
This issue reaches you later than intended because your
editor was diagnosed with a rare form of cancer. My consultant in Southampton
referred me immediately to the top urology department in a
Sgt. Charles Wallis arrived at Cour Henri IV on 30 January
1954 and was assigned the post of RASC Secretary until 10 July 1956.
After
his military service Charles signed a contract to work as the Secretary to
Manager of Grace y Cia. (
Returning
to
Charles
married Sally, a New Zealander, in Montréal and they have two children, both
married, and three grandchildren. One
son works for Air
January
1954 ~ The US Navy launches the “Nautilus, the first nuclear powered submarine
L/Cpl Richard Hales served as a dental Technician at the
Quartier Chateau from July 1953 until June 1954. Richard now lives in
After leaving the Army in August 1954
Richard decided on a career change and went to work for a local firm that
produced diesel engines where he stayed for the next thirty two years, during
this time he had various jobs ranging from machinist, tool setter and
production foreman but most of his time was spent as a work study engineer. In
1986 Richard was made redundant and after a few weeks in a temporary job with a
firm of civil engineers he secured a job as senior production engineer with a
firm that made hi tec multi layer circuit boards about which he knew very
little when one needs a job one doesn’t mention this lack of knowledge but gets
on with it and learn quickly. He
remained with this Company until retirement in 1999. In retirement Richard and
Pauline tend to have quite a few holidays and when at home he enjoys model
engineering and voluntary work.
July
1953 ~ The Korean war is over after 3 years of bloody fighting costing over two
million lives
Cpl Barry Hayes served as a member of the RAF Police at
After leaving the RAF Barry worked for Vickers (later BAC
and British Aero Space) at Weybridge, on various aircraft including Concorde.
Later moved to Filton working on Concorde and then to Farnborough later to test rig Concorde. After
twelve and a half years at the end of Concorde production, Barry then worked at
the Inspection Department for RFDGQ at Godalming before moving to Drummonds
Inspection Department. He was then recruited by Lucas Defence as Inspection
engineer for a reverse engineering exercise, for the Egyptian military on
Russian equipment. This lasted for twelve years until glasnost stopped
everything. Then followed a period of a few years when Barry was self-employed
installing BS 5750 later to become ISO into various companies. At the same time
he built his
Barry
and Irene would like to hear from: Ron Wheeler, George Skinner, Eric Crittall,
Pete Maskil, and anyone that remembers them.
April
1955 ~ Churchill resigns as P.M. and is succeeded by Anthony Eden
The
last Newsletter was returned to me with the sad news that that Reginald
Wheeler passed away earlier this year. Reginald was a Flight Sergeant in
the RAF Police at
Royston
Jones, who was member of
the Melun Communications Flight from December 1956 to August 1959
was called to the airfield in the sky in September.
FROM THE POSTBAG
I am
delighted to advise you that the York Branch RAFA Re-Launched Web Site went
'live' on 2nd June. Access address will be: www.rafayork.com
The access 'buttons' to the various pages
can be found on the left hand side of the Home Page. Please ignore the other
sites under RAFA York - they are out of date
The site developer Sprocket Internet
Services and myself welcome your comments and any
information that you have that can be imported on to the site will be very
welcome. Information can be sent either to johnarafa@tiscali.co.uk or
kmcgowan67@btinternet.com or there is a form at the
bottom of the
“Contact Us” page for your use, please feel free to use it. We look forward to
hearing from you soon
John
Allison (
On a recent visit to my late wife’s family
in
Sipping my aperitif and glancing across
the road I thought about how all the surroundings had changed. Of course, many
of the shop fronts were different, but not the buildings themselves. Tucked
away in a corner stands a relatively small bar and I was immediately reminded
of an amusing incident that happened there just a couple of days after my
arrival……………
Many of us, I am sure can recall the
oddball plumbing and quaint toilets in
Another dark and grotty toilet actually
came to my rescue a few months later but this time in
Brian
Gibbons (
Just caught your site whilst looking for the AFCENT Badge.
I have it on my Certificate of Service, But I am In the process of getting my
Station and Squadron Badges as well as Command as I did some 35 yrs in the RAF.
Married life started at
I’ve a good pic of the football team. Oh my first son was born in The French
Military Hospital. as he was a Ceaserian birth complete with French Birth Certificate
Ray
Brewer
A quick note to thank you for a very
enjoyable evening on Saturday.
Tim and I had a good time. It was nice to meet up with old friends and meet new
ones. We also appreciate the hard work you and the team put into the
Linda Hunt (Thame, Oxon)
When I arrived at
Ron Gray (Balby, Yorks)
David Talbot, son of the BBC war
correspondent seeks WWII men with stories to tell for the WWII EXPERIENCE
CENTRE in
I put him in touch with two friends of
mine and (the Leeds archive people) they are over the moon: Tony Iveson DFC,
the Dambuster whose
bomb finallly sank the Tirpitz and Capt Eric "Winkle" Brown, Fleet
Air arm (see Google of him or Guinness
Book of Records) who flew the jet planes found in Germany in 1945,
back to Farnborough, also Himmler's
private plane and knew Hannah Reitsch who tried to persuade Hitler to use
Kamakasi pilots - he said NO. David does about an hour's tape for the archives
in
The lads can get the full picture by
clicking on wwwwar-experience.org As they will see
this vast collection of memorabilia includes letters, photos etc and also the
Korean War, but mainly 39-45. Tony Iveson and Winkle Brown are amazing, almost
90 and still at it, lecturing and travelling. Tony with his girlfriend touring
etc, but Winkle said to me at lunch when I said, laughing about Tony (he was
Helen Cordet's boyfriend, stole her from Prince Philip) "You still get the
urge" "Yes, I do, but I can't remember what for"
Delay on “GUNNER IN PARIS” but should be
out Feb/Mar with the pix sent in by the lads.
Does anyone from Quartier Chataux know the
whereabouts of Douglas Rosenbaum, RASC, who later worked for Reuters in
Peter
Kinsley (Peckham)
1958-1959 were two wonderful years full of great memories spent at
AAFCE. My wife came over for a two week holiday in 1959 and my eldest son was
conceived there in the city of love. Thats what I tell
my other two sons and friends. It gets a laugh.
Pat and I celebrated our 50th wedding
anniversary on 4th January this year and we had a wonderful day. We are sorry
to be missing the reunion this year. We have had this trip booked almost a year
ago. Pats aunt lives in the
Good luck for the reunion, I know it will
be a hit because all those attending are of a special breed.
Take care and God Bless
Harry
Horn (Cullercoats, Tyne & Wear)
The economic situation in
Brian Gibbons (
Yes,
I think I do remember Pete Kinsley and the dog Gunner. He will remember the many run-ins we ‘young
ones’ had with Art Rink the Guards RSM whose thankless job it was to try to
make soldiers of us. Charles
Wallis (
I recently spent some time in
I spent half an hour with him and although
he knew my face he could not remember who I was and was unable to hold a
conversation. If any Font Vets who knew him well would like to ring me on a
more personal side of his condition, on my home number 01352-711877.
Brian
Russell (Mold)
BRIAN WARD ~ UPDATE
Brian’s
good friends in
It seems a miracle that Brian has beaten
double pneumonia and is getting better and stronger by the day after his two
weeks stint in hospital. We did have a minor scare when they thought that he
was getting another infection and were on the verge of calling an ambulance,
again, when his temperature returned to
normal.
Since Brian went back to Sanyres, Jim and
I have continued to visit him daily to ease him back into his routine. He was
so out of it in hospital that he thought he was either in a hospital in
After spending two weeks flat on his back
he got a new bedsore and his original one was threatening an infection so they
took Brian down to the theatre to do a deep cleanse of both of them. Things
there have also improved and on his last outpatient visit to the hospital they
have told the Home to continue the treatment as set out by the consultant.
We are now just visiting 3 - 4 times a
week as we have also been busy with the lawyer in the hope that the insurance
company will finally agree to Brian's lifelong financial/medical help. The good
news is they have agreed to fund Brian's care for a further three months - up
to 31 January. Meanwhile our lawyer will
speak to a litigation lawyer to see how we can move forward. We still have a
long way to go but watch this space.
Brian received a visit from Brian Russell,
a friend, who knew him when they were in
Another successful thing we have done is
to get Brian over to our apartment for afternoon tea. Jim came up with the
brain wave of using the taxi we always have for Brian's outpatients
appointments, picking Brian up from Sanyres and driving him to our home then
taking him back at the agreed time. This we did last Thursday and Brian really
enjoyed himself, it being the first proper outing he has
had since
his accident. We invited some of our friends that Brian knew and he recognised
them and remembered their names. He not only ate everything we gave him but when
he left us he would have been just in time to have his evening meal. We shall
be doing it again and inviting some other friends (we did not want to overwhelm
him with too many people at once) in about two weeks as these are dry runs to
get him over here for his Christmas dinner on Boxing Day.
That is all for now folks. Once again,
thank you to those of you who continue to email messages for Brian, sending him
letter cards etc, all of which we take to him. We do not mention any bad news
and again I request that you keep your messages short and sweet as his
attention span is not what it used to be. Keep up with all your prayers. Take
care and God bless. ~ Iris and Jim
On
a fine weekend at the end of September 58 veterans including wives and partners
gathered at the
It
was also agreed that we hold our next
After an excellent dinner in the evening we danced to music provided by Bo-Jangles either side of the raffle which realised £310. A selection of photographs from the weekend is included as a supplement to this issue. CLICK HERE TO VIEW (PAGE 1) (PAGE 2) (PAGE 3)
The
Honiley Court Hotel, near Warwick, has been booked for our Reunion next year.
The cost is £70 per person per night for dinner, bed and breakfast. There is no
single supplement. A deposit of £15 per person is payable, deposits will be
deducted from your account when you check out. This represents excellent value
for a weekend in a hotel set in beautiful country surroundings.
We
would like to see as many of you as possible there. All you have to do is
complete the Form attached to this Newsletter (CLICK
FOR BOOKING FORM) and send it with a cheque for your deposit.
Cheques will not be banked until the spring when the deposits are payable
to the hotel.
W A N T E D
Good home(s) for the following PC accessories:
1 x Lexmark 17G0050 Black ink cartridge
1 x Lexmark 17G0060 Colour ink cartridge
10 x Verbatim 8x-12x 700MB Hi-Speed CD-RW discs on spindle
(unused)
9 x Phillips 4x-12x 700MB CD-RW discs in jewel cases
(unused)
Call Ted
Caton on 01245 256790 or e-mail ted.caton@tiscali.co.uk
THE
CATON COLLECTION – PART 5
More from correspondence received by Ted Caton following the publication of his “An Erk’s-Eye View”.
“The memories of square bashing came flooding back with a vengeance, the smell of saturated uniforms in the so called drying room, polishing of galvanised buckets as adjuncts to the black leaded stoves and the incessant screaming of orders by the demented DIs. I recall the dreadful food on offer at Wilmslow which really beggared description from day one of being there. For example fried bread was produced by stacking sliced loaves, 8 in a large deep tray, molten fat was then poured over the top and the tray placed top shelf in a hot oven. You watched through a glass spy hole until the bread started to smoke and then opened up the oven and the cinderised offering went straight out to the servery.”
From J of Hockley, Essex
“I remember F/O ***** [Adjutant at RAF Norton] very well, I had been issuing fuel all morning and at 12.00 hrs it was pay parade. I was wearing rubber boots and sea boot socks, plus a waterproof jacket. I went on pay parade which had already started wearing all of this.”
“The paying officer had me put on a charge, it was for being improperly dressed. Even though it is 47 years later, I can still remember standing in the corridor in headquarters waiting to be marched in front of the Adj. There was a plaque on his door which read F/O A N F ***** Adjutant. I have never forgotten that. But the good news was, that I got off the charge as in Air Force Regulations you were not allowed to work on a fuel installation wearing footwear that could cause a spark. So I got off.”
“I recall that F/O ***** was a short thick set man, with reddish hair, he always appeared to be looking for trouble or causing it. He was a person I stayed clear of.”
From P of
Paignton, Devon
AND FINALLY ……………….
Copy for the Newsletters is still desperately needed. You must have some stories of those halcyon days in Fontainebleau which you would like to share with our readers. Snippets of current news will also be welcome.
More people are joining the dot.com brigade. If you have an e-mail facility please write your e-m address under your name on the distribution list or e-mail davidrogerson@talktalk.net
With warm seasonal greeting to you all and best wishes for 2009.
STOP PRESS
Sandy Warrener, a storekeeper at Fontainebleau between October 1954 and August 1956 passed away at the end of November