In this and the next post I'll explore further a couple of incomplete stories which have been reported and re-told, in the hope that further details might come to light.
This post focuses on a 1943 account of a military incident which, in itself, has been well-recorded and is available to view on the internet, and I don't doubt its level of accuracy, given the source – Military History Forum. It concerns a training flight by an RAF Lancaster on 22nd October 1943. The flight was notable for us in that the plane crashed into a field at Warren Farm near Colney Heath. All details of the flight had been recorded, including the names of the crew of seven who were all killed in the wreckage. Even more, the places where they were all buried. A book has even been published of the incident.
So far the story recorded is of the flight, the plane and the crew. But others were also part of the story, and saw or heard the event as bystanders; maybe in contacting the authorities or attempting to give assistance. Elements of the account are circumstantial; with little or no evidence recorded. So we would love to learn their experience in this dreadful crash.
It is alleged that a group of scouts were in the vicinity that night. They may have been undertaking their own scout activities – night hikes, camping, wide games – or may have been present on observational duties on behalf of the Air Raid Precautions. It is said that the boys observed the crash and how the plane presented itself after it had broken up on impact. Exposed were the contents of the bomb bay. The proximity of the crash to the nearby farm house and other buildings posed a potential risk to life and property, and the scouts made what might be considered by some a reckless decision; by others a selfless act of group bravery. An unknown number of bombs were carefully removed from their splintered compartment and carried to relative safety a distance away from the flames engulfing part of the plane.
The usual post-crash evaluations were made, the remains of the plane recovered and the bodies removed from the site. The scouts resumed their duties and presumably returned home to bed. It would be presumed that for such service the scouts would have been honoured with a bravery award; not that the boys would have been expecting to be rewarded; after all, they were scouts. Nevertheless, a fuss ensued in the period of time which followed. The obvious question: why were they not recipients of an award? The reason given was that an award was quite unnecessary as the bombs were not live, given that they had been loaded onto a training flight. But, of course, the scouts did not know they were dummies and carried out their duties as if they handling live ammunition.
The scout element in the Lancaster crash story needs to be credited with some authenticity and so far the author has not discovered it. Even the detailed book Milestones of 105 Years of Hertfordshire Scouting, compiled by Hertfordshire Scout Historian Frank Brittain does not relate the event. So, now it is open to all of us to take the story further if we know of evidence. The scouts themselves if still alive would now be in their late eighties, but their accounts may have been passed down through their children or grandchildren.
How much, if any, of the above account is true? Do respond if you have any relevant details you could contribute.
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