Two young men of The Perse School in Cambridge

Discussion in 'World War 2' started by liverpool annie, Nov 11, 2008.

  1. liverpool annie

    liverpool annie New Member

    Found these while I was looking for somebody else at the school .... thought they maybe of interest !

    TATTENBAUM Tobias (Tuvia)

    Aircraftman 2nd Class 774021, Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve. Died 24th April 1941. Aged 20, born February 1921. Joined the Perse School (Hillel House) in the Autumn 1936. Son of Abraham and Malca Tattenbaum, of Hampstead, London. In April 1940 he was with 103 Maintenace Unit in Aboukir, Egypt before becoming a mechanic/ground crew on the Greece-Albanian border, employed to try and salvage planes that had made false landings. It was here that he was killed, by German straffing, as the British Armed Forces were being evacuated. Initially, he was buried by the Germans in Argos Civil Cemetery, but, on 7th September 1945, he was re-intered in PHALERON WAR CEMETERY, Greece. Plot 5. Row C. Grave 19.


    Group Captain William Neil McKechnie (1907-1944) was a pilot in the Royal Air Force who was awarded The George Cross in 1929 and was killed in action over Germany in 1944.
    W.N. McKechnie was born on 27th August 1907 the son of Lt. Col. William Ernest McKechnie, I.M.S. and Marion A. McKechnie. He attended the Perse School in Cambridge.
    He later married Mary Roma McKechnie of Musselburgh, Midlothian.
    McKechnie earned the Empire Gallantry Medal for an act of bravery in saving Flight Cadet C. J. Giles after an aeroplane crash on 20th June 1929 whilst still a Flight Cadet aged 22.
    The London Gazette of 18th October, 1929, gives the following details in announcing the award to Group Captain McKechnie of the Empire Gallantry Medal:
    "On 20th June, 1929, an aeroplane piloted by Flight Cadet C. J. Giles crashed on landing at RAF College Cranwell and burst into flames. The pilot was stunned, but managed to release his safety belt and fall out of the machine in a dazed condition. Flight Cadet McKechnie, who had landed in another aeroplane about the same time some two hundred yards away, left his machine and ran at full speed towards the scene of the accident. The petrol had spread over an area about ten yards in diameter, in full blaze, with Giles lying in it semi-conscious. McKechnie, without hesitation, ran into the flames and pulled out Giles, who was badly burned. McKechnie, who was himself scorched and superficially burned, then proceeded to extinguish Giles's burning clothing. There is no doubt that without McKechnie's assistance Giles would have been burned to death, as he was quite incapable of moving himself. His machine was entirely destroyed, and the ground for some distance around was burned up by the spread of the ignited petrol."
    Attended RAF College Cranwell - where he won The George Cross
    In January 1939 he was commanding No. 27 Squadron RAF at Kohat, India.
    During World War II McKechnie was a Group Commander based at RAF Metheringham with 106 Squadron from 11th November 1943 until his death. He was involved in The Battle of Berlin in which he flew in an Avro Lancaster that completed thirteen operations against Berlin and four other operations over Germany, when the plane was lost it had flown 638.05 hours. Their eighteenth, and final flight, on the 29th August 1944, was an operation over Königsberg where 106 Sqdn lost two planes, including McKechnie's, without trace.
    Those killed in action were:
    G/C W.N.McKechnie GC
    Sgt R.B.Clarke
    F/S H.W.T.Carter RCAF
    F/O E.E.Fletcher
    Sgt C.C.Jeffrey
    Sgt D.Forster
    F/S E.L.Collins
    There is no known grave for McKechnie, or any members of his crew, but they are commemorated on Runnymede Memorial panel 200, Surrey.

    William Neil McKechnie - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
     

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