Spitfire
I'll Lock Up
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- 5,078
- Location
- Copenhagen, Denmark.
While digging around the foundations of a house in Vester Skerning the southern part of Funen yesterday, a bricklayer unearthed a bit of WWII history.
A long 3 barrel cannon and boxes with ammunition belts.
When the police was called, they discovered that it was the canon from a RAF Stirling LJ526 which was shot down by a German nightfighter April 23 1944 while on a “Gardening” mission (Dropping mines)
There were actually two RAF planes shot down that night, but LJ526 crashed near the village Øster Skerning – quite close to Vester Skerning, and it is obvious that some locals had the luck to get to the wreck before the Germans did, and they obviously carried the cannon away and hid it - by digging it down.
Probably to hand it over to the resistance later. But then it was all forgotten.
The crew of LJ526 were all killed in the crash, and buried fast and quite primitive in two unmarked mass graves by the Germans.
After the liberation in may -45 the graves were discovered and opened and the airmen were identified. Since the Germans had not even offerede the dead airmen coffins, the corpses were very molested, but what was left of the airmen were re-buried at a proper service at the churchyard in Svendborg, where the graves still are to be seen today.
Every year the local people of Svendborg honour the British airmen with a ceremony.
The wreck of LJ526 outside the village Øster Skerning
The crew of LJ526:
Nr. 1: J/89959 Pilot Officer, Air Gunner, Roderick Hugh Cameron. Born august 1 1924 in Toronto, Canada.
Nr. 2: 1696297 Sergeant, Flight Engineer, Alan Richardson Redfean. Married, 27 years old.
Nr. 3: 410762 Sergeant, Air Gunner, Raymond Thomas Walker, Royal Australian Air Force. Born December 6 1918
Nr. 4: 1468683 Sergeant, Air Gunner, Jack Leslie Stean.
NR. 5: 175342 Pilot officer, Navigator, David Hughes.
Nr. 6: 150240 Flight Lieutenant, Pilot, age 22.
The seventh man left the crew due to eardisorder and was replaced by:
Not in photo: J/95100 PilotOfficer, Air Bomber, John Menzies Ronahan, Royal Canadian Air Force. Age: 35.
Lets us never forget.
A long 3 barrel cannon and boxes with ammunition belts.
When the police was called, they discovered that it was the canon from a RAF Stirling LJ526 which was shot down by a German nightfighter April 23 1944 while on a “Gardening” mission (Dropping mines)
There were actually two RAF planes shot down that night, but LJ526 crashed near the village Øster Skerning – quite close to Vester Skerning, and it is obvious that some locals had the luck to get to the wreck before the Germans did, and they obviously carried the cannon away and hid it - by digging it down.
Probably to hand it over to the resistance later. But then it was all forgotten.
The crew of LJ526 were all killed in the crash, and buried fast and quite primitive in two unmarked mass graves by the Germans.
After the liberation in may -45 the graves were discovered and opened and the airmen were identified. Since the Germans had not even offerede the dead airmen coffins, the corpses were very molested, but what was left of the airmen were re-buried at a proper service at the churchyard in Svendborg, where the graves still are to be seen today.
Every year the local people of Svendborg honour the British airmen with a ceremony.
The wreck of LJ526 outside the village Øster Skerning
The crew of LJ526:
Nr. 1: J/89959 Pilot Officer, Air Gunner, Roderick Hugh Cameron. Born august 1 1924 in Toronto, Canada.
Nr. 2: 1696297 Sergeant, Flight Engineer, Alan Richardson Redfean. Married, 27 years old.
Nr. 3: 410762 Sergeant, Air Gunner, Raymond Thomas Walker, Royal Australian Air Force. Born December 6 1918
Nr. 4: 1468683 Sergeant, Air Gunner, Jack Leslie Stean.
NR. 5: 175342 Pilot officer, Navigator, David Hughes.
Nr. 6: 150240 Flight Lieutenant, Pilot, age 22.
The seventh man left the crew due to eardisorder and was replaced by:
Not in photo: J/95100 PilotOfficer, Air Bomber, John Menzies Ronahan, Royal Canadian Air Force. Age: 35.
Lets us never forget.