- Joined
- 9 October 2009
- Messages
- 21,928
- Reaction score
- 13,552
I should have posted this yesterday (the birthday was actually the day before but I only saw it on Thursday). Group Captain John 'Paddy' Hemingway DFC:
View: https://x.com/UKDefenceDublin/status/1813663832981618788
View: https://www.reddit.com/r/ireland/comments/1e5qf1d/irish_battle_of_britain_pilot_celebrates_105th/
For some reason, the BBC overlooked the occasion (possibly the anti-military faction within the organisation is acting up again with Labour's return to power). Here's a couple of pieces they did on him last year though:
www.bbc.com
www.bbc.com
The Wikipedia article on him:
en.wikipedia.org
Pilot Officer John “Paddy” Hemingway, born in Dublin in 1919, joined the RAF in 1938. He was one of the young pilots of 85 Squadron that took off from Lille-Seclin aerodrome on strafing attacks, air patrols and dogfights in what became known as the “Battle of France”. No 85 squadron had been in France since the start of the “phoney war” in September 1939.
On 10th May 1940, Paddy was recorded as destroying a He-111, the following day he downed a Do-17 but his Hurricane fighter plane was hit by anti-aircraft fire, and he had to make a forced landing.
Returning to the UK, 85 Squadron, under a new commanding officer, Peter Townsend, became one of the front-line squadrons of 11 Group (Fighter Command) responded to the daily attacks from German aircraft, which became to be known as the ‘Battle of Britain’. Paddy’s logbook records, almost nonchalantly the sometimes up to five daily sorties he and the other pilots undertook in defence of the United Kingdom. In August 1940, during hectic dogfights, Paddy was twice forced to bail out of his Hurricanes, landing once in the sea off the Essex coast and in marshland on the other occasion.
On 1 July 1941, Paddy was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross (DFC) and in September that year, he was Mentioned in Dispatches.
View: https://x.com/UKDefenceDublin/status/1813663832981618788
View: https://www.reddit.com/r/ireland/comments/1e5qf1d/irish_battle_of_britain_pilot_celebrates_105th/
For some reason, the BBC overlooked the occasion (possibly the anti-military faction within the organisation is acting up again with Labour's return to power). Here's a couple of pieces they did on him last year though:

John Hemingway: 'There was two of you - one of you was going to be dead at the end'
The veteran credits "Irish luck" with helping him survive being shot down four times during the war.


Battle of Britain: Pilot John Hemingway says he was lucky to survive war
John Hemingway, 104, has been shot four times, including twice in the World War Two aerial battle.

The Wikipedia article on him:

John Hemingway (RAF officer) - Wikipedia
Last edited: