- Karl Mander Gravell
Infobox Military Person
name=Karl Mander Gravell
caption=
born=27 September 1922
died=10 November 1941
placeofbirth=Norrköping , Sweden
placeofdeath=Calgary , Canada
nickname=
allegiance=Canada
branch=Royal Canadian Air Force
serviceyears=
rank=Leading Aircraftman
unit=
commands=
battles=
awards=
relations=
laterwork=Leading Aircraftman Karl Mander Gravell was posthumously awarded theGeorge Cross , the highest British(and Commonwealth) award for bravery out of combat. The decoration was awarded for the heroism he showed on the10 November 1941 inCalgary ,Alberta . LAC Gravell was on a training flight when theTiger Moth aircraft he was flying in suffered mechanical failure and crashed in flames. Gravell managed to get clear but despite hisserious injuries - he had lost an eye and was badly burned - he dived back into the inferno with his own clothes still on fire in a vain effort to rescue the pilot. He was pulled from the wreckage but later died from his grievous burns.Born in
Sweden in 1922, he moved to Canada with his family in 1937 and became a naturalized Canadian citizen in July of that year. The aspiring air gunner had joined theRoyal Canadian Air Force on15 March 1941 from his adopted home town ofVancouver . After completing his depot training, he had been posted to No. 2 Wireless School in Calgary.cite web
url=http://www.gc-database.co.uk/recipients/GravellKM.htm
title=Karl Gravell, GC
publisher=George Cross database
accessdate=2007-11-22]The following citation was published in the
London Gazette on the11 June 1942 :LondonGazette
issue= 35587
date=
linkeddate=
startpage= 2533
endpage=
notarchive=
supp=Y
accessdate=2007-11-22 ]"In November, 1941, a training aircraft crashed and immediately burst into flames. Leading Aircraftman Gravell, who was under training as a wireless air gunner, managed to extricate himself from the wreckage and get clear. In spite of the intense shock caused by the loss of one eye and severe burns, suffered at the time of the crash, Leading Aircraftman Gravell's first and only thought was for the welfare of his pilot. The pilot was still in the aircraft and Gravell ignoring his own serious injuries and the fact that his clothes were ablaze attempted to get back to the flaming wreckage to pull him clear. He had barely reached the aircraft when he was dragged away and rolled on the ground to extinguish the flames which had, by this time, completely enveloped his clothing. Leading Aircraftman Gravell subsequently died from his burns. Had he not considered his pilot before his own safety and had he immediately proceeded to extinguish the flames on his own clothing, he would probably not have lost his life."
LAC Gravell is buried in Mountain View Cemetery, Vancouver. [ [ [http://vancouver.ca/commsvcs/nonmarketoperations/mountainview/interesting/mander.htm] Mountain View Cemetery website] retrieved 22 November 2007.]
References
ee also
List of George Cross recipients
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.