Hi All,
Yardley suffered a tragedy in June 1944. 2030 (Yardley) Squadron, Air training Corps, which was based at Hobmoor Road School near The Yew Tree ,went to RAF, Wymeswold, Leicestershire for a weeks training. RAF Wymeswold was an Operations Training Unit. On the day of our arrival we were told that an exercise was planned for that night and 8 of us would be required to assist, We all volunteered and 8 of us were chosen at random. We set off at about midnight in an RAF lorry driven by a WAAF who had an RAF sergeant sitting beside her and there was an RAF aircraftman sitting in the back of the lorry with us cadets. Whilst travelling on the outskirts of Leicester there was a terrific bang and the offside of the lorry was torn away. Our lorry stopped with the WAAF driver screaming hysterically. None of us knew what had happened but we found three cadets and the RAF aircraftman lying in the road many yeards away. They had all been sitting on the offside of the lorry. The aircraftman and Cadet Sergeant Ken Harrison and Cadet Kenneth Beech were killed instantly. Cadet James Brogan died a few days later.
Our stay at Wymeswold carried on but we returned home one day early as the funeral of all three cadets was to be held the following day. I returned home to the news that my brother Arthur, who was serving with Bomber Command, was missing after a raid on Krefeld in Germany. The funeral of the cadets was held on Saturday, 24th June 1944 at Yardley Old Church followed by burial at Yardley cemetery. Ken Beech and Ken Harrison lie side by side adjacent to the Crematorium and their graves have Commonwealth War Graves headstones. James Brogan lies in the Roman Catholic section of the cemetery.
I must add that none of us received any trauma counselling , there was no such thing then. Think of the millions killed in both wars and civilian who endured the bombing. There was no counselling whatsoever but the country has not become a raging lunatic asylum. I believe modern day counselling for trauma is a con and those practising it are making a fortune. As a retired police officer I am ashamed of those officers at Hillsborough who claimed damages for trauma caused by what they had witnessed.
Finally I must add that it transpired that we had been hit by a stolen American Army lorrry. The driver, a British paratrooper, was later arrested and appeared at Leicester Assizes charged with manslaughter. (There was no charge of causing death by dangerous driving in those days) He pleaded Guilty was sentenced to 18 months in prison. This was a light sentence for those days and it is assumed that the Judge took into account his excellent army service throughout the war.
Old Boy