Guy Gibson

Guy Gibson

Infobox Military Person
name= Guy Penrose Gibson
lived= 12 August 191819 September 1944
placeofbirth=Simla, India
placeofdeath=Steenbergen, Netherlands


caption= Photo from 617 Squadron The "Dambusters"
nickname=
allegiance=flag|United Kingdom
serviceyears= 1936 – 19 September 1944
rank= Wing Commander
branch= air force|United Kingdom
commands=
unit=
battles= World War II
awards= Victoria Cross
Distinguished Service Order & Bar
Distinguished Flying Cross & Bar
Legion of Merit {Commander}
laterwork=

Wing Commander Guy Penrose Gibson VC, DSO & Bar, DFC & Bar, RAF (12 August 191819 September 1944), was the first CO of the RAF's 617 Squadron, which he led in the "Dam Busters" raid (Operation Chastise), in 1943, resulting in the destruction of two large dams in the Ruhr area. He was killed later in the war.

Early life and career

Gibson was born in Simla, India, during the British Raj, the son of Alexander James Gibson and Norah Gibson. He moved with his family to Porthleven, Cornwall, England in 1921 aged three. He was educated at St Edward's School, Oxford.

In 1936 he joined the RAF, becoming an Acting Pilot Officer with effect from and with seniority of 31st January 1937; [London Gazette [http://www.gazettes-online.co.uk/ViewPDF.aspx?pdf=34371&geotype=London&gpn=1086 Issue 34371 published on the 16 February 1937. Page 10 of 68] ] Pilot Officer on 16 November 1937 [London Gazette [http://www.gazettes-online.co.uk/ViewPDF.aspx?pdf=34457&geotype=London&gpn=7352 Issue 34457 published on the 23 November 1937. Page 6 of 72] ] and by the outbreak of the Second World War was a bomber pilot with 83 Squadron, flying the Handley Page Hampden. In July 1940 he won the Distinguished Flying Cross. [London Gazette [http://www.gazettes-online.co.uk/ViewPDF.aspx?pdf=34892&geotype=London&gpn=4177 Issue 34892 published on the 9 July 1940. Page 13 of 78] ] After completing his first tour of duty of 27 operational sorties, Gibson volunteered for Fighter Command, avoiding the normal six-month rest from operations at a flying training establishment. As a night fighter pilot flying the Bristol Beaufighter with 29 Squadron he claimed four kills in 99 sorties and won a bar to his DFC. [London Gazette [http://www.gazettes-online.co.uk/ViewPDF.aspx?pdf=35276&geotype=London&gpn=5360 Issue 35276 published on the 16 September 1941. Page 2 of 38] ] In November 1942 he was awarded the Distinguished Service Order. [London Gazette [http://www.gazettes-online.co.uk/ViewPDF.aspx?pdf=35791&geotype=London&gpn=5031 Issue 35791 published on the 17 November 1942. Page 1 of 22] ] Whilst with 29 Squadron, based at RAF West Malling, Gibson said "Of all the airfields in Great Britain. Here many say, including myself, we have the most pleasant". [http://www.flyingzone.co.uk/associations/asr/rafwestmallingmemorialgroup/index2.htm RAF West Malling Memorial Group] Retrieved 14 July 2007]

Promotion to Wing Commander followed and at 23 he was posted back to Bomber Command in 1942. During the next 11 months he led 106 Squadron now flying the Avro Manchester and then the Avro Lancaster, personally completing 46 sorties. He was remembered by subordinates as tough, brash and often aloof, a disciplinarian who bore a professionalism and arrogance derived from his position as one of the most experienced bomber pilots in the RAF.

After several operational sorties with 106 Squadron he considered two members of his crew sub-standard and had them replaced. However, when a visiting Air Ministry team considered his 5' 11" tall rear-gunner (Pilot Officer John Wickens) too tall to be a Lancaster gunner, Gibson told them to forget the rules, as his gunner was staying.

Operation Chastise

In 1943 he was selected to command the new 617 Squadron asked to destroy dams in the Ruhr area. To accomplish this they were provided with the bouncing bomb designed and developed by Barnes Wallis. The bombs had to be dropped from convert|60|ft|m from a predefined distance to skip across the water into the dam face and then roll down it to explode at predefined depth. To stand any chance of success Operation Chastise had to be flown at night.

Flying at such a low level at night was deemed difficult by even the most experienced pilots. Altimeters (using air pressure) were unreliable in the mountainous terrain so close to the ground. To achieve the correct height they fixed two spotlights to the nose and tail of the Lancaster and directed their beams downwards so that they crossed convert|60|ft|m under the craft. The navigator would direct the pilot up or down until the spots touched, forming a figure 8. The bomb aimer found the correct distance from the dam by looking through a simple hand-held wooden triangle with dowel markers. When the dowels lined up with the towers on the dam he released the bomb.

On the night of 16 May 1943, despite the full moon, both Bomber Command and Fighter Command flew a number of sorties which were spread widely over Germany and the Low Countries. As 617 Squadron needed a full moon to carry out their mission, it was thought that the only way they could penetrate German anti-aircraft defences was to fly the whole mission as close to the ground as possible. The 19 Lancasters carried one bomb each. It took five attempts to breach the Moehne Dam. Gibson then led the three remaining Lancasters to attack and breach the Eder Dam. Two other dams were attacked but not breached. Only 11 of the bombers survived the mission; 53 crew members died in the raid.

The devastation caused by the raids was extensive but the Germans managed to rebuild and recover much more quickly than was expected. However they were forced to use assets to protect key installations like dams to a greater extent than they had before. These assets would have been useful on other fronts. The propaganda boost given to the allied war effort was considerable.

Victoria Cross

After the Dams raid, Gibson was awarded the Victoria Cross [London Gazette [http://www.gazettes-online.co.uk/ViewPDF.aspx?pdf=36030&geotype=London&gpn=2361 Issue 36030 published on the 25 May 1943. Page 1 of 12] ] in recognition not just of the raid, but his leadership and valour demonstrated as master bomber on many previous sorties.

:Wing Commander Gibson, whose personal courage knew no bounds, was quickly recognised to be an outstanding operational pilot and leader. He served with conspicuously successful results as a night bomber pilot and also as a night fighter pilot, on operational tours. In addition, on his "rest" nights he made single-handed attacks on highly defended objectives such as the German battleship Tirpitz. Wing Commander Gibson was then selected to command a squadron formed for special tasks. Under his inspiring leadership this squadron executed one of the most devastating attacks of the war - the breaching of the Moehne and Eder dams. Wing Commander Gibson's aircraft made the initial attack on the Moehne dam. Descending to within a few feet of the water, he delivered his attack with great accuracy. He then circled very low for thirty minutes, drawing enemy fire and permitting as free a run as possible to the following aircraft. He repeated these tactics in the attack on the Eder dam. Throughout his operational career, prolonged exceptionally at his own request, he has shown leadership, determination and valour of the highest order.

His Victoria Cross is displayed at the Royal Air Force Museum, Hendon, England.

After the dams raid

After receiving his VC, Gibson wrote an account of his wartime career, "Enemy Coast Ahead" and was sent on a lecture tour of the United States by the government, partly to keep the new hero safe. The tour was "at a time when the first American airmen were coming home 'tour expired' after 25 operations. During questions one young lady asked `Wing Commander Gibson, how many operations have you been on over Germany?' 'One hundred and seventy-four.' There was a stunned silence." [From Sir Robert Thompson's autobiography Make for the Hills: Memories of Far Eastern Wars, L. Cooper, 1989, ISBN 0850527619. [http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=MLZ6AAAAIAAJ&dq=Make+for+the+hills&q=%22One+hundred+and+seventy%22&pgis=1#search p. 36] ]

In December 1943 he was conferred the Legion of Merit (Commander) by the President of the United States of America. [London Gazette [http://www.gazettes-online.co.uk/ViewPDF.aspx?pdf=36271&geotype=London&gpn=5284 Issue 36271 published on the 30 November 1943. Page 2 of 10] ]

Return to operations

Gibson returned to operational duties in 1944, after pestering Bomber Command, and was killed along with his navigator Sqn Ldr Jim Warwick, on a bombing raid on Rheydt (a borough of Mönchengladbach) operating as a Pathfinder Master Bomber based at RAF Hemswell, when his de Havilland Mosquito crashed near Steenbergen, the Netherlands, on 19 September 1944. He was 26 years old. It was assumed for many years that he had been shot down, but following the discovery of the wreckage of his plane, it was found that a fault with the fuel tank selector had meant that the aircraft had simply run out of fuel. Gibson CWGC record at [ [http://www.cwgc.org/search/casualty_details.aspx?casualty=2766520 CWGC record] ]

The station Headquarters building at RAF Hemswell still stands, on what is now a commercial trading estate and is named "Gibson House". Gibson's office is latterly being used as a computer software business.

Barnes Wallis said of Gibson:

:For some men of great courage and adventure, inactivity was a slow death. Would a man like Gibson ever have adjusted back to peacetime life? One can imagine it would have been a somewhat empty existence after all he had been through. Facing death had become his drug. He had seen countless friends and comrades perish in the great crusade. Perhaps something in him even welcomed the inevitability he had always felt that before the war ended he would join them in their Bomber Command Valhalla. He had pushed his luck beyond all limits and he knew it. But that was the kind of man he was…a man of great courage, inspiration and leadership. A man born for war…but born to fall in war.

"Bomber" Harris described him as "As great a warrior as this island ever produced"

Personal life

Gibson met his wife to be, Eve Moore, at a party in Coventry during early December 1939 while he was on three days rest leave at his brother’s house. The following year Gibson and Eve were married at All Saints Church in Eve's home town of Penarth near Cardiff in Wales. Guy Gibson flew his Blenheim bomber from his airbase in Lincolnshire to RAF St Athan in time for the wedding.

Eve's parents, Mr and Mrs Ernest Moore, lived in Archer Road, Penarth, and the couple moved in with them while they considered buying a home of their own. Ernest Moore was a keen golfer and invited his new son-in-law to join the Glamorganshire Golf Club as an honorary member.

When the Dambusters raid took place in May 1943, widely hailed as a turning point of the War, Gibson spent his post-raid leave in Penarth, playing golf on most days. While he was on that leave he had a call from the Air Ministry telling him that he had been awarded the VC. Ernest Moore immediately telephoned the steward at the Glamorganshire and asked to him lay on as many drinks as he could find and the whole family went down to celebrate in style at the clubhouse.

Gibson continued to live unaccompanied in the officers' messes at his various stations and Eve remained at home with her parents. Gibson died in action shortly after they found a family home in London during 1943, before which they only managed a few weekends together while on leave in Penarth or at various hotels. Eve Gibson died on 3 November 1988, the same day that Sir Harold "Micky" Martin a pilot on the Dambusters Raid also passed away.

Other facts

*Gibson's grave and a memorial are in Steenbergen en Kruisland R.C. Churchyard, the Netherlands.
*He was survived by his wife, Eve Mary Gibson of Westminster.
*Gibson was played by Richard Todd in the film "The Dam Busters".
*Paintings of Gibson feature on the wall of the bar of the Olde Crown pub in Lincoln, a pub that Gibson frequented regularly when he was based at RAF Scampton.
*Gibson had a black Labrador called 'Nigger' [ [http://www.elsham.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/raf_bc/damsraid.html RAF Bomber Command 1939-1945] "(Retrieved 2 Aug 2007)"] which was killed after being hit by a car the day before the Dambusters raid.
*There is a "blue plaque" outside a house on Aberdeen Place, off Edgware Road in London commemorating his occupancy there for a short time in 1943.
*There is a "blue plaque" outside a house on Archer Road, Penarth, South Wales commemorating his residency there between 1940 and 1943.
*Guy Gibson's RAF flight log is on display at the [ [http://fancyapint.com/pubs/pub3176.html Windsor Castle, 27-29 Crawford Place, Marble Arch W1H 4LQ ] at fancyapint.com] Windsor Castle public house on Crawford Street, London.

Notes

References

*"Enemy Coast Ahead", Guy Gibson, 2003
*"British VCs of World War 2", John Laffin, 1997
*"Dam Buster: the Life of Guy Gibson, VC", Susan Ottaway, 1996
*"The Dam Busters", Paul Brickhill, 1983
*"Enemy Coast Ahead", Guy Gibson, 1984
*"Enemy Coast Ahead", Guy Gibson, 1946
*"Monuments to Courage", David Harvey, 1999
*"The Register of the Victoria Cross", This England, 1997
*"For Valour: The Air VCs", Chaz Bowyer, 1992

External links

* [http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/2WWgibsonG.htm Guy Gibson] biography from UK educational site
* [http://www.dambusters.org.uk/gibson.htm Wing Commander Guy Penrose Gibson (39438)] "(detailed biography and military service record)"
* [http://www.dambusters.be The Dambusters] "(Website in Dutch)"
** [http://www.stedwards.oxon.sch.uk/gibson.html Dedicated page at St Edward's School]
* [http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/dambusters/images/legacy13.jpgGibson's Medals at the RAF Museum]
* [http://www.goodtaste.boo.pl/link_dambusters_pr.html Dambusters-new movie] "Production will soon begin on DAMBUSTERS"


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