
A new phase in Bomber Command strategy took place during the last two months of 1942 when Italy, which had thus far only been lightly attacked became the centre of a series of heavy attacks on Genoa, Turin, and Milan.
Attacks against these targets generally presented few problems to the crews after the nightmare German defences and because of the inefficiency and gutlessness of Italian gun, searchlight and night-fighter crews, Air Marshal Harris was able to order attacks on moonlit nights. This aided visual recognition of the target and led to unusually good marking by the Pathfinders and very effective bombing results as a consequence.
The first of these attacks undertaken by the squadron was on 28th November, 1942, when they provided 11 crews of a total force of 192 bombers in a raid on the Fiat works at Turin.
The crews could see the bends in the river east and south of Turin clearly outlined by the flares which were well concentrated around the aiming point. All crews reported good results and only Sergeant Brooks' crew had to contend with any degree of belligerence on the part of the Italians. He withstood four separate night-fighter attacks but his rear gunner, Sergeant R. Harris, fought off each one quite successfully.
No record of this particular raid would be compete without reference to the superb courage of Flight Sergeant, R. H. Middleton who, although not a member of 460, was an Australian captain serving No. 149 R.A.F. Squadron. Middleton's aircraft was the only one lost on this particular raid and his valour earned him the first R.A.A.F. Victoria Cross of World War II.
On 28 November the target for the squadron was the Fiat works at Turin, which involved a flight over the Alps. Flight-Sergeant R.H. Middleton was flying Stirling BF372 (OJ:H) when, in the low-level attack, he was hit and badly wounded, losing his right eye. Other members of the crew were also wounded. Despite desperate wounds the two pilots flew the aircraft all the way back to the English coast, where Middleton kept the aircraft flying until most of the crew had baled out successfully; Middleton was lost when the aircraft crashed into the sea, but for his bravery he was awarded the VC.
This award was regarded after the war as possibly the finest V.C. of the Second World War and his courage moved an R.A.F. commentator at the time to write: "It doe not seem possible that even death could have had the heart to seek out and destroy such tenacious, valiant and enduring courage…No man will know what force uplifted that tortured body in its last struggle for the lives and liberty of a faithful crew. They had urged him to abandon ship over France while strength was still in him, but he refused to leave them prisoners. Rather, he elected, in that inner wisdom with which suffering transcendentalizes the mind, that in the balance their fit lives against his maimed one were the thing for which he must fight and plan with his last strength.
In proof that his plan succeeded there are now in this country five men ready to fight and fly again. They have in their hearts the memory of perhaps the greatest captain of aircraft under whom any crew will ever have the honour to serve, and of a front gunner and engineer to whom comradeship and company of that captain meant more than the certainty of safety, and who determined to be with him to the end as long as any faint hope of his rescue remained. They stuck to him to the last. …In such men as these is the finest inspiration ever sent to us as people to use our minds and our limbs - not in the same way, for only to the immortals is given such perfection of service - but for the same purpose, and in order that in our victory the foul indignity of war may be wiped forever from the earth."
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RAAF Flight Sergeant Rawdon Hume Middleton, of
Yarrabandia, New South Wales, Australia, served in 149 Squadron, RAF in
1942. His promotion to Pilot Officer came after his death, which occurred
on 28th November, 1942. "Flight-Sergeant Middleton was captain and first pilot of a Stirling aircraft detailed to attack the Fiat works, Turin, one night in November, 1942. Great difficulty was experienced in climbing to 12,000 feet to cross the Alps, which led to excessive consumption of fuel. (Middleton's body was recovered the day after the citation was written.) |