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War Memorial #559 ~ Lancaster LM311 Traditional Geocache

Hidden : 10/30/2018
Difficulty:
1.5 out of 5
Terrain:
1.5 out of 5

Size: Size:   small (small)

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Geocache Description:


LM311

 

The extract below is taken from the website dedicated to the last flight of Lancaster LM311:

On the night of 12th July, Lancaster LM311, better known as Lizbeth, lumbered into the air from RAF Bottesford. She had apparently acquired her name from the fiancée of one the crew, who served as a WAAF on the base. Another version of the story is that she was named after the mother of the youngest crew member, Sgt Patrick Donlevy, a 19-year-old Wireless Operator from the small village of Pathhead near Dalkeith in Midlothian.

The aircraft although ‘Australian’ was mainly crewed by Scotsmen, the pilot Sgt Cedric Chapman was the only Aussie onboard. The others were Sgt Norman Smith, Bomb Aimer (21) from Edinburgh, Sgt Jack Greenwood, Flt Engineer (25) from Yorkshire, Sgt William Buchanan, Gunner (20) from Glasgow, Sgt Albert Edwards, Navigator (20) from Glasgow, Sgt William Bruce, Gunner (22) from Renfrewshire and Pat Donlevy.

The target for that night was a distant one, the Italian city of Turin. It was their 14th sortie with the Squadron and their first to Italy. The rest had been against heavily defended German cities such as Dusseldorf, Cologne, Dortmund and Essen.

The flight to Turin was fairly uneventful, however on the bombing run itself ‘Liz’beth’ took a direct hit from an anti-aircraft gun which caused damage to the tail section. After checks were made, the pilot decided that he could fly the damaged plane back to England. Back at RAF Bottesford the aircraft appeared back at base one by one, X-Ray, Able and Yorker flew back in rapid succession until all were back bar Liz’beth.

Just as dawn was breaking, a voice was heard over the intercom in the Ops Room at RAF Bottesford, it was Cedric Chapman, “Liz’beth to Bedrock, over.” The operator responded “Liz'beth aerodrome 1,000 over”  – “Liz’beth to aerodrome, 1,000, I have no elevator control, am flying on trimmer, over”

This was a serious problem, it meant the pilot had very little control of his height. Chapman gave his crew the option to bail out, but they had already decided to stay together as a crew, it was the RAF way.

The pilot decided that despite the damage he could land the Lancaster at RAF Bottesford, it was really his only option anyway, as he was down to the last 15 minutes of fuel.

The tension in the control tower could be cut with a knife, Chapman asked for permission to ‘pancake’ or land.  He received the reply “Bedrock to Liz’beth , you may pancake, over” Chapman responded “Liz’beth to Bedrock, Roger thanks. Out”

It would be the last words he would utter. As the Lancaster lined up on the runway Chapman went through all his pre landing drill and everything seemed fine. Just as the flaps lowered a shudder went through the aircraft and to their horror, they felt the tail of the plane break off, sending it into a vertical dive from a few hundred feet, a parachute was seen to come out the tail just as she struck the ground, it was too late.

Liz’beth struck the ground and exploded in a massive fireball. The crash alarm screamed out across the base and fire engines descended on the burning plane. Sadly it was obvious no one could have survived the impact or the fire.

After the fire was doused the bodies of the men were recovered and sent home for burial.

Between January 1942 and April 1945, 467 Squadron flew 3,833 sorties in Avro Lancaster heavy bombers and suffered heavy losses – 760 personnel were killed, of whom 284 were Australian, and 118 aircraft were lost.

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Additional Hints (Decrypt)

O B G

Decryption Key

A|B|C|D|E|F|G|H|I|J|K|L|M
-------------------------
N|O|P|Q|R|S|T|U|V|W|X|Y|Z

(letter above equals below, and vice versa)