The following article appeared in “Airforce News”
and is reproduced here with the kind permission of the author
Captain Phil Pyke
Bomber crew remembered
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The crew of N-Nuts, shortly before they
were killed: (from left): Ken Francis,
Jack Mitchell,
Reg Corcoran, William
Summers, Ron Gallagher, Lawrence Pearse and Tony
Atkinson.
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The cross erected in memory of Pilot
Officer
Jack Mitchell.
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With the cross is a plinth, bearing the
names of the crew members.
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By CAPT Phil Pyke
IT would be hard to find a more isolated memorial in
Tasmania .
On the peak of
Sugarloaf , overlooking the
Jordan Valley
in the State’s Midlands , sits
a simple white cross. This is a memorial to a young man from the
area who led a bomber crew over
Germany .
Pilot Officer
Jack Mitchell was the pilot of
Lancaster bomber N-Nuts on a raid over
Magdeburg , southwest of
Berlin , in January 1944.
On its return 60 years ago, the
Lancaster was shot down. The crew were
listed as missing until the end of the war when it was found
they had been buried with full military honours by the Germans.
On his last leave home,
Jack Mitchell
climbed to the top of Sugarloaf with some friends and jammed a
stick between rocks on the peak. As he did so, he declared, “I
wonder if this will be here when I come home?”
His Lancaster , from No. 467
Squadron RAAF, was the only bomber not to return from the
Magdeburg raid.
On hearing the news, PLTOFF Mitchell’s father, Cliff, climbed to
where his son had placed his stick and erected a wooden cross.
In time a wooden shield was added, commemorating the
Lancaster crew.
As time went on, Cliff Mitchell passed away and the wooden cross
fell down. It would seem this is the end of the story.
However, in 1981, local landowner Tony Bisdee manufactured a new
cross of tubular steel and set it in concrete on the peak of the
mountain. He used a tractor and winch system to haul the 3m
cross up the steep slope.
Nine years on, the Air Force and the Bothwell Historical Society
climbed to the top of Sugarloaf and held a memorial service.
A special gathering was held in 1994 – 50 years to the day since
the Lancaster and crew were shot down – and since then a
memorial service has been held on the peak most years on January
22.
The names of the other RAAF crew members and one RAF crew member
have also been added on plaques.
In front of locals from the Bothwell area at this year’s
service, CO No. 29 (City of Hobart) Squadron Wing Commander
Geoff O’Hara recounted the story of the crew of the Lancaster on
their final mission over Germany 60 years before, after which
the Ode to the Fallen was read.
Squadron Leader Alan Robertson, XO 29SQN, said the cross was
important as a memorial to a single bomber crew – and a tribute
from the community.
“This rural area strongly felt the loss of this bright young man
in 1944,” he said.
“Unfortunately, details of their deaths weren’t confirmed until
1948. As time went on, people in the area felt an appropriate
memorial was required.
“Although the peak of Sugarloaf is isolated, it is certainly an
appropriate place not only just to remember the crew of the
Lancaster bomber N-Nuts and
Jack
Mitchell,
but also all RAAF bomber crews who served in World War
II.
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