"Here is a mystery for you Ken..
Walking through the British Military Cemetery in Guyana, and saw these Canadian memorials
What happened to the crews on April 11th 1944 and May 20th 1943"
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"Ian Mackenzie", Facebook (www.facebook.com/madmack66 : accessed 5 Sep 2018), post from 23 Aug 2018 at 20:49. |
Here are the steps I took to answer his question.
I first went to the Library and Archives Canada page for the "Service Files of the Second World War - War Dwad, 1939-1947" and started my search via the "Search: Database" link using their last names, or in the case of H. D. G. Ward, the service number. Why use the service number just for him? There are 184 names containing the word "ward"! Even after adding "H" for the Given Name(s) there were 81 service members found.
Since each of the grave markers also gave the date of death I could quickly verify that I had found the right person for those markers without a service number.
Surname | Given Names (s) | Date of Birth | Date of Death | Service Number |
---|---|---|---|---|
Milbury | Francis Arthur Robert | 21 Sep 1921 | 20 May 1943 | R113616 |
Ward | Hugh Dennis George | 11 Feb 1923 | 20 May 1943 | R117558 |
Probert | K F | 16 Nov 1919 | 11 Apr 1944 | J29636 |
Stubner | R F | 23 Sep 1914 | 11 Apr 1944 | J29635 |
In each case I clicked on the associated Item Number for the person to see if there was a PDF file available from Library and Archives Canada. Unfortunately the pages for each of the service members stated "No PDF file available". I could physically visit the Library and Archives Canada building in Ottawa but that will take a bit of time to request the files and I wouldn't be able to get there until the next day anyway. So I will continue my online search for information about what happened to these people.
Since these service members were from the Commonwealth the next site I went to was the Commonwealth War Graves Commission. Using what I had learned from the LAC search I was able to quickly locate the same service members here. The CWGC site even told me the name of the cemetery, "Georgetown (Rabbit Walk) Cemetery".
Within each page for the service members there were town tables in the CWGC Archives section: "Grave Registration" and "Headstone". The Headstone document provides was what actually inscribed on the headstone. In this case, all four of the personnel we are interested in were recorded on the same sheet.
Commonwealth War Graves Commission, "War Dead Records", database on-line, CWGC (www.cwgc.org : accessed 5 Sep 2018), Headstone document for Francis Arthur Robert Milbury, service number R/113616. |
The Grave Registration document has these four service members listed plus two others from the R.A.F. that died on the same dates. Could these all be related to aircraft crashes and what were they doing in Guyana?
Canadian Virtual War Memorial where I did yet another search for these R.C.A.F. service members. In each case there was a link to the image of the page from the Second World War Book of Remembrance that lies within the Memorial Chamber in the Peace Tower on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. For Flying Officer Richard Frank Stubner (another fact we didn't have until now: his forenames) there was even a newspaper clipping from the Winnipeg Evening Tribune announcing his death. Pilot Officer Francis Arthur Robert Milbury had a picture with a short biography submitted under the Digital Collection section for him.
My final stop in this brief research adventure was to Ancestry since they have a collection called "Canada, WWII Service Files of War Dead, 1939-1947". This is a free collection that should be searchable and viewable as long as you have an account (not a paid subscription) with Ancestry.ca. For example, using my paid Ancestry subscription, when I did a search for Milbury and selected "View Record" for Francis Arthur Robert Milbury I saw this:
Ancestry search results page for Francis Arthur Robert Milbury |
So what did happen on 20 May 1943 to Francis Arthur Robert Milbury and Hugh Denis George Ward1. Form 551, "Royal Air Force. Officer or Airman-Report on Accidental or Self-inflicted Injuries or Immediate Death Therefrom." for F. A. R. Milbury states that he was:
Deceased (Killed outright)Later on another form in his file states "Killed when aircraft FA.250, of which he was pilot, crashed at Georgetown, British Guiana while on ferry flight." He was with No. 45 (AT) Group at the time of the accident.
Baltimore FA/520. Ran off runway in landing. Aircraft Crashed and burnt.
Deceased was Captain of Aircraft
In H. D. G. Ward's service file the "Clinical Record Brief" form states that the wounds from 20 May 1943 were "...accidentally incurred in an airplane crash at Atkinson Field, British Guiana at approximately 1:15PM, May 20, 1943. Type of plane A-30." Another form states that he was the navigator on that ferry flight.
The No. 45 (AT) Group was a based at Dorval, Quebec, Canada and was part of the R.A.F. Transport Command and ferried aircraft from factories to the operational units. For this flight they were ferrying a Martin Baltimore light attack bomber. The A-30 designation was for those aircraft part of the United States Lend-Lease Act.
For the incident involving Kenneth Frederick Probert and Richard Frank Stubner, their service files also provided quite a bit of information. They were ferrying a Martin B-26 Marauder aircraft, HD.149, from Nassau to Accra when it crash at Atkinson Field in British Guiana. In a letter in R. F. Stubner's file to Miss Laura Taylor of Clandeboye, Manitoba, dated 6 Feb 1946 it states:
Dear Miss Taylor,
Further to our letter of December 20th,1945, the names of the crew members of Pilot Officer
Richard Frank Stubner are as follows:-
Pilot: Howard WEIBEN, American CivilianI trust this is the information you desired.
2nd Pilot: P/O Stanley BLACKBURN, (65124).
Navigator: P/O Kenneth PROBART, (J.29636).
So in both cases these servicemen were ferrying aircraft from North America to operational bases overseas via the South Atlantic ferry route.
From just a bit of information on the headstones we were able to learn a bit more about the people and the part they were playing in the effort of the Allies to fight in the Second World War.
1. Note that he wrote his name as "Hugh Denis George Ward" and not "Hugh Dennis George Ward" in his Royal Canadian Air Force Service Book.
Ken -
ReplyDeleteThanks for taking the time to answer the question, and show the effort involved. I will bookmark this page for the next time I have to do this type of look-up ... or just consult with the master!
Hi, I think you may have cleared up a question I had asked the war graves commission with no success. I was stationed st Atkinson field in 1963 with 3 para. Its always been in my memory that on the edge of the bush there were I believe 5 graves with military headstones. I checked and could only find Georgetown listed for military burials. Which led to my enquiries. Seeing as you have done a mountain of research. Are there listed graves in that area, or is it possible that they have been reinterred in Georgetown. Thank you in advance. Denis.
ReplyDeleteDenis: For the Commonwealth War Grave Commission's listing for Guyana, there are two listed cemeteries for that locale and both are located in Georgetown: Timehri and Rabbit Walk. The listings for both can be found at https://www.cwgc.org/find/find-cemeteries-and-memorials/results?country=Guyana. I took a look at the interment forms for all the service members listed in both locations. The ones buried at Timehri all are interred before around 1952. However, those at Rabbit Walk, which are the ones I researched for a friend, appear to have a year of 1993. I think that this just might be the new location of those military headstones you saw in 1963.
DeleteDenis: A followup to my response.
DeleteIf you read page 13 of the Minutes of Proceedings at the 486th Meeting of the Commonwealth War Graves Commission held on 14 Mar 1967 found at http://archive.cwgc.org/GetMultimedia.ashx?db=Catalog&type=default&fname=e8%5C70a5b6-b838-479b-916d-aad92d07620c.pdf concerning "War Graves In Guyana" might also shed some light on your question.
Richard Stubner was my maternal grandmother’s brother. This is amazing. Thank you for posting a photo of his grave marker, I’ve been trying to find.
ReplyDeleteI hope you don’t mind but I’ve taken a copy of this marker to show my mom and her siblings.
My Unit service in Guyana in 1966 as resident Infantry battalion. One of our REME attached personel was murdered during our tour and buried in a small military cemetery in Atkinson field it was situated very near to where I worked and I visited it regularly. I can find no reference to this soldier Craftsman Cliff Fairbrother anywhere. Could this be one if those that gave been moved
ReplyDeleteYou might want to post a query on The Guyana / British Guiana Genealogical Society forum (https://gbggs.org/) to see if someone might be willing to visit the Timehri and Rabbit Walk in Georgetown to possibly locate his marker or even check the local newspaper archives to see if they can find any additional details for you.
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