On
May 4, a new memorial was unveiled in
Goudriaan, a small village in the southern part of
Holland. On that memorial is the name and photograph of
a Maybole man who was killed in the Second World War,
Sergeant James Kiltie. James’s photograph was only found
after a world-wide search which traced him back to
Maybole, local newspaper archives of the Carnegie
Library in Ayr, and descendants of the family.
Sergeant Kiltie was a wireless operator/gunner and he
and his fellow crew members were in an RAF Lancaster
which was shot down in the night of May 21 – 22, 1944 as
they flew over Holland on their way home after bombing
Duisburg in Germany. Five of the crew, including
James, were killed that night and are resting in the
graveyard in Goudriaan; Two others were captured and
held as prisoners of war.
Andries
van der Graaf, 77, told our local correspondent when he
was searching for a photo, “The people of Goudriaan
always took good care of the graves and because there
are, year after year, less people who where there we
decided to make a kind of memorial with the story of
them.”
On
May 4 the people of Holland hold
their Commemoration Day to remember all the victims of
the World War. Local newspapers had the story of James
death but it only appeared a year later possibly due to
not being confirmed at the time. |
|
Our David
Kiltie contacted James’s niece Eileen Walker who supplied an
original photograph which was duly sent to Andries. He replied
to everyone who had helped, “Mission accomplished!! “I think we
all did a wonderful job, helped by technical things such as
computers.
We all together were able to make it
possible to create a memorial for the heroes of the Lancaster ND
956 AS-I. “Without your help I should not have been able to make a
memorial half as good as we have now. When they asked me to help
with information about this memorial the “youngsters” did not
know I had much material and information about this tragic
crash.
“But
not as much as I wished. I knew that I only had three photos of
the crew members. I thought I can ask the R.A.F. for more
information but that was a little too easy. I was searching on
the Internet and even there I couldn’t find information and
photos of “our” Lancaster. “With your kind help and drive we
succeeded and can be proud of that. On the 4th of May 2013 the
people of Goudriaan and the world will get a stylish and
informative memorial. I thank you all, you have worked so hard.”
At first it was
thought that three crew members were killed. For that reason
there were only three crosses during the commemoration in 1946.
Text on the new memorial says, “On Sunday the 21st of May 1944,
around 22.30 o’clock, 708 bombers take off from several airbases
in Southern England for different raids on Nazi-Germany. As ever
their mission is to bomb strategic targets. On this particular
night these are Duisburg, Hannover and a Belgian airport.
So-called “Intruders” fly with the bombers for protection and to
bomb airfields with German fighters, intending to keep these out
of the sky.
“Our” bomber, a
four engine AVRO Lancaster MK III, with a wingspan of 34 meters,
is part of the 166th squadron of the R.A.F., which is stationed
on airfield Kirmington, about 28 kilometres northwest of
Grimsby. The crew consists of a pilot, a bomb aimer, three
gunners, of whom one is also wireless operator, one navigator
and a mechanic. Seven young men who fulfil their mission each
with their own different motives and ideals. Each with his own
pleasures, fears and beliefs.
The Lancaster
reaches its target the town of Duisburg, marked earlier by
torches and marker flairs. They drop their bombs and hit the
southern part of the city. 124 people are killed on the ground,
350 buildings are destroyed and 665 are seriously damaged.
When the
mission is fulfilled the plane curves back to the west, back to
base, back to England. But there is no time for relaxation. The
Lancaster is still flying above enemy territory. Not only do the
anti-aircraft guns (flak) pose a serious threat, but the Germans
also have very effective combat fighters. In contrast with the
American bombers, the so-called “Flying Fortresses”, the
Lancasters do not have a turret with machine guns on the bottom
of the plane. If a German Messerschmitt BF-110 manages to reach
a spot below the Lancaster unseen, the situation is very
dangerous.
The bombers fly
on an altitude of approximately 6000 metres when an enemy
Messerschmitt manages to intrude into the formation unseen. When
it flies about 50 metres below the Lancaster it shoots, with the
machine gun, a salvo at an upwards angle. It is a direct hit;
heavily burning the plane crashes. It comes down in the polder
Zuidzijde, behind the house of the then Mayor R.D.C.M. van
Slijpe, 134 Zuidzijde Goudriaan.
At about 2.00
o’clock that night inhabitants hear heavy machine gun fire and
see the burning plane coming down close to the houses. Due to
the tremendous heat coming off the wreck it is impossible to
come closer to it than about 150 metres. After a short time
soldiers of the German Feldgendarmerie arrive to fence off the
terrain. A worker of the municipality Teus den Dikken is
assigned, later that day, to search for the human remains. On
the same day, at about 19.00 o’clock, the victims are buried in
a provisional grave on the graveyard in Goudriaan.
In addition to
this Lancaster the R.A.F. lost another 30 bombers and fighters
that night. Ten crashed in the Netherlands. Planes that brought
hope for liberation, manned by young men, who again and again
put their lives at stake under enormous pressure. One hit of the
artillery or a grenade from an unobserved fighter would mean a
certain death . But they went, … so we should be free.”