Jack Currie |
Early life
Currie was born in Sheffield, the son of John Alban William Currie and Margaret Ulph Ward-Smith. While still a young child the family moved to Harrow, London. Currie was taken to air shows, where he became fascinated with aeroplanes.1 After leaving school he worked a variety of jobs, including cartoonist for the Harrow Observer. On occasion his cartoons were featured on the pages of national publications such as ''Punch''.2 In the evenings Currie sang for a dance band. 1
With the outbreak of war in 1939 Currie volunteered to serve in the Royal Air Force.1 He scored well on the aptitude tests and was placed on the deferred service list to await pilot training.2 While awaiting his call up he volunteered as a stretcher bearer and ambulance driver during the London blitz. He also served as an ARP runner.
Second World War
Flight training
Flight instructor with cadet, Georgia 1943 |
Forming a crew
He earned his wings and returned to the United Kingdom in late 1942, being posted to Bomber Command as a sergeant pilot. He was sent for further training at an Operational Training Unit, and received final training at a Heavy Conversion Unit, where he collected a crew. His crew was assembled in the usual RAF manner. All the trainees were placed in a large hanger and sorted themselves out on their own into crews. Currie was approached by navigator Jimmy Cassidy, and the two of them collected the rest. Currie's flight crew comprised Sergeant Pilot Jack Currie (pilot), Pilot Officer Jimmy Cassidy (navigator), Flight Sergeant Larry Myring (bomb aimer), Sergeant "Johnny" Walker (flight engineer), Sergeant Charlie Fairbairn (wireless operator), Sergeant George Protheroe (mid upper gunner) and Sergeant Charles Lanham (rear gunner).2 All were on their first operational tour. Lanham had already completed 9 sorties from a previous posting. He had been removed from his first crew and placed on disciplinary duty for 6 months after he punched his pilot for drinking alcohol too near to their flight time. Shortly after making Currie’s acquaintance, Lanham made his feelings on the subject clear. "I don’t reckon grog mixes with flying, and I aim to survive this war." Replied Currie "So do I. And just to set your mind at ease, I only drink on leave or stand downs." "You ought to cut that out too, skipper. Grog slows your reactions."3 The only officer on board was the navigator, Pilot Officer Cassidy. Three of the crew, Cassidy, Myring and Lanham, were Australians. The other four were British.
First tour
A Lancaster warms its engines for a mission |
On their fifth mission the squadron was sent to bomb Hamburg. The flight became their most difficult sortie. Over the target they flew into a heavy storm. While evading Flak the aircraft went into a cloud, was tossed onto its back and fell into a steep dive. Currie had the sense that he had lost all control of the aircraft. Struggling with the controls he felt something give way. They lost 10,000 feet and Currie instructed the crew to prepare to bail out.2 Just at that moment he was able to pull out, but the Lancaster did not feel right. He soon found it was extremely difficult to turn the aircraft. In the intense winds of the storm both ailerons had been ripped from the wings of the aircraft. With the rudder he could change the direction the aircraft was pointing, but without the ailerons he could not bank to change the direction of flight. The plane would just skid sideways and return to its original heading. Thinking about the principles he learned in flight school, he realized by increasing the power to the outer engine he could use the torque of the propeller to lift the wing and bank the aircraft. He succeeded in turning the aircraft toward home, but control of pitch and yaw was very difficult to maintain. Reaching England, he doubted he could maintain adequate control of the aircraft to land safely, and advised his crew to bail out. Lanham asked "What are you going to do, Jack?" "I'm going to put her down at base, but I might make a balls of it." "You wont. This is your lucky night. I'm staying on board." The rest of the crew followed suit, and though Currie warned them again to take to the chutes, there were no takers.6
With no aileron controls the wings continued to rock and dip up and down, and with no flaps the landing speed had to be high to avoid stalling. Currie found the wing's rotation could not be checked with power control, but it could be timed. He brought her in low and fast, and dropped her wheels down hard on the tarmac just as she leveled out. In debriefing the station commander commented "Not one of your better landings, Currie." "No sir. If I had known you were watching I would have tried harder."7 When it was learned that Currie made the landing with no aileron control or flaps the station commander could not believe it. Inspection of the Lancaster soon confirmed the astonishing fact that the ailerons had indeed been torn right off the wings during the storm. The aircraft should have crashed in Germany. The squadron commander immediately recommended Currie for a Conspicuous Gallantry Medal, but this was turned down.1 On completion of his first operational tour Currie was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross for this mission, as was Cassidy and Lanham, and the Distinguished Flying Medal was awarded to Fairbairn.8
V-2 test site at Peenemünde, 23 June 1943 |
With Bomber Command expanding, on 7 November 1943 12 Squadron's "C" Flight was hived off and used to form the basis of a new squadron, 626 Squadron.4 The new unit would share the field at Wickenby with 12 Squadron.11 12
Currie’s feisty Australian tail-gunner, Charlie Lanham, finished his tour slightly ahead of the rest of the crew, having completed 9 sorties before joining with Currie. As Currie's total trips approached the magic mark of 30 he began to wonder if they would in fact beat the odds and survive their first tour. Their second to last mission was against their hardest target, a target crews liked to call "The Big City." It was part of Butch Harris's four month campaign against Berlin, a campaign that Bomber Command was in the process of losing.13 Currie and crew survived the trip.
With its completion Currie was looking forward to a milk run in the next few days to end his tour. Instead he awoke the next morning to learn he was up for ops again that night. Worse, the target was again… Berlin. Furious that his final mission was back to one of the continent's most distant and dangerous targets, Currie went to argue with his flight commander, but he could make no odds. The CO reassured him that waiting for a few days for a final op was a mistake, and that it was all for the best. Currie and his crew set out for their final mission, and completed it without incident. Their first tour was completed in February 1944.
Pilot instructor
Second tour
Mosquito of 1409 Meteorological Flight |
After the war
After the war Currie applied for and received a permanent commission. In the following years he served at RAF Lindholme, RAF West Kirby, RAF Akrotiri on Cyprus, and at RAF Syerston. While posted at Syerston in 1959 he came to live in Newark. He retired from the RAF in 1964 with the rank of Squadron Leader.5
Currie worked as Civil Defence Officer for Newark from 1964 till 1970, when the government closed down most of their Civil Defense operations. While living in Newark he became involved in the town cricket club and the Robin Hood Theatre at Averham, where he involved himself in theatrical productions, notably playing the king in the Newark Amateur Operatic Society's 1961 production of "The King and I".1 In 1970 he moved his family to London to take up a position as south east area secretary in organising small scale air shows. Over time these grew and developed into the [[RAF Benevolent Fund]]'s annual [[Royal International Air Tattoo]]. In 1975 Currie moved to Easingwold near York to present Civil Defence lectures at the Home Defence College. He retired in 1986.5
Jack Currie at the controls |
Personal life
Currie met his first wife, Nina, while he was a pilot instructor. He had gone to the adjutant's office at Blyton to request a transfer to an operational squadron, and as the adjunct was out he was obliged to deal with the Women's Auxiliary Air Force officer that was working with him. She informed him a transfer was doubtful, but before he left Currie had her agree to meet him for drinks later. They married during his second tour, and remained together until her death. He married a second time, and his second wife Kate survived him.5
List of works
* "Lancaster Target: the story of a crew who flew from Wickenby" (2012) [1981]
* "Mosquito Victory" (1983)
* ''The Augsburg Raid'' (1987)
* ''Wings Over Georgia'' (1989)
* ''Battle Under the Moon: An Account of the RAF raid on Mailly-le-Camp'' (1995)
* ''Round the clock: experience of the allied bomber crews who flew by day and by night from England'' by Jack Currie and Philip Kaplan (1993)
* ''Echoes in the Air'' (1998)
References
Citations
1 Drawings on display, Newark Advertiser ↩
2 Jack Currie, Good Reads ↩
3 Currie (2012) p. 18 ↩
4 Squadron Leader John Anthony Logan “Jack” Currie, DFC ↩
5 RAF Wickenby Memorial Collection ↩
6 Currie (1981) p. 65 ↩
7 Currie (1981) p. 66 ↩
8 London Gazette Third Supplement, 1 October 1943 ↩
9 Darlow (2008) p. 120 ↩
10 Middlebrook (1982) p. 222 ↩
11 Moyes (1976) p. 288 ↩
12 Halley (1988) p. 440 ↩
13 Currie (1989) pp. 202-204 ↩
14 Currie (1983) p. 5 ↩
Bibliography
- Darlow, Steve ''Special Op: Bomber'' Newton Abbot: David & Charles Ltd (2008) ISBN 978-0-7153-2782-1
- Halley, James J. ''The Squadrons of the Royal Air Force & Commonwealth 1918–1988''. Tonbridge, Kent, UK: Air Britain (Historians) Ltd., 1988. ISBN 0-85130-164-9.
- Middlebrook, Martin ''The Peenemünde Raid: The Night of 17–18 August 1943'' New York: Bobs-Merrill (1982).
- Moyes, Philip J.R. ''Bomber Squadrons of the RAF and their Aircraft''. London, UK: Macdonald and Jane's Publishers Ltd., 1964, 2nd edition 1976. ISBN 0-356-01462-2.
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