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Douglas Bader was a model
national hero. At the age of just 21, as a young officer in the Royal Air Force, he
had both legs amputated after he crashed his aeroplane, but through sheer guts and
determination he learnt to walk again. Then, after being allowed to rejoin the RAF
at the outbreak of World War II, he went on to become Britain’s best-known pilot –
the most famous of ‘the few’ who helped save their country during the Battle of
Britain.
Nor did Bader’s heroism end
there. When his plane came down in France on 9 August 1941, he didn’t sit out the
rest of the war quietly in a prisoner-of-war camp. Instead, his constant attempts
at escape, despite his disabilities, led to his incarceration at Colditz Castle –
the special German prison for officers who were repeat escapees, which famously had
more guards than prisoners.
Yet Bader was also a
controversial character. Loathed as much as loved by those under his command, he
was a man of strong ideas who didn’t always follow orders.
Early
ambitions -
Douglas Robert Steuart Bader was
born in London in 1910, the son of a soldier who died in 1922 of shrapnel wounds
received in World War I. His childhood heroes were the fighter aces from that war,
and from an early age, he was determined to become a pilot himself.
After winning a scholarship to
St Edward’s School, Oxford, he gained a place at the RAF training college at
Cranwell, where he excelled in sports, becoming a boxing champion and captain of
the rugby team. He went on to play rugby as fly half for Harlequins and was widely
tipped for an England cap.
In 1930, he graduated from
Cranwell as a pilot officer. A year later he was selected to fly in the elite RAF
aerobatic team. Its precision stunts and choreographed displays provided one of the
greatest spectacles of the age, and in June 1931 at the Hendon air show, Bader’s
performance was described in the press as ‘the day’s best
event’.
‘Crashed … Bad
show’ -
But while Bader had the talent
to be an outstanding aerobatic pilot, he didn’t have the discipline. In particular,
he repeatedly disobeyed orders about low flying, for which he received several
reprimands. He ignored them, to his lasting cost.
On 14 December 1931, as he
approached 500 hours solo flying, he responded to a civilian pilot’s taunt (or,
perhaps, dare) by performing one of his specialities – slow rolls at very low
altitude – in his British Bulldog fighter. Regulations forbade this manoeuvre below
1,000 feet (305 metres); Bader attempted it below 30ft (9m). His left wing clipped
the ground and he crashed.
Miraculously, he was not killed
outright. But his right leg was amputated above the knee that night, and his left
below the knee a few days later. ‘Crashed slow-rolling near ground,’ he wrote in
his log book. ‘Bad show.’
Recovery and return
-
Taken to Roehampton Hospital,
even then famous for its work with amputees, Bader’s sheer guts and determination
enabled him to learn to walk again. But, invalided out of the RAF, he became a
clerk with the Asiatic Petroleum Company. ‘He was bored stiff,’ says his
sister-in-law Jill Lucas. ‘It was absolutely the last thing he wanted to
do.’
Fighting both his disability and
depression, Bader married Thelma Edwards in 1935. But it was only with the outbreak
of World War II that he got the chance to take up his first love – flying –
again.
The shortage of experienced
pilots and his own determination overcame resistance within the RAF hierarchy.
Eventually he was given medical approval to resume flying and was assigned to 222
Squadron. He took part in the operation to evacuate British forces from Dunkirk,
during which he made his first kill – a Messerschmitt
109.
Promotion and the
‘Big Wing’ -
Bader was then promoted to take
command of 242 Squadron, a Canadian unit that had suffered heavy casualties in
France. He cut through RAF bureaucracy to get the squadron operational, and in its
first serious combat operation, on 30 August 1940, it downed 12 German aircraft in
just over an hour. Bader himself shot down a Messerschmitt
110.
Later he helped to develop the
‘Big Wing’ strategy, which involved sending large numbers of RAF fighters in mass
formation against the Luftwaffe. The strategy was successful in bringing down
significant numbers of enemy planes (but often only after they had hit their
targets), and it made such an impression on the Germans that they delayed
indefinitely the invasion of Britain. However, it was criticised because of the
time it took all the aircraft that made up the ‘Big Wing’ to assemble, and because
it left targets at home vulnerable to German
raiders.
Downed in
France-
By the summer of 1941, Bader was
the fifth most successful fighter ace in the RAF, having shot down 23 German
aircraft. He had also been awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross (DFC) and
Distinguished Service Order (DSO) and, promoted to wing commander, had taken over
the Tangmere Wing, comprising four squadrons. On 9 August, however, his run of
successes came to an end when his Spitfire came down near Le Touquet, in northern
France.
In Paul Brickhill’s
biography, Reach for the Sky
(1954), and in Bader’s own 1973 autobiography,
the war ace blamed a mid-air collision with a Messerschmitt 109, which he said had
clipped his aircraft’s tail. But his story has always raised questions, and recent
research now suggests that he may have been a victim of ‘friendly fire’, shot down
by one of his fellow RAF pilots after becoming detached from his own
squadron.
It is also thought that the loss
of his legs gave Bader an advantage over other pilots in combat. The high G-force
produced in combat manoeuvres caused many pilots to black out as blood drained away
from their brain to other parts of the body. Because he had no legs, Bader could
sustain greater G-force without losing
consciousness.
Bader parachuted from his
falling aeroplane and was captured and taken to hospital. But despite having left
behind one artificial leg, trapped in his plummeting aeroplane, and damaging the
other in the crash, he managed to escape with the help of a French nurse and a
farmer who hid him in his barn. The Germans found him, however, and the farmer and
his wife were sent to a concentration camp.
Bader himself was more
fortunate. His flying abilities – particularly in view of his lack of legs – had
earned him great respect among his captors. Indeed, General Adolf Galland, the
German fighter ace, even notified the British about Bader’s missing and damaged
prosthetic legs and offered safe passage for an aircraft to drop off replacements.
Churchill arranged for them to be supplied – but the aircraft carrying them then
continued on its mission to bomb the Germans.
After the war
-
After several more escape
attempts, Bader was sent to the ‘escape-proof’ Colditz Castle, where he was forced
to await the end of the war. On his release, he was promoted to group captain,
leading a victory flypast of 300 aircraft over London. He left the RAF in 1946 for
a job with Shell Aircraft, where he stayed until 1969, then joining the Civil
Aviation Authority.
Bader published his
autobiography in 1973, and was knighted three years later for the work he had done
on behalf of other amputees. He died of a heart attack on 5 September 1982, aged
72, after speaking at the 90th birthday celebrations of Sir Arthur ‘Bomber’ Harris
at the London Guildhall.
A pilot later summed him up: ‘He
was a not particularly pleasant man, by turns arrogant, obstreperous and
egotistical, but [he] made use of those qualities to do things which lesser men
didn't have a hope of doing. He was certainly not an angel, but he was
remarkable.’
Source : Some of the information on this page came
from a Wikipedia article and is licensed under the GNU Documentation
License. ©2008 www.geneticmatrix.com.
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