Dowding's Eagles
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Dowding's Eagles

Accounts of Twenty-Five Battle of Britain Veterans

Norman Franks

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eBook - ePub

Dowding's Eagles

Accounts of Twenty-Five Battle of Britain Veterans

Norman Franks

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About This Book

Twenty-five veteran airmen share stories of their experiences during World War II's Battle of Britain in this unique history. The Battle of Britain fought by The Few, as Churchill famously called them, will remain a legendary feat of arms for centuries to come. Sadly, there remain only a handful today who can tell their stories so this collection of personal accounts is extremely timely. The Author has over the years gathered the stories of twenty-five survivors and in Dowding's Eagles he brings these stirring stories together. Each account describes the actions and impressions of the individuals who fought lonely battles against a numerically superior enemy. The odds were stacked against The Few. Over 500 pilots were killed in action during the summer of 1940, and this book is as much about those who gave their lives for their country as those who risked everything but managed to survive. Together with photographs of the men and their aircraft, this is an inspiring book.

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Year
2015
ISBN
9781473844216
Chapter 1
Flying Officer N leC Agarzarian
I said in the foreword that this book remembers survivors of the Battle of Britain and the war, and this first story deals with a pilot who did not survive to see peace, although his Spitfire did survive, and is still with us today. I have always been fascinated with this particular pilot.
Noel LeChevalier ‘Aggy’ Agazarian was born on 26 December 1916, the son of an Armenian father, Berge Agazarian, and a French mother, Jacqueline Marie-Louise le Chevalier. Berge Agarzarian had come to England in 1911 to escape persecution and had set up what became a very successful electrical business.
Noel was the third of four brothers, and there were also two sisters. All four brothers were educated at Dulwich College, where Noel excelled as an athlete. He was in the first Rugby XV, captained the swimming and boxing teams and was awarded the Victor Ludorum for his sporting achievements. In 1935 he went to Wadham College, Oxford, taking an honours degree in jurisprudence three years later.
While at university, he was one of many who joined the university Air Squadron. Upon leaving, he joined the Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve, being commissioned in February 1939. The three brothers who each served with the RAF may well have had their interest in aviation stimulated by their mother who, soon after the end of the First World War, purchased a war surplus Sopwith Pup fighter aeroplane for the ridiculous sum of £5 at a Croydon auction and had it brought home and installed in the family’s back garden so that her children could play with it.
Flying Officer Noel LeC Agazarian RAuxAF, flew with 609 Squadron in the Battle of Britain. Many of his sorties were in Spitfire R6915 which today hangs in the Imperial War Museum, Lambeth, London.
When war was declared in September 1939 Noel was immediately called up and went to No. 3 Initial Training Wing at Hastings on the Sussex coast. Here he was to meet a similarly minded young college graduate, Richard Hillary, later the famed author of the book The Last Enemy. In his book Hillary described Noel as having a ‘pleasantly ugly face’ and being ‘cosmopolitan by nature, intelligent and a brilliant linguist’. Hillary also described Noel’s flying as ‘
 rough, slap-dash, and with touches of brilliance’.
That November they were both posted to No. 15 Flying Training School at RAF Lossiemouth, and having completed the course moved to No. 1 School of Army Co-operation at Old Sarum in early May 1940. This might well have led to a career in Army Co-operation, but fortunately they both showed promise as fighter pilots, so on 23 June Agazarian went to No. 5 Operational Training Unit at Aston Down, converting to single-seat fighters, namely Spitfires. Once converted, and with the Battle of Britain having started, Noel was posted to No. 609 Squadron at RAF Middle Wallop. Hillary, in turn, went to 603 Squadron. Both were auxiliary squadrons, one of a number formed to be manned by ‘weekend’ airmen. 609 was known as the West Riding Squadron, that began life at RAF Yeadon, Yorkshire as a bomber unit in 1936 but by 1939 had been reorganised to day fighters.
No. 609 Squadron was to be heavily involved in the Battle of Britain, under the command of Squadron Leader H S Darley DSO, and was to have a number of very successful fighter pilots among its complement. John Dundas was one, John Bisdee (qv), Johnnie Curchin, Frankie Howell, David Crook, Keith Ogilvie and James McArthur were others of note. Later in the Battle, 609 received three early American volunteers fighting alongside them, Andy Mamedorf, Red Tobin and Vern Keough. The squadron, while it continued to have Middle Wallop as its main base, often used Warmwell, located southeast of Dorchester and north-east of Weymouth. When German raiders were expected to come into the Weymouth or Portland areas, 609 would fly down and operate from here and return to Wallop each evening.
Noel Agazarian (right) with his flight commander, Frank Howell. Howell won the DFC in 1940 but later in the war became a Japanese prisoner of war. He survived captivity only to die in 1948 in a tragic accident whilst filming Vampires taking off at Odiham, being hit by the wing tip of one.
Noel, although he would never know it, was to gain fame by flying a number of sorties during 1940 in Spitfire R6915. Why was this so special? It was due to the fact that this particular Spitfire survived the war and now hangs in the Imperial War Museum in Lambeth, south London. It has done so for many years. In fact Noel would fly it on twenty-five operational sorties in 1940.
However, he was not flying it on 11 August, the day he claimed his first combat victory, his victim being a Messerschmitt 110C twin-engined fighter which he shot down over the sea south of Portland. These aircraft came from I/ZG2 and they suffered heavily at the hands of 609. They, and aircraft from II Gruppe, were on a mid-morning operation and were intercepted by fighters from 609, 213, 1 and 145 Squadrons. It is always difficult to be certain who got who, but 609 claimed four of the five lost, and a further five fighters damaged. One source indicates that Argazarian shot down that flown by Major Ott, the I Gruppe Kommandeur, with his gunner Fw. Zimehl. Dundas, Crook, Bisdee and McArthur were also amongst the victorious claimants of these 110s. It had been the squadron’s first ‘big show’ and it had been ordered off at around 11.30 am. After climbing to 25,000 feet they spotted this large formation of 110s and the CO led his pilots down into the attack. After a terrific dog-fight 609 began to drift back to Warmwell where, surprisingly, everyone returned. McArthur had been heavily engaged by two German fighters but avoided them by spinning down to 5,000 feet. He landed more than a little shaken by the experience.
The next day Noel knocked pieces off another 110 south of Portland as bombers raided Portsmouth docks, then waded into several Me109 single-seaters, claiming two destroyed. These were fighters from III Gruppe of JG53, while the 110s were of III/ZG76. Noel’s next claim came on the 25th, sharing the destruction of another 110 with Pilot Officer G N Gaunt. This 110 came from 1/ZG2 and crashed at Priory Farm, East Holme, Dorset. The Messerschmitts had been escorting Ju88s of KG51. Unteroffizier Siegfried Becker and his gunner, Obergerfreiter Walter Wöpzel were taken prisoner, the latter having been wounded. 609 Squadron had become heavily engaged with 110s and 109s that came from II/ZG2, V/LG1 and III/JG2, over Portsmouth and the Isle of Wight. 609 certainly accounted for three 110s and at least two 109s. On 15 September, Noel appears to have been involved, along with several other pilots, in attacking a formation of Dornier 17 bombers from KG76 north of Hastings at 15.30, one of which was shot down.
Noel’s next combat successes did not occur until late September, by which time he was regularly flying R6915. However, in this machine, he was hit and the Spitfire damaged by return fire from a Heinkel 111 he was attacking. The Spitfire was hit in the oil sump and had to be force landed at RAF White Waltham at around 6 pm. Noel was not hurt and R6915 was quickly repaired.
On 25 September Noel, in company with Johnnie Curchin, shot down a He111 of 7/KG55 near Swanage. It crashed into a house east of Poole Harbour, in Westminster Road, Branksome Park, at 12.08 pm. Oberleutnant Hans Bröcker and four of his crew all died, the survivor being Gefreiter Kurt Schraps, the wireless operator, who baled out. Bröcker was the unit’s StaffelkapitĂ€n. On the 26th, again in R6915, Noel shot down a 109 over Southampton, and claimed damaging hits on two Dornier 17 bombers. After making his pass on the Dorniers he engaged the 109, and his combat report reads:
‘I then climbed up to attack a Me109 when I saw one diving past me – I turned and dived after it. It zoomed and I followed, getting in a short burst from about 400 yards. I then gave my machine full throttle and revs, and caught up [with] the 109 hand over fist. When about 50 yards away and directly behind I gave him the rest of my ammunition. He went onto his back and spun down – I followed him down – the spin straightened out into a vertical dive so that I could not long keep up with him. I lost interest and climbed up at about 3,000 feet and went home.’
Spitfire R6915 in the Imperial War Museum, taken by the author in the 1970s.
The following day he was in action again, this time shooting down a Me110 twenty miles south of Portland. 110s of LG1, ZG26 and ZG76 suffered heavy losses this day. Noel and R6915 finished the month damaging another 110 on the 30th, but again return fire caught him. This time R6915 was hit in the glycol tank but luckily Noel was not far from his base and managed to get back and down before his engine seized through overheating.
Although the Battle had begun to slacken, enemy incursions over southern England continued, mostly with Me109s carrying bombs. The RAF engaged them in cloudy autumn skies that proved dangerous. However, Noel knocked down one Me109 on 15 October north-west of Southampton. The squadron had been somewhat surprised by a number of 109s of JG2 that suddenly came down on them. David Crook spotted them coming and yelled a warning, and the Spitfires scattered. Despite this, John Dundas’ Spitfire took several hits, but without serious damage. To everyone’s surprise, when the squadron scattered, Noel and Tadeusz Nowierski, a Polish pilot with 609, had pulled round and stayed at height, but as Noel manoeuvred round his Spitfire (X4539) he was hit by several bullets too, one actually crashing through the cockpit hood three inches above his head. He then saw two 109s calmly flying off, not paying him the slightest attention. He chased after them and shot down the rear one. Nowierski also shot down a 109, this one from JG2’s 4th Staffel, its pilot crashing near Lymington, where Gefreiter Alois Pollach was taken prisoner. JG2 lost two aircraft and had a third written off in a crash at base, its pilot returning wounded.
He111 of 7/KG55 caught by the camera gun in R6915 on 25 September 1940 with Agazarian at the controls.
His last claim for 1940 came on 2 December, sharing a Dornier 17 damaged, again with Flying Officer T Nowierski flying with him. It seems they may have identified this machine as a Me110, something that often happened as both aircraft had twin rudders. However, it was a Dornier, probably a machine of KĂŒ.Fl.Gr.606 (KĂŒstenfleigergruppe), which subsequently crashed into the sea near Brest, killing Leutnant Helmut Anders and his crew. The German unit, as its named suggests, were formed to attack coastal targets but often went for inland targets over Britain in 1940 too.
With victory in the air over Britain secured, everyone waited to see what would happen in 1941, once the spring weather made operations more favourable for both sides. However, the war in the Middle East was hotting up, and Fighter Command were seeking volunteers to go out to the Western Desert, or even Malta, and Noel apparently volunteered. He was shipped out in January 1941 and assigned to No. 274 Squadron on 6 April, based at Amiriya (LG39) in the Western Desert. The downside to this was that his new squadron flew Hurricanes, somewhat different to the Spitfire he had become used to. Combat was just as fierce in North Africa, where blue skies and brilliant sunshine could make things difficult for fighter pilots. However Noel, fighting over the beleaguered garrison coastal town of Tobruk on 1 May 1941, shot down a Me109. This, and another 109 claimed by a fellow pilot, while confirmed by ground observers, may well have been crashing RAF aircraft, shot down in a fight with JG27.
Sadly, Noel Agazarian was not to survive for much longer. The RAF squadrons were heavily engaged in Operation ‘Battleaxe’ that involved many ground attack sorties, fighters strafing German troops and transports. On 16 May, 274 Squadron was intercepted on an early morning sortie by Me109s of JG27, and Noel and Flying Officer Clostre failed to return to base. One fell to a 109; the other is thought to have been hit by ground fire. In any event, both men were killed. Noel is buried in Knightsbridge war cemetery, at Acroma, Libya. If he was shot down by a 109, its pilot was Fw. Elles.
* * *
One of Noel’s brothers, Flight Lieutenant Jack Charles Stanmore Agazarian, was a British espionage agent with SOE in France during the war, having been recruited from the RAF where he had been a wireless operator. He was captured by the Germans and shot by them on 29 March 1945 whilst in Flossenberg concentration camp. He was 29. His wife Francine also worked with SOE in France. Another brother, Leven, also served in the RAF and became a Thunderbolt pilot in Burma.
One sister, Monique, became a much respected name in aviation. During the war she flew with the Air Transport Auxiliary delivering wartime aeroplanes from factories to RAF units. She had earlier been a VAD nurse. After the war she...

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