Medals of Unremitting R.A.F. Hero Go Under the Hammer
On 19th April 2007 Spink will
auction the remarkable and unique Medal Group of Air Chief Sir Basil Embry,
which is expected to fetch between £150,000 to £180,000.
The sheer scale of his medal group, a total of 18, is truly a feast for the
enthusiast’s eyes. They represent innumerable acts of heroism and are a symbol
of daring deeds performed by Embry over the course of his spectacular military
career. Described as “both charming and rude,
prejudiced and broad-minded, pliable and obstinate, dedicated and human. Above
all things he was a gallant leader of men.”
Embry Timeline of Events and awards:
- 28 February 1902 –Born in Barnwood, Gloucester
and educated at Bromsgrove
School,
Worcestershire.
- March 1921- Commissioned Pilot
Officer, Royal Air Force
- August 1922 – Served for five
years in Iraq,
the majority of this time was spent piloting an Air Ambulance –on one
occasion he had to transport a serviceman suffering from the plague!
- January 1926 – As a result of
his service in Iraq
he received the Air Force Cross, the first of many awards to follow during
his glittering career.
- October 1937 – After several
more years service in India and subsequent
promotions he received the first of his four D.S.O.s
for inflicting heavy casualties on the enemy and exceptional flying
ability.
- September 1939 – In command of
No.107 Squadron at R.A.F. Wattisham, a Blenheim
bomber unit, which had already begun operations and
suffered casualties. On 25 September Embry led a formation of three
Blenheims on a reconnaissance mission to Germany.
They were attacked by German fighters and Embry’s aircraft suffered
serious damage to wings and fuselage. He carried out a one-wheel landing
on reaching Wattisham.
- With the German campaign in
full swing Embry’s Squadron, detached to Scotland, carried out ten
raids in eight days on the airfield Stavanager
in treacherous weather conditions resulting in frostbite for Embry and the
award of his first bar to his D.S.O.
- 10 May 1940, the German
blitzkrieg invasion of the Low Countries erupted and Embry and his crews
were in the thick of the battle to stem the German advance, each crew
flying two or three sorties daily across the Channel to France.
His leadership and personal gallantry at this time resulted in the award
of a second bar to his D.S.O.
- 26 May 1940 – Due to the
tremendous workload of flying missions that Embry had taken upon himself
to lead, he was ordered to take a ‘back seat’ and given command of R.A.F.
West Raynham with promotion to Group Captain. He could not resist,
however, one last hurrah before relinquishing command. The next day
he led his Squadron for the last time in an attack on German troops
advancing on Dunkirk.
His aircraft received a direct hit, killing the air gunner and sending the
aircraft out of control. He and his navigator bailed out and Embry
landed behind enemy lines near St Omer. He was captured by the
Germans and marched away to a POW camp. En route he saw a road sign
“Embry, 3 km,” which he took as a good omen. He rolled down a bank
and successfully escaped and evaded the Germans for two months eventually
making his way through France
and Spain to Gibraltar. Nine weeks and five days after
bailing out of his aircraft, Embry stepped ashore in the UK.
- After a brief flirtation with
fighter command and a secondment to the Desert
Air Force in North Africa, Embry was
appointed Acting Air Vice Marshal with command
initially of some 10 squadrons operating a variety of aircrafts.
- 18 February 1944 - Operation Jericho, the Mosquitoes attacked Amiens prison and
liberated hundreds of French patriots, many under sentence of death by the
Gestapo. Whilst Embry planned this raid, he was ordered by higher
authority not to participate. Although, Embry did take part in several
other equally successful precision attacks, often under the pseudonym
‘Wing Commander Smith,’ including on the
Gestapo Headquarters in Aarhus, Copenhagen
and Odense.
- 1945 – First peacetime
appointment as Director General of Training
- 1947 – Promoted to Air Vice
Marshal
- For the following four years
he was an Air Officer Commanding-In-Chief, Fighter Command from April 1949
to April 1953, with the rank of Air Marshal from January 1951, and he was
a representative of the R.A.F. both at the funeral of King George VI, and
the Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II.
- July 1953 - Appointed to
N.A.T.O. as Commander-In-Chief, Allied Air Forces Central Europe and was
promoted to his final rank of Air Chief Marshal that December.
- February 1956 - Embry left his post at N.A.T.O. after
frustrations with trying to revise the attitudes on vital importance of
air power.
- April 1956 – Emigrated to New Zealand and wrote an
auto-biography covering his experiences of the 35 years that he served,
titled Mission Accomplished.
He later moved to Western
Australia where he took up farming and
established a thriving farm out in the bush.
- 8 December 1977 – Air Chief
Marshal Sir Basil Embry dies.