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| Name | REYNOLDS |
| First names | Robert George |
| Rank | Sgt |
| Service | RAAF |
| Service number | 402979 |
| Crew position | Wireless operator/Air Gunner |
| Age | 26 |
| Date of death | 03/09/42 |
| Cemetery | Heverlee War Cemetery Belgium |
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2/3 September, 1942; KARLSRUHE: Bill Chorley (of RAF Bomber Command Losses) explains..... NCO aircrew who exchanged identities with army personnel were able to go outside of their camp, under escort, attached to working parties. From quite early on in the war the Germans were aware that aircrew (RAF et al) were keen to escape, particularly officers, and though - in theory- NCOs of all three services might be ordered for work parties, aircrew were, in the main, prevented from doing so. Thus, in camps where you had a mix of RAF/Army personnel aspiring escapers would try to take the place of an army friend. Such cases, I believe, were not common; some would exchange just to get away from the sheer boredom of being behind the wire and not necessarily as a means for escape. Also, such excursions with work parties enabled them to gather intelligence as to what the general mood of the local population was like or to obtain data such as information pertaining to train timetables. Following his return to the UK, W/O Bradshaw
joined the South African Airforce who were flying Liberators
out of Celone, Italy. W/O Bradshaw was killed on the 17th August
1944 whilst flying with 31Sqn SAAF. It was a low point for the
squadron as, on the same day, they lost a further 21 aircrew,
five of whom were listed as pilots. |
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