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http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1179696/Breathtaking-account-Second-World-Wars-dangerous-jobs---gunner-Lancaster-bomber.htmlAt just 18, RUSSELL MARGERISON volunteered for one of the most dangerous jobs in the Second World War: gunner on a Lancaster bomber. His chances of survival were slim - half of all Bomber Command's aircrews perished.
He was shot down, rescued by the Belgian resistance, hidden in the home of a millionairess, betrayed to the Gestapo and marched off to a prison camp in Eastern Europe - all before he was 21.
But he lived to tell the tale, and share it with his son, Colin, Production Editor of The Mail on Sunday, who died from cancer in 2007. This is the first part of Russell's story...
The sun shone from a cloudless sky, bathing the airfield at Stormy Down, South Wales, in its warmth. It was 11am on July 7, 1943. Dressed in fur-collared outer flying suit and fur-lined flying boots, I was oblivious to the wry smiles of the pilot and instructor as we climbed aboard the twin-engined Avro Anson.
A sickly mixture of glycol antifreeze, petrol and warm oil replaced the clean air I had been breathing. The temperature in the plane would have wilted tomato plants. Sweating freely, I sat on the baking-hot seat next to the pilot.
At the age of 18 years and eight months I had completed my basic training with the RAF as an air gunner and this was the first time I had been near an aircraft, let alone flown in one.
My father Bob, who was supervisor of casual labour at Blackburn's Queens Park Hospital, had been very worried when I joined up on my 18th birthday. He had lost his first wife, my mother, and his six other children to illness. I was his only remaining child.
The Anson took off for the Bristol Channel, where shooting practice would be carried out. The object of the flight was for the three new gunners to each fire 200 rounds of ammunition at a target drogue being towed by a single-engined Martinet aircraft. At a height of 5,000ft, with the Anson rising and sinking at irregular intervals, the instructor called the first gunner to the mid-upper turret. He quickly rattled off his rounds and in the process filled the fuselage with cordite fumes which, mixed with the other smells, produced a nauseating stench, doing nothing to help my stomach, my sweating or my headache.
The second boy only worsened the situation. It was with some reluctance that I left my seat to try my hand at this shooting lark.
After struggling to lever myself up into the turret I found myself sitting in the smallest smoke-filled sauna ever seen. My head was stuck up in the Perspex dome like a light bulb in an upturned goldfish bowl. Sweat dripped from my nose.
I had no room to move my foot, let alone my body.
'Commence firing in your own time,' the instructor commanded.
I discovered that when the hand grips were twisted towards me, the guns elevated and down went the seat; twist them away, down went the guns and up went the seat. A seesaw, no less. The combination of this, the motion of the plane, the stench and the heat turned me green.
I squeezed the triggers of the guns to get the whole performance over with as quickly as possible. The turret vibrated, the deafening noise drowned the drone of the engines. Cordite fumes invaded my nostrils until I could hardly breathe.
Icon: A Second World War Avro Lancaster bomber like the one in which Russell Margerison flew
It was a bedraggled, disillusioned airman who eventually half fell out of the turret to be violently sick.
Back at Stormy Down I staggered towards my billet past the noticeboard on which I read: 'Flying 14.30 hours LAC Margerison.'
'You must be bloody joking,' I said out loud. 'If this is flying you can keep it.'
But as the days went by, I began looking forward to the flights, and it was a delighted group of youngsters who, on August 6, 1943, paraded for the last time at Stormy Down to have their Air Gunner brevets pinned to their chests.
I became the mid-upper gunner of a seven-man Lancaster bomber crew. Our pilot was First Lieutenant Max Dowden of the Royal Canadian Air Force. He was a craggy-faced 'old man' of 28 originally from California.
The navigator, Dave Weepers, was a Canadian, as was our bomb-aimer, Arthur 'Brick' Brickenden. Our wireless operator was 6ft 2in, broad-shouldered, big-nosed Richard 'Dick' Reeves, from Tilbury. Flight engineer Frank Moody was from Huddersfield and the other gunner, Gilbert 'Gib' McElroy, was another Canadian.
We were stationed at Kelstern, 18 miles from the Lincolnshire coast, arriving there in March 1944 to join 625 Squadron, consisting of 22 Lancasters, 25 pilots and 153 aircrew. Four days later, the seven of us watched as 19 Lancs rolled past, about to take off for Stuttgart. Max said: 'Well, you guys, it'll be our turn on the next one. Feel ready for it?'
'I wish to hell I was with them now,' said Dick. 'I was in Tilbury during the Blitz and saw what those bastards were doing and swore if I got half a chance I'd get some of my own back. If I'm lucky enough to get through this tour of 30 ops, I'll volunteer for another.'
'I'll say one thing for you guys,' said Max. 'You're sure approaching this in the right spirit. If only you could all speak goddarn English.'
The following morning we heard that three Lancs had failed to return. Since the forming of the squadron in October 1943, not one crew had completed the magical figure of 30 missions needed to complete a tour of duty.
However, Max had been right. The noticeboard on March 18, 1944 read: 'Dowden operations.'
We went to see the plane we would be flying and watched the 'cookie', a 4,000lb bomb, being winched up into the huge bomb bays, followed by eight 500-pounders and canister after canister of incendiaries.
At 17:00 hours the crews trooped into a Nissen hut that served as the briefing room. We sat on benches, facing a large blank blind above a platform.
Young aces: Russell Margerison, centre, with his crew. Gib McElroy is first left, pilot Max Dowden is third from left and Dick Reeves is second from right.
A glance around the room would have sent a sergeant major rushing for his tranquillisers: buttons remained unfastened, hats were treated as an unnecessary encumbrance, scarves of every colour were draped around necks, and some even wore plimsolls.
A haze of cigarette smoke floated ceilingwards as the commanding officer raised the blind, revealing a map of Europe. A red ribbon stretched from Kelstern giving us the route we would take.
The intelligence officer spoke: 'There you are chaps, Frankfurt. Badly neglected by us these past few months. We aim to remedy that tonight.
'It is a vital communication centre. Eight hundred and forty-six aircraft will be bombing, 17 of these being provided by 625. New crews in particular watch out for the dummy fires they may light away from the target area.'
'Watch these three areas on the route,' the gunnery leader said, pointing at three blue circles on the map.
'They are Luftwaffe fighter beacons. Frankfurt is heavily defended by anti-aircraft guns, so watch out for those searchlights, you gunners.'
'Any questions?' asked the CO. No one spoke. 'In that case, off you go. Have a good flight and give them hell.'
The business of dressing for us gunners was a long and arduous one.
I donned my ladies' silk stockings, woolly knee-caps, fleecy long johns with full-length sleeves and high neck, shirt and trousers. I put on my normal socks and long woolly white socks.
Next came a thick white sweater and battle-dress top, followed by an electrically heated full-length suit, then my kapok-filled yellow outer suit. My electrically heated slippers went on, completed by fur-lined flying boots.
On the hands, white silk gloves, followed by electrically heated long black gloves, topped by leather gauntlets.
I then strapped on my parachute harness and finally tied on a Mae West life jacket. Anti-freeze ointment was spread on our faces. This was essential for rear gunners as the Perspex had been cut away from the front of the turrets to allow better vision, and frostbite was a real danger.
Carrying our 'chutes, Gib and I waddled out to the crew bus. We took a 'wakey-wakey' pill to keep us alert and we all climbed into our Lancaster for a final test of engines and equipment. Then Max switched off.
Enlarge Heavy metal: A Lancaster with the 12,000lb of bombs it carried
The time had come which all aircrew dreaded: the 45-minute wait before take-off. We lounged about, talked to the ground crew, joked and forcibly laughed and got through approximately ten nervous urinations each.
Any subject was discussed apart from the operation itself and the ground crew never asked where we were bound. The airfield was deathly quiet.
At long last Max said: 'Come on, fellas, the time has arrived.'
We shook hands all round. 'Good luck, see you in the morning.' Then we climbed aboard. The evening was shattered by Lanc after Lanc starting up its four Rolls-Royce Merlin engines. We raced to the very end of the runway, Max heaving her off at the last moment. Up she went, then down she sank. Up again she staggered with her load of 1,800 gallons of fuel and 12,000lb of bombs.
As we set course, I could see aircraft above and below, in front and to the rear. Their number would soon swell into a stream of bombers stretching across the sky for some 65 miles, all heading for Frankfurt and timed to pass over the city in a 30-minute onslaught to saturate the defences.
I switched on the electric gunsight and put the guns on 'fire'. Without even thinking I muttered a prayer.
It was soon impossible to see any other planes. I switched on my intercom. 'If there's supposed to be 846 kites on this raid, where's t'other 845?'