From the CBC:
“Canadian
WWII pilot who steered crashing plane away from school will get memorial in
England”
It was more
than 80 years ago and the Battle of Britain was underway, with pilots of the
Royal Air Force fighting to repel attacks from Hitler's Luftwaffe. Flight Lt.
Robert Coventry, a Canadian born in Oak Bay, B.C., was piloting an RAF Bristol
Blenheim back from a training mission when the bomber's engine failed. As the
story is told, Coventry managed to steer the plummeting bomber away from a busy
school in Quedgeley, near Gloucester, before it crashed in a field. Coventry
died in the flaming wreck. Now, plans are underway for a new memorial stone to
be unveiled near the crash site. "I think it's an amazing and wonderful
thing," said Anne Underhill, Coventry's daughter. Underhill now lives in
Oak Bay, where the father she never knew spent part of his childhood. He was 27
when he crashed on Sept. 23, 1940. Underhill was just 10 months old.
(Anne Underhill
stands in front of a memorial listing all the citizens of Oak Bay, B.C., who
died in the Second World War, including her father, Robert Coventry. He's set
to be memorialized with a plaque near the place where he died in England in
1940.)
She grew up
knowing her father had died in a plane crash during the war and that locals had
rushed to the crash site to help, managing to pull two other surviving crew
members from the fuselage. "Basically that was the story I had as a
child," said Underhill. But it wasn't until the BBC — which had covered
the campaign to honour Coventry with the memorial — tracked her down on
Vancouver Island that Underhill learned how her father had avoided crashing
into Quedgeley School.
'I owe my
life to him'
(A photo shows
the wreckage of Coventry's Bristol Blenheim in a field in Quedgeley. Coventry
was piloting the bomber on a training mission when the engines failed, but he
managed to steer the plane away from a school, saving the children inside.)
Peter Hickman
remembers the crash still. He was 10 years old and attending the school at the
time. He and other students rushed out, thinking they would be able to help. "I
can remember running across these fields, and of course there was the plane burning.
We stood there absolutely shocked," he said in an interview with the BBC.
"There were flames in the cockpit." Helen Tracey is among the people who called
for the memorial to Coventry last fall. Her mother, Margaret Cale, was a
six-year-old student at the school in 1940. "If the plane had hit the school on that
day, mum would have died and therefore I would never have been born,"
Tracey told the BBC in October. "I don't know how else to sum it up — I
owe my life to him."
'The supreme sacrifice' Quedgeley Town Council has commissioned the memorial, with plans to hold an unveiling ceremony in September. The plaque names Coventry and notes his RAF title. It describes him as "a hero who made the supreme sacrifice near this place on Sept. 23, 1940, and in doing so saving the lives of many children from Quedgeley." Underhill has been invited to the ceremony, but it's unclear whether travel restrictions due to the pandemic will still be in force in September. "It means a lot to me, and I'd love to be able to be there, but who knows," she said. "I think it's absolutely extraordinary and wonderful and my mother must be dancing around up there, just to get the recognition," said Underhill, pointing toward the sky. As for the heroic actions of her father to avoid striking a school, "I would have hoped that would have been the attitude for people who were flyers," she said.
^ There are so
many men and women around the world (Canada, the US, the UK, Australia, New
Zealand, etc.) that do many heroic and self-less things like this during the
war. I wish we knew more of these. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/robert-coventry-quidgeley-memorial-1.5980718
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