'I dragged him away from the fire': Homefront heroism and a tragic crash by a prairie school

Similar documents
Investigators, passengers seek answers why derailed Via Rail train was speeding

New Zealand balloon crash pilot was due to marry fiancée (and the invitations were posted on the day he and ten others died)

Canada s Contributions Abroad WWII

ANZAC Centenary and ANZAC Day

From Die Laughing (The BIT'N Files Series), by T. L. Wolfe, 2005, Austin, TX: PRO-ED. Copyright 2005 by PRO-ED, Inc. BIT N File One. Thadd L.

Back to Training Page Glider Guiders on Glider Riders:

Danish teacher solved war mystery By JONAS H.R. MOESTRUP (translated by Anders Straarup) Published :21

File No WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW FIREFIGHTER STEVEN WRIGHT. Interview Date: December 10, Transcribed by Nancy Francis

The Explorers: Amelia Earhart

Contents. Chapter 1 Introduction Chapter 2 Tenerife, Chapter 3 Chile, Chapter 4 Washington, DC,

3861 PRIVATE C. A. JENNINGS 32ND BN. AUSTRALIAN INF. 22ND MARCH,

File No WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW

Gallipolis OH David Poling LEO Suspect Pursuit -River. End of Watch: Tuesday, May 22, 2007

MY FIRST TRIP Hal Ames

JAMES SHAW ROSE MACDONALD

File No WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW FIREFIGHTER THOMAS DONATO. Interview Date: January 17, Transcribed by Laurie A.

Paul Bunyan T-I-M-B-E-R! You ve got to get that huge child away from here! He s doing too much damage to our homes! The farther away the better!

August 24-27, 2017 Mirabeau Meadows in the Spokane Valley

Enfield at War. Enfield WW1 Images

Hannibal crosses the Alps

I LEFT THROUGH THE WINDOW. Phil Reynolds

Tragic crash: Major coal firm confirms contractor killed

2009 runner-up Northern Territory. Samuel van den Nieuwenhof Darwin High School

Curriculum Links: Grade 8 Science RW8.3- Critique the approaches of Canada and Canadians to environmental stewardship and sustainability.

File No WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW CAPTAIN RICHARD WELDON. Interview Date: December 10, Transcribed by Elisabeth F.

UN IN ACTION. Release Date: May 2010 Programme No Length: 5 18 Languages: English, French, Spanish, Russian HAITI: UNSUNG HEROES

D-Day. June 6th, 1944

A tall man with short hair and a medium build dressed in BDUs walks out of the base and looks up at the sky (DAN)

Why Checklists? Thomas Knauff. An experienced aerobatic pilot bails out of his crippled airplane, opens his parachute and falls to his death.

Mrs. Moore. Titanic Tribute

A dedicated group, the Confederate Air Force brings aviation history to life.

6 Sydney Morning Herald

Witness Statement of: Maria Jafari No. of statement: 1 Exhibits: 0 Date of statement: 1 June 2018 GRENFELL TOWER PUBLIC INQUIRY

HONDURAS. True Missions Story. From Trouble to Triumph. (Picture 1)

Vintage Crime Scene Photos Superimposed on Modern NY Streets (Warning: Graphic)

11/6/2018. The Battle of the Somme. 1 July Darkest Day in the History of the British Army. 1 July 18 November 1916

8 still missing - Can you help put a face to a name?

File No WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW FIREFIGHTER FITZROY HAINES Interview Date: January 25, 2002 Transcribed by Laurie A.

File No WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW FIREFIGHTER KEVIN DUGGAN. Interview Date: December 14, Transcribed by Maureen McCormick

October, 2016 ISSUE 12

and led Jimmy to the prison office. There Jimmy was given an important He had been sent to prison to stay for four years.

AIR DISASTERS ANN WEIL

SOURCE: The Canberra Times, Thursday December 4, 1941, pages 1 and 2

The word ANZAC stands for Australian and New Zealand Army Corps.

Day of Mourning. April 28, 2018

TOMB OF THE UNKNOWN WARRIOR

WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW

Newsletter. No 1 spring By the president Alice van Bekkum

Financial Planning Issues for New Parents

World record heights to fatal plane crash, the stories of Ryan Campbell and Gary Turnbull

Past practice - Fernie Derrick restoration

29844 PRIVATE A. J. NICOLSON N.Z. OTAGO REGT. 14TH JULY,

Mark Beyer SMOKEJUMPERS. Life Fighting Fires

WO1 I) WAR II N THREE HOURS. The Confederate Air Force ensures that old times there are not forgotten.

Witness. Dr. J.C. Ridgway, Newcastle Sanatorium, Co. Wicklow. Identity Subject. Nil. S.2726.

Wildfires in California wine country destroy 2,000 businesses and homes

Brigham City Regional Airport s AIRPORT EMERGENCY RESPONSE PLAN

JAPAN S PACIFIC CAMPAIGN. Chapter 16 section 2

File No WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW LIEUTENANT JAMES FODY. Interview Date: 12/26/01. Transcribed by Maureen McCormick

Over the past couple of weeks, we have been highlighting our Company s involvement within each of our location s communities.

In Memory of Sapper EDWARD PENNINGTON , 105th Field Coy., Royal Engineers. who died on 27 May Remembered with honour ARRAS MEMORIAL

The North Africa Campaign:

File No WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW LIEUTENANT RUDOLF WEINDLER. Interview Date: January 15, Transcribed by Nancy Francis

Laura Holland fonds. Compiled by Christopher Hives (2006) Revised November University of British Columbia Archives

FIVE IMPORTANT LESSIONS ON TREATING PEOPLE

The Battle of Quebec: 1759

File No WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW

File No WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW EMS LIEUTENANT NELSON VELAZQUEZ. Interview Date: January 23, 2002

IST battlefields exhibition 2010

The Day I Killed Someone

Coast Country Memories of Camp Wallace 2003 Alecya Gallaway

Extreme Tourism at Chernobyl. Throughout the ages, people from all walks of life have loved the idea of an adventure.

2013 ARFF CHIEF S & LEADERSHIP SCHOOL, FEBUARY 19 TH TO 22 ND 2013 AL TROPIANO CAPTAIN, PHILADELPHILA FIRE DEPARTMENT ENGINE 78 ARFF

The Lafayette Escadrille

1 Listen to Chapters 1 and 2 on your CD/download and decide if these sentences are true or false. Can you correct the false ones?

Stories from Maritime America

The Life Of Greece By Will Durant

File No WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW CAPTAIN JOHN KEVIN CULLEY. Interview Date: October 17, Transcribed by Nancy Francis

ANZAC Memorial Hyde Park June 2013

The Odyssey. December 5, 2016

Wildfire. When you think of firefighters, HEROES. naturalists. firefighters rush to help. Young. When forests or grasslands go up in flames, these

Bailey s Bulletin. The Honourable Isaac Buchanan finds a Home. Volume 17 Issue 2 September 2013

ROYAL CANADIAN AIR CADETS PROFICIENCY LEVEL FOUR INSTRUCTIONAL GUIDE SECTION 2 EO M IDENTIFY ROYAL CANADIAN AIR FORCE (RCAF) RANKS PREPARATION

Order # High Noon Books a division of Academic Therapy Publications 20 Commercial Boulevard Novato, CA

3762 PRIVATE S. CLARKE 49TH BN. AUSTRALIAN INF. 21ST JUNE,

Iace Report Day 1. Day 2

The Packard plant was known for its big, strong buildings. These structures were famous for their open spaces and use of sunlight. The Packard Plant i

National Register of Historic Places PRESERVATION MONTH

Kategória 2D Olympiáda v anglickom jazyku Obvodné kolo 2010/2011 G R A M M A R

Uncle Robert Glasheen,Cork Ireland

Day of Mourning. April 28, 2017

Gordon Percy Olley ( )

A FOREST WITH NO TREES. written by. Scott Nelson

Felix Fund News Spring 2015

[Here follows another passage in Blackfoot followed by a passage in English.]

TESTIMONY OF CANDACE KOLANDER ASSOCIATION OF FLIGHT ATTENDANTS - CWA BEFORE THE SUBCOMMITTEE ON ECONOMIC SECURITY,

National Transportation Safety Board Aviation Accident Final Report

Daring flight removes 2 sick workers from South Pole station (Update 4) 22 June 2016, by Seth Borenstein And Eva Vergara

Where and When 35 Squadron was Formed As I Remember By Alfred Boyd N 45542, RAAF, 1941 to 1948.

WORLDTRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW

Transcription:

A REMEMBRANCE DAY CHRONICLE -THE FRANCES WALSH STORY The following article was published by the CBC on Remembrance Day 2018. It ties together the heroic efforts of Frances Walsh, a teacher at a one-room school near Calgary, with LAC Karl Gravel and F/O James Robinson, two airmen from 2 Wireless School in Calgary, and Daniel Fitzgerald, a young air cadet from Canmore -with permission of CBC Calgary 'I dragged him away from the fire': Homefront heroism and a tragic crash by a prairie school The sputtering of the biplane's engine was the first sign of trouble as it roared low past a schoolhouse Dave Gilson CBC News Posted: Nov 10, 2018 7:01 PM MT Last Updated: November 11 The memorial of the 1941 air training accident near Big Spring School. ((Dave Gilson)) The sputtering of the biplane's engine was the first sign of trouble as it roared low past a one-room schoolhouse in the Prairies that morning in 1941. Moments later, the Royal Canadian Air Force flight smashed to the ground with an explosion that rattled classroom windows. The teacher and some of her students sprinted hundreds of metres to the crash site in a gully. There, they found a young crew member uniform ablaze and missing an eye trying to climb back into the flaming wreckage.

Teacher Frances Walsh, who pulled Gravell from the flames, was awarded the George Medal for her bravery. (Bomber Command Museum of Canada)

"His clothing was on fire and, after proceeding away from the aircraft, he turned back to it," the teacher, Frances Walsh, later told the military in a witness statement. "He hadn't quite arrived back at the aircraft when I reached him, and then I dragged him away from the fire and rolled him on the ground to extinguish the flames from his clothing." Despite heroic efforts, both the 19-year-old trainee, Leading Aircraftman Karl Gravell, and the 44-year-old pilot, Flying Officer James Robinson, died that November day. Walsh, who was 29, suffered burns to her face, arms and hands. Flying Officer James Robinson was an Alberta lawyer and First World War veteran who returned to duty as a flight instructor. He died instantly in the crash. (Submitted)

The crash at the Big Springs School, north of Calgary, is just one of countless Canadian stories about sacrifice and bravery during wartime. It's also a reminder that many played out on the home front, thousands of kilometres from combat zones. Hundreds died in training accidents Their deaths were far from the only ones as more than 130,000 people took part in the British Commonwealth Air Training Plan during the Second World War. More than 1,400 air crew died in training-related accidents across the country, the Bomber Command Museum of Canada estimates. The dead include Canadians, Britons, Australians and New Zealanders. At least 80 were training at Calgary flight schools. "It was just that it was such a huge effort that there [were] bound to be a lot of guys killed," said Dave Birrell, director of the museum in Nanton, Alta. "A lot didn't even make it overseas but were killed in places like flying over Calgary and in places like a schoolyard." 'Did I get Jimmy out?' Investigators believe Robinson died instantly in the crash at Big Springs School. A First World War veteran, Robinson had returned to his home town of Jasper, Alta., to settle down, raise a family and practise law. When the Second World War rolled around, he returned to duty and was praised by fellow fliers for his skills and dedication as an instructor. Gravell was born in Sweden and had moved to Canada with his parents in 1937, settling in Vancouver.

Leading Aircraftman Karl Gravell was posthumously awarded the George Cross for bravery after his training aircraft crashed near Big Springs School north of Calgary in 1941. (DND Archives) He joined the air force in March 1941, just eight months before the crash. He was posted to No. 2 Wireless School in Calgary, where he trained as a wireless operator and air gunner.

Despite losing one of his eyes when the plane plowed into the ground, he still struggled to try to reach Robinson. As the teacher pulled him back by his parachute harness, Gravell was slipping into shock, at one point asking: "Did I get Jimmy out?" The Menasco Moth biplane was completely destroyed in the crash, as shown in these photos taken by investigators in 1941. (Library and Archives Canada)

While one student sped off on his bike for help, others fashioned a makeshift stretcher for Gravell out of a schoolhouse door. Once help arrived he was rushed to the Col. Belcher Hospital in Calgary. He died later that day. A doctor told an inquiry that Gravel might have survived had he not raced back into the flames. He was posthumously awarded the George Cross for his heroism. Investigators couldn't determine the cause of the crash but suggested the type of airplane, a Menasco Moth, had been underpowered, overweight and likely ill-suited for its training job. Cadet's mission turned memorial Loved ones mourned, the war effort moved on and the details of this tragedy seemed destined for obscurity within government files. Then, more than five decades later, a 15-year-old Alberta boy rediscovered the story and gave it new life. Daniel Fitzgerald was an air cadet in 1995 when he spearheaded a year-long effort with the help of family, friends and fellow cadets to erect a cairn near the crash scene in the Prairies between Cochrane and Airdrie. Air Cadet Daniel Fitzgerald, shown at age 15 in 1995, stands in front of the cairn he led efforts to create at the site of the 1941 training accident. (Daniel Fitzgerald)

What started as a volunteer community service project soon turned into a passion.fitzgerald still gets emotional about it nearly a quarter-century later. He felt a bond with Gravell that grew deeper after meeting the young airman's elderly mother. "It made it very real seeing how hard it was for her and everything she went through." Teacher felt she didn't deserve medal Alongside the two airmen on that memorial is a photo of Walsh who became the first Canadian woman to be awarded one of the Commonwealth's highest awards for non-combat bravery, the George Medal. She downplayed the decoration in a letter to Gravell's mother. "I am very honoured at receiving the George Medal, but I feel that I do not really deserve it. If only I had been able to have helped your son enough to have saved his life." Sandy Robinson and Lisa Gravell. two relatives of the men who died in the crash, pay tribute with Daniel Fitzgerald, left, at the unveiling of the memorial. (Daniel Fitzgerald) Today, Walsh's niece, Maureen Poucher, says she was never really surprised that the "colourful" aunt who came to live with her family in B.C. would have raced into the heart of a crisis to help. "She wouldn't have hesitated to do anything like that. She was quite the lady."

A terrible twist of fate Poucher says Walsh's wartime efforts included working shifts in a munition factory in eastern Canada during a summer break. But tragedy and a terrible twist loomed ahead for the teacher. In 1955, Walsh's 18-year-old son, who had joined the air force, was killed in a flight-training accident in Manitoba. It crushed Walsh, who died six years later of complications related to cancer, her niece said. Back at the former crash site, the schoolhouse is gone, but the memorial remains. Fitzgerald occasionally visits and ponders its legacy. "We just wanted to try to tell something that was a little bit different, that people may not consider in their daily lives, about the costs of war closer to home."