly. 'But you're doing it for the right reason, Viddy,' she added with pride. 'We have to stand up to those bullies. There must always be an England and England shall be free,' she said, referring to a song David had been playing for months on the sitting room piano. 'Now you must get back to your homework. Only six more weeks to your final exams.'

David needed no reminding. He was a conscientious student, and wanted to do well. Before the war had blown up he had set his sights on going to university and becoming a teacher. It was something of a family tradition. His father's parents had been teachers, with their own school at Emerald Hill in Melbourne. Now both his older brothers were teachers. It was a good profession.

In his last week at school, the headmaster called David to his study.

'Has the war affected your plans too?' he enquired. 'Will you be joining up like so many others?'

'Yes, sir.'

'The Air Force, I suppose.' The headmaster knew David's passion for planes.

'I hope so.'

'Well, they'll be getting a good recruit in you. But if you're not called up for a while - lots of fellows have enlisted but had to wait for their call-up - I'd be glad if you'd help us out here. We're losing another couple of teachers to the forces and need replacements. Think about it.'

'I don't know whether I could change from schoolmate into teacher, sir,' David demurred.

The headmaster looked at the tall, fresh-faced young man, whose modesty, quiet humour and sense of responsibility had endeared him to students and staff alike. 'You've been a prefect, wicket-keeper in the Second Eleven, and rowed in the First Four. You're respected and well liked. You won't have any trouble. I'll give you classes in the lower school, where you're looked up to. Share your passion for poetry with them and tell them stories from English history which they'll never forget. Anyway, see how you go at the recruiting office. If they can't take you straightaway, we'll be glad to have you back and pay you for your time and effort.'

His mother was pleased when David told her of the headmaster's offer. It was a good fallback position, if his call-up didn't come straight through. He knuckled down to revision and the approaching exams with some peace of mind, if not confidence.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Battle Order 204 by Christobel Mattingley. Copyright © 2007 Christobel Mattingley. Excerpted by permission of Allen & Unwin.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

'Wings' by Cecil Roberts,
BATTLE ORDER 204 (1) Bomb Doors Open!,
1 A Passion for Planes,
2 Name, Rank and Number,
BATTLE ORDER 204 (2) D Dog,
3 Slow Boat to Britain,
4 Loving Life,
BATTLE ORDER 204 (3) Target Dortmund,
5 Confronting Death,
6 Airborne Again At Last,
'High Flight' by John Magee,
7 Wimpeys and Crewing Up,
8 Heavies and 'Butch' Harris,
'An Airman's Prayer' by Hugh Brodie,
9 625 Squadron,
BATTLE ORDER 204 (4) Hit!,
10 Holland, Happy Valley and France,
BATTLE ORDER 204 (5) Put on Parachutes!,
11 J Jig,
12 Erks and Armourers,
13 Holland, Happy Valley and Operation Hurricane,
BATTLE ORDER 204 (6) Take Up Crash Positions!,
14 'Three of our aircraft are missing',
15 'Bold, cautious, true and my loving comrade',
16 G George and D Dog,
BATTLE ORDER 204 (7) A Perfect Landing,
17 A Fractured Skull and a Headless Crew,
BATTLE ORDER 204 (8) Outstanding Devotion to Duty,
18 'It is so good to be alive!',
19 Victory At Last!,
20 'In hospital again. Nothing serious. Don't worry.',
21 Going Home,
Epilogue,
About the Others,
Writing Battle Order 204,
Acknowledgements,
About the Poems,
Glossary,
Sources,
Wings,

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