I Won't Be Home Next Summer: Flight Lieutenant R.N. Selley DFC (1917-1941)

I Won't Be Home Next Summer: Flight Lieutenant R.N. Selley DFC (1917-1941)

I Won't Be Home Next Summer: Flight Lieutenant R.N. Selley DFC (1917-1941)

I Won't Be Home Next Summer: Flight Lieutenant R.N. Selley DFC (1917-1941)

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Overview

Ronnie Selley, a South African from rural Natal, joined the RAF on a short-service commission in 1937, considered the Golden Age of aviation. During these glory years of Howard Hughes and Amelia Earhart few guessed at the brewing storm and dark days to come. After completing his training on antiquated First World War aircraft, Selley was posted to 220 Squadron Coastal Command, the RAF’s under-staffed and under-equipped poor relation to the more prestigious Fighter and Bomber Commands. Tasked with reconnaissance, convoy patrols and submarine-hunting the pilots of Coastal Command chalked up more flying hours than any other RAF Command. It was not uncommon for pilots to be in the air, searching the waters of the North Atlantic, for up to sixteen hours a day, in aircraft that were neither capable of such ranges nor, initially, adequately armed to defend their charges. From the outbreak of war until after its cessation Coastal Command had aircraft in the air twenty-four hours a day, every single day. The toll this took on the men of Coastal Command was unthinkable.

The first RAF pilot to sink a German U-boat, Selley went on the win the DFC for his actions during the Dunkirk evacuation. He won high praise and newspaper headlines such as “Plane fights 13 German warships”, “One RAF man bombs 3 ships, routs Nazis” and “One against eight” were not uncommon. Selley subsequently suffered acute battle fatigue and spent time convalescing at the Dunblane Hydro. Thereafter, he was posted by the Air Ministry as Air Vice-Marshal Breese’s personal pilot. On 5 March 1941 Ronnie Selley, Air Vice-Marshal Breese and the entire crew of the fully armed Lockheed Hudson they was flying experienced engine problems, lost speed, stalled and exploded on impact at Wick in northern Scotland.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781928211198
Publisher: 30 Degrees South Publishers
Publication date: 10/19/2014
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 324
File size: 40 MB
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About the Author

Ron Selley grew up in northern Zululand, South Africa. He started hunting at the age of eight and operated a boat on Lake St Lucia at the age of ten. He became fluent in Zulu, Afrikaans and French. In 1975 he joined the Rhodesian Department of National Parks and Wildlife as a game ranger, in the Zambezi Valley and the Gona re Zhou during the height of the Bush War. He returned to South Africa in 1979, hunted professionally and joined KwaZulu Nature Conservation, before moving to Lambert’s Bay in 1994, running a wide variety of businesses, such as boat-charter and ship refurbishment. He enjoys black-powder hunting, is an avid collector of Second World War trucks and tanks, owns two Rolls Royces which are in daily use and is station commander of National Sea Rescue Station 24A.
Kerrin Cocks has worked in military-history publishing for fourteen years. She ghostwrote Mzee Ali: The Biography of an African Slave-raider Turned Askari and Scout (30° South, 2006) and conceptualized the Africa@War series (co-published by 30° South and Helion & Co.). She scripted, directed, produced and edited the full-length DVD documentary that accompanied Richard Wood’s book, Counter-Strike from the Sky: The Rhodesian All-arms Fireforce in the War in the Bush, 1974–1980, which was aired on the New Zealand Documentary Channel, as well as producing a short documentary on the SADF Pathfinder Company. She is an honorary member of the Rhodesian Light Infantry Regimental Association and LAARSA, the Legion of Associated Airborne Regiments of Southern Africa.
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